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17-year-old boy shot in Little Villageon April 30, 2021 at 7:13 pm

A 17-year-old boy was wounded in a shooting Friday in Little Village on the Southwest Side.

About 11:12 a.m., he was in the 2700 block of South Drake Avenue when someone in a silver-colored sedan opened fire, striking him in the shoulder and arm, Chicago police said.

The teen was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where his condition was stabilized, police said.

On Monday, Jorge Cruz, also 17 years old, was killed in a shooting on the same block.

Area Four detectives are investigating.

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17-year-old boy shot in Little Villageon April 30, 2021 at 7:13 pm Read More »

Second man charged in 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams’ murder denied bailon April 30, 2021 at 7:21 pm

The first of two alleged shooters who opened fire on a car at a West Side McDonald’s drive-thru — killing 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams — was ordered held without bail Friday.

Demond Goudy, 20, is facing murder and attempted murder charges for the April 18 shooting at the fast food restaurant, at 3200 W. Roosevelt Road.

Marion Lewis is also being held at Cook County Jail without bail for Jaslyn’s murder after he was taken into custody last week following a police pursuit on the Eisenhower Expressway. Lewis was shot by a police officer after the chase.

On the day of deadly shooting, Goudy was seen getting out of of the silver Audi Lewis was driving before firing a hail of bullets from a .40-caliber handgun at the car Jaslyn was in with her father, Assistant State’s Attorney Kevin DeBoni said.

A second uncharged gunman also opened fire on the car with a Draco AK-47-style rifle with a “banana clip,” DeBoni said.

The two shooters then got back into the Audi, but got back out again when Jaslyn’s father began to drive away. They fired on the car a second time before speeding away, DeBoni said.

Jaslyn was shot multiple times and died at Stroger Hospital. Her father was also wounded.

Police later recovered 19 40-caliber shell casings and 28 7.62-mm shell casings from the scene of the shooting, prosecutors said.

Guns that matched the casings were found in Lewis’ possession when he was taken into custody after being tracked to an apartment in west suburban Lombard, DeBoni said.

A video posted on social media by Lewis earlier that day showed him driving around with Goudy and the uncharged shooter, who was seen holding the Draco rifle in the video, DeBoni said.

Surveillance cameras also recorded Goudy at a BP gas station, at 3159 W. Chicago Ave., when the group pulled up in the Audi, DeBoni said. There, a man noticed damage to the car, and allegedly gave Lewis a business card, saying he could repair it.

That man said he couldn’t identify members of the group, but his business card was later found inside Lewis’ apartment, DeBoni said.

Goudy was out on bond at the time of the shooting for weapons, robbery and drug charges in four separate felony cases, DeBoni said. As a juvenile, Goudy had faced similar charges, the prosecutor added.

Judge David Navarro Friday also revoked Goudy’s bail for his pending cases.

Cathryn Crawford, an attorney with the not-for-profit Lawndale Christian Legal Center, told Navarro earlier this week that she needed time to investigate prosecutors’ evidence and potentially find witnesses for the bond hearing.

Crawford sought to delay the hearing again Friday. As Navarro listened to a motion to allow her to be physically in the room with her client during the live-streamed hearing, she compared the proceedings to a Russian courtroom, where defendants “sit in a cage” and are not allowed to converse during hearings with their attorneys.

Crawford also sought to prevent prosecutors from discussing Goudy’s juvenile criminal history and argued that prosecutors had not provided sufficient records in the case that would allow her to property defend Goudy — even at one point calling for the court to sanction DeBoni.

Navarro rejected each of Crawford’s motions.

Navarro allowed Crawford to speak with Goudy, but Crawford later returned to the hearing and said she had not been able to speak privately with her client because he wasn’t provided a private room and their conversation could be overheard and again called for the hearing to be delayed.

“It’s a violation of [Goudy’s] due process to continue this [hearing],” Crawford said.

“we’re just treading ground here,” Navarro snapped at Crawford in reply.

Crawford ultimately declined to provide information in Goudy’s defense during the hearing.

Goudy is expected back in court for Jaslyn’s murder on May 19.

Demond Goudy
Demond Goudy
Chicago police

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Second man charged in 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams’ murder denied bailon April 30, 2021 at 7:21 pm Read More »

Take me out to the ballgame in a pandemicon April 30, 2021 at 3:38 pm

I’ve Got The Hippy Shakes

Take me out to the ballgame in a pandemic

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Take me out to the ballgame in a pandemicon April 30, 2021 at 3:38 pm Read More »

The exception doesn’t prove the rule — it disproves iton April 30, 2021 at 6:07 pm

Margaret Serious

The exception doesn’t prove the rule — it disproves it

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The exception doesn’t prove the rule — it disproves iton April 30, 2021 at 6:07 pm Read More »

Reunion Park Pop-Up Coming to Chicago This June + Interview with Chef Alex Wnorowskion April 30, 2021 at 6:46 pm

I am a big fan of pop-ups, especially the ones in Chicago. Yes, they’re temporary, but they are one of the best experiences in my opinion. They’re not something you can experience every day and it’s a perfect time for much needed date nights or just a fun night with your friends. We’ve all heard of these T.V show pop-ups right? Well, this one is even better.

Reunion Park pop-up is an underground dinner series where you will enjoy 10 courses of pure perfection. I was lucky enough to get a hold of the chef and organizer himself, Alex Wnorowski. His dedication and enthusiasm for this event is clearly shown in my *brief* Instagram interview with him below. 

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“Reunion Park Pop Up has been my project for about two years. The idea started when I first visited a friend in Chicago who had recently moved from NC, where we worked together, to Chicago to chase the Michelin life. I had a trip planned for Chicago to stage for a position at a really good restaurant and figured it would be nice to cross paths with my friend and catch up if I had the time. During my layover, we got to talking about this pop up he started while he was there. At that point, I had no idea what a pop up was. The more he explained it to me, the more I was intrigued and wanted to see it for myself. I then proceeded to cancel the interview, and dedicate the three days I was there all to this pop up dinner he had that weekend. I fell in love with the process. I fell in love with Chicago and the energy that everyone has. The second I stepped off the plane at O’Hare, I was hooked. It was around that time that I first watched a documentary that really changed my life. A sous chef of mine jokingly recommended I watch 42 grams, which was on Netflix at the time. I’m not sure why, but he was shocked when I showed up the next day lit up with passion and excitement that I’ve never felt before. Serendipitous events led to me being able to help Jake with a couple pop ups in Chicago, and also here in North Carolina. It was after the dinner here that I decided to start this pop up and the following month, December 2019, was my first dinner.The dinners in Chicago are emotional for me. They bring me back to a mentality of pure inspiration. A lot has changed since I made my first trip there for a covert job interview that never ended up happening, but I love being back. The dinners in Lincoln Park are actually where I helped Jake for the first time. I personally targeted this event space for those sentimental feelings. I can’t wait to come back for my second set of dinners on my own!” 

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Reunion Park is coming to Chicago this June! Tickets are already selling out fast so be sure to buy yours. The event will run June 4- June 6. The June 4th experience is already sold out so if you’re itching to attend a food pop-up with an amazing line-up of courses, get your tickets now and show Chef Wnorowski some love on Instagram! You can find the link to purchase tickets here

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Featured Image Credit: Reunion Park Pop-Up

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Reunion Park Pop-Up Coming to Chicago This June + Interview with Chef Alex Wnorowskion April 30, 2021 at 6:46 pm Read More »

Chicago White Sox dominate Detroit Tigers in double headeron April 30, 2021 at 6:00 pm

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Chicago White Sox dominate Detroit Tigers in double headeron April 30, 2021 at 6:00 pm Read More »

US closes in on 100 million Americans fully vaccinatedon April 30, 2021 at 4:39 pm

Disneyland reopened on Friday and New York’s mayor predicted the big city will be up and running again at full strength by July 1, as the number of Americans fully vaccinated against COVID-19 closed in on 100 million.

Visitors cheered and screamed with delight as the Southern California theme park swung open its gates for the first time in 13 months in a powerful symbol of the U.S. rebound, even though the self-proclaimed Happiest Place on Earth is allowing only in-state guests for now and operating at just 25% capacity.

The reopening and similar steps elsewhere around the country reflect increasing optimism as COVID-19 deaths tumble and the ranks of the vaccinated grow — a stark contrast to the worsening disaster in India and Brazil and the scant availability of vaccines in many poor parts of the world.

While the overall number of lives lost to COVID-19 in the U.S. has eclipsed 575,000, deaths have plummeted to an average of about 670 per day from a peak of around 3,400 in mid-January.

As of Friday morning, more than 99 million Americans, or over 38% of all adults, had been fully vaccinated, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. About 55% of adults had received at least one dose.

However, about 8% of those who have gotten one dose of either the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine have not returned for their second shot, officials said. Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, said it is important to complete the course to gain maximum protection against the coronavirus.

“Make sure you get that second dose,” he said at a White House briefing.

CDC officials also reported Friday that it was anxiety — not a problem with the shots — that caused reactions in dozens of people at vaccine clinics in five states in early April.

Many of the 64 people fainted or reported dizziness. Some became nauseated or vomited, and a few had racing hearts, chest pain or other symptoms. None got seriously ill.

In New York, Mayor Bill de Blasio said Thursday he expects to see COVID-19 restrictions lifted and the city “fully reopen” by July 1. He cited rising vaccination rates and decreasing hospitalizations.

“We are ready for stores to open, for businesses to open, offices, theaters, full strength,” he said on MSNBC.

However, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has maintained throughout the crisis that such decisions are his alone, and he said Thursday that he would like to lift restrictions even sooner if possible.

“I don’t want to wait that long. I think if we do what we have to do, we can be reopened earlier,” he said.

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US closes in on 100 million Americans fully vaccinatedon April 30, 2021 at 4:39 pm Read More »

Critics say Pritzker’s COVID-19 relief bill prioritizes individuals’ circumstances, but ZIP code where they live (LIVE UPDATES)on April 30, 2021 at 5:10 pm

The latest

State Senate sends Pritzker COVID-19 relief bill designed to ‘keep people in the state of Illinois in their homes’

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

SPRINGFIELD — A bill distributing $1.4 billion of federal relief to those in need of COVID-19 emergency housing assistance was sent to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s desk on Thursday over Republican objections that the measure does not target those who are in real need of help.

“This bill essentially is trying to keep people in the state of Illinois in their homes,” said state Sen. Omar Aquino, the bill’s sponsor. “It tries to prioritize and surgically utilize the one-time money that we’re getting from the federal government to assist those people that truly need it the most.”

The bill “prioritizes disproportionately affected areas” based on “positive COVID-19 cases” or by “a history of homelessness,” according to the Near Northwest Side Democrat.

But state Sen. Jason Barickman said the money does not go to those who need it the most because it prioritizes “not based on their individual circumstances but based on the ZIP code in which they live.”

Read the complete story here.


News

12:10 p.m. Scarred by pandemic, labor and allies mourn, then mobilize

As May Day 2021 approached, registered nurse Kathy Haff thought about the trials she and co-workers have faced over the past year and was moved to speak out.

Haff, who works at Community First Medical Center in Portage Park, wrote down her thoughts about three co-workers who succumbed to COVID-19. She touched on their humor, professionalism and generosity.

In a local observation of the International Workers’ Memorial Day, Haff talked Wednesday about her late colleagues during an online prayer service memorializing those who have died. Her point wasn’t to elevate them above others being remembered but to address the grief and sense of injustice that inhabits many workplaces because of the pandemic.

Haff told the Chicago Sun-Times the deaths shook the small hospital’s staff, where workers have organized with the National Nurses United union and pressed administrators to provide more personal protective equipment. “We finally have a voice with the union and the hospital isn’t happy because we’re airing their dirty laundry. They’re oblivious,” she said.

Read the full story by David Roeder here.

11:30 a.m. Response to coronavirus outbreak ‘inefficient and chaotic’ at LaSalle Veterans’ Home where 36 died, report finds

SPRINGFIELD, Ill. — Consistent statewide procedures and ongoing drills that target infection response and other emergencies will be routine at Illinois veterans’ homes after COVID-19 caught the LaSalle Veterans’ Home unprepared and claimed 36 lives last fall, the state’s newly appointed director said.

Terry Prince, a 31-year Navy veteran and former senior adviser to the U.S. Surgeon General, has issued a six-point plan for improving readiness at the state’s veterans’ homes in Anna, Manteno, Quincy and LaSalle. The plan follows a blistering investigative report that laid out a string of miscommunications, lax policy and missed opportunities when the pandemic hit the home in LaSalle, 94 miles west of Chicago.

The report by the inspector general of the Illinois Department of Human Services, released Friday, noted that despite escaping all traces of the deadly respiratory illness for eight months after it entered Illinois, there was little done to devise protocols for preventing or managing infections. After the first four cases were reported Nov. 1, the virus spread to 60 residents and 43 employees as confused staff operated in an environment that was “inefficient, reactive and chaotic,” the report said.

Read the complete story here.

10:45 a.m. Blackhawks excited for fans’ return to United Center, albeit for only 2 games

Four players in the Blackhawks’ lineup Thursday have never played in front of fans at the United Center.

Four others have never done so as a member of the Hawks. Another three have done so only once. That adds up to 11 players — more than half the team.

But come May 9 and 10 against the Stars, the last two games of the regular season, that will change. The City of Chicago announced Thursday the UC can be filled to 25% capacity starting with the Bulls’ May 7 game, although Hawks spokesperson said the Hawks would actually have around 20% capacity — approximately 4,000 fans.

Read the full story by Ben Pope here.

8 a.m. Fans allowed at Bulls, Blackhawks games as Chicago continues to ease restrictions

With two million vaccine doses administered and health metrics improving, Mayor Lori Lightfoot is reopening Chicago a little bit more — this time to let restaurants and theaters serve more patrons and allow fans inside the United Center for the first time since the start of the pandemic.

The new Phase Four rules, effective immediately, allow the Bulls and Blackhawks to close their seasons before roughly 5,250 fans per game — 25% of the United Center’s capacity.

The Blackhawks play at home Thursday and Saturday against the Florida Panthers, then finish their regular-season home schedule with two games in May. The Bulls have a home game Friday, the first of six regular-season games left.

That 25% rule also applies to Wrigley Field, Guaranteed Rate Field and Soldier Field, an increase from the current 20%. The 25% also includes churches, synagogues, mosques and other houses of worship.

Restaurants and bars can increase indoor capacity to 50% or 100 people, whichever is less. The cap had been 50% or 50 people.

Meetings, conferences and conventions held at large indoor venues like McCormick Place now can operate at 25% capacity or 250 people, whichever is less.

Festivals and, what the city calls “general admission outdoor spectator events” get the green light to welcome 15 people for every 1,000 square feet.

The same rules apply to flea markets, which can operate at 25% capacity.

Fran Spielman has the full story here.

7:15 a.m. Shot, please! Preckwinkle pushes vaccinations for restaurant workers as indoor capacity expands

Public health officials in Cook County are serving up COVID-19 vaccines to bar and restaurant workers as the suburbs follow in lockstep with Chicago’s latest round of eased coronavirus restrictions.

Mondays in May will be designated “restaurant days” at the county’s six suburban mass vaccination sites, Cook County Board Presidents Toni Preckwinkle announced Thursday.

Anyone can sign up for an appointment or walk up to the six sites in Tinley Park, Matteson, River Grove, South Holland, Des Plaines or Forest Park. But officials want to vaccinate as many of the “essential heroes” in the hospitality industry as possible with indoor capacity expanding to the lesser of 50% or 100 people per room.

“Restaurant staff people worked tirelessly, even as they were asked to pivot to new roles to meet new demands, even as hours were cut, doors were closed, and their own life livelihoods were in jeopardy,” Preckwinkle said. “Now we’re starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel, and people are returning toward cafes and restaurants for a sense of normal normalcy and camaraderie that we all have craved.”

An estimated 20% of restaurants statewide won’t survive the pandemic, according to Illinois Restaurant Association President Sam Toia, shuttering about 5,000 businesses and leaving more than 100,000 out of work.

Mitchell Armentrout has the full story here.


New cases and vaccination rates

  • A total of 3,394 new cases of COVID-19 and 38 additional deaths were reported by Illinois health officials Thursday.
  • The latest cases were among 89,057 specimens tested over the last 24 hours, bringing the state’s positivity rate to 4%, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.
  • A total of 107,689 vaccine doses were administered in the state Thursday, health officials said. An average of 97,434 vaccine doses have been administered per day over the last week.
  • Since the pandemic began, over 1.3 million people in Illinois have tested positive for COVID-19 and 21,927 have died, officials said.

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Critics say Pritzker’s COVID-19 relief bill prioritizes individuals’ circumstances, but ZIP code where they live (LIVE UPDATES)on April 30, 2021 at 5:10 pm Read More »

Israel mourns deaths of 45 in stampede at religious festivalon April 30, 2021 at 5:31 pm

JERUSALEM — The holiday of Lag BaOmer is one of the happiest days on the calendar for Israel’s ultra-Orthodox community — a time of mass celebrations in honor of a revered sage. But in a split second Friday, the festive gathering in northern Israel turned into one of the country’s worst-ever tragedies, with at least 45 people crushed to death and dozens injured in a stampede.

The disaster prompted a national outpouring of grief as devastated families rushed to identify their dead relatives and bury them ahead of the Jewish Sabbath. There was also anger toward authorities over an accident that experts had long feared, further clouding Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s hopes of remaining in office.

Netanyahu, who briefly visited Mount Meron at midday, offered his condolences. “In these moments our people unite and that is what we are doing at this moment as well,” he said.

He announced Sunday would be a day of national mourning and said he had joined the masses of people who donated blood for the victims. Israel’s President Reuven Rivlin lit 45 candles in honor of the dead. Messages of condolences poured in from around the world.

President Joe Biden said he was heartbroken and had called Netanyahu to offer support. “The people of the United States and Israel are bound together by our families, our faiths, and our histories, and we will stand with our friends,” he said.

The stampede erupted around 1 a.m. as people began to leave and thronged a narrow, tunnel-like passage. According to witnesses, people began to fall on a slippery ramp, causing others to trip and sparking panic.

Avigdor Hayut, who survived the stampede, described slipping on the ramp and getting trapped in the crowd with his two sons, ages 10 and 13.

“My son screamed, ‘I’m dying,'” he told Israel’s public TV station Kan. A policeman tried to pull him and his younger son out of the crowd but couldn’t move them.

“The policeman threw up and started crying, and I understood what he was looking at, what I couldn’t see,” said Hayut, 36, who suffered a broken ankle and ribs. “I thought this was the end.” He said he began to pray and “simply waited.”

Hours later, in hospital with Shmuel, his 10-year-old, they learned that his other son, Yedidya, had died.

Lag BaOmer is very popular with Israel’s ultra-Orthodox community. The main event takes place each year at Mount Meron. Tens of thousands, mostly ultra-Orthodox, celebrate to honor Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai, a 2nd-century sage and mystic who is believed to be buried there. This year, authorities said some 100,000 people attended.

The crowds light bonfires, dance and have large festive meals as part of the celebrations. Across the country, even in secular areas, smaller groups gather in parks and forests for barbecues and bonfires.

Video footage from the scene of the disaster showed large numbers of people, most of them black-clad ultra-Orthodox men, squeezed in the tunnel. Witnesses complained that police barricades had prevented people from exiting properly.

“The officers who were there couldn’t care less,” said Velvel Brevda, a rabbi who witnessed the stampede. He blamed the government for the deaths of “beautiful holy Jews that were killed here for no reason whatsoever.”

At least 45 people were killed, according to the Israeli Health Ministry, with four people remaining in critical condition and dozens more hospitalized.

Bodies were later taken to Israel’s central forensic institute for identification, where distraught families waited to identify their loved ones. Israel’s Army Radio said some 40 people remained unaccounted for.

By Friday night, 32 victims had been identified. Israeli media earlier published a partial list of the victims, including a 9-year-old boy, a pair of brothers, 12 and 14, and a father of 11 children. An unknown number of American citizens, two Canadians and an Argentinian were also among the dead.

In a race against time, a number of funerals were held before sundown Friday, the start of the Jewish Sabbath when burials do not take place. The death toll at Mount Meron exceeded the 44 people killed in a 2010 forest fire, previously believed to be Israel’s deadliest civilian tragedy.

The Justice Ministry said the police were launching a probe into possible criminal misconduct by officers.

Experts have long warned that the Mount Meron celebrations were ripe for disaster due to the crowded conditions, large fires and hot weather. In a 2008 report, the state comptroller, a watchdog government office, warned conditions at the site, including escape routes, “endanger the public.”

Last year, the celebrations were greatly scaled back due to coronavirus restrictions. But this year’s event marked the first religious gathering to be held legally since Israel lifted most restrictions in the wake of its successful vaccination program.

According to Health Ministry guidelines, public gatherings continue to be limited to no more than 500 people. But Israeli media said that Netanyahu assured ultra-Orthodox leaders that the celebrations would take place, despite objections from public health officials. Netanyahu’s office did not respond to requests for comment.

The deadly stampede was bound to have political reverberations at a time of great uncertainty following an inconclusive March election, the fourth in two years.

Netanyahu has so far been unsuccessful in forming a governing coalition. His time to do so runs out on Tuesday. If he fails, his political rivals will get a chance to try to cobble together an alliance.

Netanyahu has long relied on powerful ultra-Orthodox parties as allies and will need their support if he wants to keep faint hopes alive of staying in power.

During Friday’s visit to Mount Meron, Netanyahu was jeered by dozens of religious protesters. If such sentiments spread, it could further hurt Netanyahu’s prospects.

The stampede also threatened to deepen a broad public backlash against the ultra-Orthodox.

Netanyahu came under heavy criticism over the past year for allowing ultra-Orthodox communities to flout safety guidelines by opening schools and synagogues and holding mass funerals. The ultra-Orthodox communities were among the country’s hardest hit by COVID-19.

Gideon Rahat, a political scientist at the Hebrew University and fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute, said the coming days would see a battle over “framing” of the event. Netanyahu will call for national healing and unity, while his opponents will say he is unfit to remain in office and its time for change.

“There is a battle on the framing, who is to blame, not to blame,” he said. “Already we see the signs of it.”

___

Associated Press photographer Ariel Schalit contributed to this report.

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Israel mourns deaths of 45 in stampede at religious festivalon April 30, 2021 at 5:31 pm Read More »

Former Joliet Diocese teacher charged after video showed ‘inappropriate communication with a minor’on April 30, 2021 at 5:41 pm

A former Catholic school teacher in the southwest suburbs has been charged after a video surfaced showing him ‘engaged in inappropriate communication with a minor.”

Jeremy M. Hylka was charged with traveling to meet a child and grooming, according to Joliet police. A warrant was issued for his arrest.

Hylka was a teacher at St. Joseph Catholic School in Lockport, as well as St. Paul the Apostle Catholic Church and the Cathedral of St. Raymond Nonnatus, both in Joliet, according to a statement from the Diocese of Joliet.

He was fired after diocesan officials learned about the charges Wednesday. Hylka is prohibited from working or volunteering for any diocesan school or parish, the diocese said in a statement.

“We urge any individuals who have suspicions of child abuse to notify local law enforcement authorities and diocesan officials,” the statement said. “We remain steadfast in our commitment to providing a safe environment for all children under our care.”

Joliet police were expected to provide additional details at a news conference later Friday.

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Former Joliet Diocese teacher charged after video showed ‘inappropriate communication with a minor’on April 30, 2021 at 5:41 pm Read More »