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2021 NFL Draft: Teddy Bridgewater trade helps Chicago BearsJordan Campbellon April 28, 2021 at 6:52 pm

The Chicago Bears may have seen a path into the top 10 of the 2021 NFL Draft open for them on Wednesday as the Denver Broncos acquired veteran quarterback Teddy Bridgewater from the Carolina Panthers. After the Panther acquired Sam Darnold from the New York Jets earlier this off-season, it seemed inevitable that Bridgewater would […]

2021 NFL Draft: Teddy Bridgewater trade helps Chicago BearsDa Windy CityDa Windy City – A Chicago Sports Site – Bears, Bulls, Cubs, White Sox, Blackhawks, Fighting Illini & More

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2021 NFL Draft: Teddy Bridgewater trade helps Chicago BearsJordan Campbellon April 28, 2021 at 6:52 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: April 28, 2021on April 28, 2021 at 8:00 pm

Good afternoon. Here’s the latest news you need to know in Chicago. It’s about a 5-minute read that will brief you on today’s biggest stories.

This afternoon brings a chance of showers with a high near 50 degrees. Tonight will be cloudy with a low around 46. Tomorrow there’s a chance for more rain, mainly before 2 p.m., with a high near 61.

Top story

Police bodycam video shows officer shoot Anthony Alvarez as he ran from cops with a gun in his hand

Video released this morning shows a Chicago police officer fatally shoot Anthony Alvarez as he ran from police with a gun in his hand in the Portage Park neighborhood.

A Chicago police officer yells “Drop the gun! Drop the gun!” before firing five shots from close range, according to the police bodycam video released by the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which investigates police shootings.

Anthony Alvarez, 22, collapses onto the front sidewalk of a home on the 5200 block of West Eddy Street in the early-morning hours of March 31.

A gun can be seen in Alvarez’s right hand in the footage captured by the body camera of the officer who pulled the trigger.

A camera mounted to the home feet from where Alvarez collapsed shows a gun fall from his hand as he fell to the pavement.

“Why you shooting me?” Alvarez asks the officer.

“You had a gun,” said the officer, who then tells his partner to place handcuffs on Alvarez.

“No, I’m going to render aid,” his partner says before applying a tourniquet and administering chest compressions.

The video doesn’t show Alvarez pointing a gun at the officers in pursuit.

Alvarez was wounded twice, once in the right side of his back with an exit wound in the upper right chest, and once in his right thigh, according to a police document released Wednesday. Alvarez was pronounced dead at Illinois Masonic Medical Center.

Read Mitch Dudek and Fran Spielman’s full story on COPA’s release of the videos in the police shooting of Anthony Alvarez.

More news you need

  1. The city plans to reveal more details for its proposal to create a COVID-19 vaccine passport for major Chicago events in the coming days. Mayor Lightfoot said today the goal will be to use the system as an incentive to bolster vaccination rates among young people most likely to attend outdoor events like Lollapalooza and Riot Fest.
  2. Students returning to public universities in Illinois this fall may need to take the COVID-19 vaccine first. During an unrelated press conference today, Gov. Pritzker didn’t rule out a statewide mandate requiring students to take the vaccine before going back to state universities later this year.
  3. Larry Panozzo, one of the Chicago area’s longest-running funeral directors, died earlier this month at age 91, his son announced. Licensed for 67 years, Panozzo ran the Panozzo Brothers funeral home, which was founded in Roseland, up until his retirement in February.
  4. Candace Rae Jackson-Akiwumi, President Joe Biden’s nomination to sit on the Chicago-based Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals, would be the very rare judge who – if confirmed – previously served as a criminal defense lawyer. Lynn Sweet looked at Jackson-Akiwumi’s unique background ahead of her confirmation hearing with the Senate Judiciary Committee today.
  5. Arlington International Racecourse will open the 2021 season on Friday. Tickets for what’s potentially the final season of horse racing at the venue, which has been put up for sale by its corporate owner, are now available.
  6. Steppenwolf Theatre Company today announced its 2021-22 comeback season, which for the first time will feature works written exclusively by ensemble members. Along with the return of in-person productions, Steppenwolf will also debut its highly anticipated new theater center.

A bright one

Batavia-based Fermilab welcomes first bison calf of the year

Along with flowers, baby bison are in season at Fermilab in Batavia as the national physics lab welcomed its first bison calf of the year earlier this week.

Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, or Fermilab, was established in 1967 as a United States Department of Energy national laboratory specializing in high-energy particle physics. Fermilab’s first director, Robert Wilson, established the herd in 1969.

The calf was born on Monday morning, according to a statement from Fermilab. The lab says it’s expecting 16 to 18 calves to be born this spring.

The first bison calf of the year was born Monday morning at Fermilab in Batavia, Ill.
Ryan Postel/Fermilab

The herd currently has 32 bison with 30 females and two males that are switched out periodically to promote the herd’s health and genetic diversity. Through genetic testing, the lab says it’s confirmed the herd shows no evidence of cattle gene mixing.

Bison nearly went extinct in the 19th century, but thanks to conservation efforts, that’s no longer the case. Still, conserving the bison genome is still a federally recognized priority, the statement said.

The lab is currently closed to the public, but those who’d like to view photos or read more about the bison herd can visit Fermilab’s website.

— Grace Asiegbu (full story link here)

From the press box

Just a day before the 2021 NFL Draft, Rick Morrissey has a message for Bears fans: If you want GM Ryan Pace gone sooner than later, you should hope that he doesn’t draft a quarterback in the first round this year. Trading up to land one of the big-name QBs, which may be the plan, would likely buy Pace at least another year or two in Chicago, Morrissey writes.

Not only did the Blackhawks lose Adam Boqvist for the remainder of the season to a wrist injury, but their loss against the Lightning last night effectively put their postseason odds close to zero. Since March 6, the Hawks have won just nine of 24 games.

Your daily question ?

How do you feel about Chicago’s planned “Vax Pass” system to limit admission to select concerts based on vaccination status?

Email us (please include your first name and where you live) and we might include your answer in the next Afternoon Edition.

Yesterday, we asked you: If you know someone who’s graduating this spring amid the pandemic, how are you planning to celebrate? Here’s what some of you said…

“My daughter graduates virtually on Mother’s Day.” — Kathy Paskvalich Adler

“My daughter is graduating from high school and we will have an outdoors graduation. Limited tickets but we’ll still celebrate afterwards outdoors as a family!” — Estell Clark

“This momma is watching two graduate from college via zoom. I’ll be popping a bottle of champagne for each. They are both so amazing and I’m so proud of their accomplishments.” — Melody Felton

“Pool party for her and her friends. Not spending money at any restaurant this year.” — Carl Loewes

“Catholic School got approval from Arch this week for graduation. Ceremony will be smaller. Masks required. Our party afterwards will be in backyard. Most of the family is vaccinated.” — Pam Coz

Thanks for reading the Chicago Afternoon Edition. Got a story you think we missed? Email us here.

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Afternoon Edition: April 28, 2021on April 28, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

Pair charged in deadly Albany Park drive-byon April 28, 2021 at 8:02 pm

An alleged gunman and his getaway driver in a deadly Albany Park drive-by were ordered held without bail Wednesday.

Prezila Apreza, 20, slowed the silver Chevrolet Trailblazer she was driving on Sept. 16 so that Maverick Cela could shoot his weapon from the back seat at Samuel Lique, Assistant Cook County State’s Attorney Kevin DeBoni said.

Lique was struck by the bullets as he stood on the sidewalk in front of a Metro PCS store, at 3627 W. Lawrence St.

“I got him,” Cela, 19, said after shooting at least nine 9-mm rounds at Lique, DeBoni said.

Maverick Cela arrest photo
Maverick Cela
Chicago police

Paramedics who treated Lique saw that he was armed with a 0.380-caliber handgun, but it was later determined that the weapon had not been fired, DeBoni said.

Lique, 20, was later pronounced dead at a hospital.

The shooting, which was captured by a Chicago police POD camera, took place during a spike in gun violence in Albany Park. It was the neighborhood’s third shooting within several days, and came less than 24 hours after five people were wounded in shooting a block away.

The Trailblazer used in Lique’s murder was found by police in Skokie that night for its alleged use in a credit card case. The license plates on the SUV were registered to Apreza, but they did not match the ones captured on surveillance footage of the shooting, DeBoni said.

Prezila Apreza arrest photo
Prezila Apreza
Chicago police

Apreza and Cela discussed the shooting on social media with each other and others for the next several days, DeBoni said. In one conversation, Cela mentioned to someone that there would be no shell casings inside the Trailblazer, but that his fingerprints might be inside, DeBoni said.

Cela also allegedly assured Apreza that police were looking for another person in connection to the murder. He also told her he could show her how to delete data from her cellphone, DeBoni said.

After Apreza and Cela were arrested Monday, Apreza admitted to changing the Trailblazer’s license plates before and after Lique’s shooting, DeBoni said. Apreza also allegedly told investigators she had driven Cela to the scene of the crime.

A witness who was in the Trailblazer’s front passenger seat at the time of the shooting also identified Apreza as the driver and Cela as the gunman, DeBoni said.

There was no evidence Apreza knew the shooting would take place, an assistant public defender said. She also had no motive for participating in the murder, the defense attorney added.

Cela lives with his mother in the city, another assistant public defender told Judge David Navarro.

Apreza and Cela are expected back in court May 18.

Read more on crime, and track the city’s homicides.

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Pair charged in deadly Albany Park drive-byon April 28, 2021 at 8:02 pm Read More »

2021 NFL Draft carries highest stakes of Bears GM Ryan Pace’s careeron April 28, 2021 at 8:21 pm

Unless the Bears have some preposterous backroom deal with general manager Ryan Pace in which they’re giving him multiple years to turn the team around, this will be the most high-stakes draft of his career.

The low bar for Pace to save his job is probably 10 wins and the playoffs, and if he wants any shot of clearing it, he needs three instant starters with his first three picks — Nos. 20, 52 and 83 — and a Darnell Mooney-like gem among his fifth-round pick and four sixth-rounders.

That’s what Pace needs, regardless of whether he was willing to admit it in a pre-draft press conference that began with a preemptive apology for avoiding answering any questions.

“For us, the draft’s just about collecting talented players, not just focusing on a need right now,” he said. “That can get you in trouble.”

He’s right that need-based drafting is how teams sometimes miss out on generational talents, but the Bears made it clear by keeping Pace and coach Matt Nagy that they’re focused solely on this season. And far as this season is concerned, the Bears need a starting offensive tackle, cornerback and wide receiver.

That’s an extremely difficult target for Pace or any other GM to hit, but it’s a predicament of his own making. The Bears went into this offseason knowing it’d take a miracle to make them a contender, and that miracle is staying in Seattle. Pace’s next-best moonshot is a perfect draft.

This team went 16-16 the last two seasons, has shaky depth and had more negatives than positives in free agency. Pace has no more margin of error to absorb a Mitch Trubisky, Adam Shaheen or Kevin White.

The ideal approach is to fill needs by the end of free agency, allowing the luxury of drafting the best available player regardless of position. But the Bears were out of money — at present, they don’t even have enough salary-cap space to sign their draft picks — and nothing about their plan has been ideal.

That’s especially true at quarterback, where they’ve got 33-year-old journeyman Andy Dalton, 32-year-old journeyman Nick Foles and … Oops. That’s all.

It is excruciatingly fitting that in a dream draft where the consensus is that there are five potential franchise quarterbacks — Trevor Lawrence, Zach Wilson, Trey Lance, Mac Jones and Justin Fields — the Bears appear to be well out of reach of any of them at No. 20. It is the curse of the perpetually mediocre.

The first three teams in the draft — the Jaguars, Jets and 49ers — are virtually committed to drafting a quarterback. So even if the Bears trade up, which is not advisable, they’ll be doing so for no better than the fourth choice of those five. And given that the 49ers had to give the Dolphins two future first-round picks and a third to move up from 12th to third, the Bears can’t afford to make the necessary jump.

The cost of trading future picks is never felt in the moment. Quite the opposite, in fact. Who fretted about those distant first-rounders when Pace used them to trade for megastar Khalil Mack? Nobody.

It doesn’t even hurt that much when the team arrives at the draft itself and has to wait until No. 73 to make a pick as the Bears did in 2019 or at No. 47 last year. The true pain comes two or three years later, when linebacker Roquan Smith is the only first-round investment maturing into his prime. It’s imperative to continuously replenish.

The organization can’t keep doing that to itself — not for the mere privilege of having fourth or fifth choice among quarterbacks and not with the possibility of a comprehensive rebuild looming in 2022.

Instead, while it wouldn’t be as thrilling as a new quarterback, picking up an offensive tackle such as Virginia Tech’s Christian Darrisaw or Oklahoma State’s Teven Jenkins would be prudent Thursday. That immediately plugs the biggest leak in a Bears’ offense that currently has Charles Leno at left tackle and Germain Ifedi at right.

If no offensive tackle of that caliber is available at No. 20, the Bears could trade down, add an extra pick to replace the fourth-rounder Pace traded for Foles, and add a multidimensional playmaker like Florida wide receiver Kadarius Toney.

There is no foolproof plan for the draft, but the simplest approach is best for the Bears this year: Fill needs.

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2021 NFL Draft carries highest stakes of Bears GM Ryan Pace’s careeron April 28, 2021 at 8:21 pm Read More »

Man charged with deadly shooting outside funeral repast in Lawndaleon April 28, 2021 at 8:28 pm

A 35-year-old Austin man shot and killed a man outside a funeral repast that they both had attended in Lawndale, Cook County prosecutors said Wednesday.

Prosecutors didn’t say why Antwoine Moss chased and shot Devon Jackson multiple times on April 16.

But Moss’ attorney suggested they had an argument earlier in the day connected to a death in Florida that Moss believed 33-year-old Jackson, or Jackson’s relative, was responsible for.

Prosecutors said the two men didn’t know each other or have contact before the shooting, but Moss’ attorney claimed Jackson had threatened Moss with a gun earlier in the day when they “had words.”

Jackson was walking to his car at 10:30 p.m. when Moss stepped out of a silver Buick Regal sedan with a gun in his hand and followed, Assistant State’s Attorney Kevin DeBoni said.

Jackson put up his hands and said “you don’t have to do this” before Moss began firing, DeBoni said.

Antwoine Moss arrest photo
Antwoine Moss
Chicago police

Moss alleged continued to fire and chased Jackson as he tried to get away.

Jackson, who has a permit to carry a concealed weapon, then took out his gun and fired back, DeBoni said.

Multiple witnesses said Jackson was unarmed when Moss began firing and eight people identified Moss, who used to live in the block, as the shooter, DeBoni said.

Jackson was shot in the chest and thigh. He collapsed in a vacant lot in the 2700 block of West Flournoy Street and later died at Stroger Hospital, authorities said.

When Moss returned to the area where the repast was being held, he allegedly told one witness he “f—— up” and then took a Lyft home.

Moss turned himself in to police with his attorney at his side on Monday.

Judge David Navarro ordered Moss held without bail.

He is expected back in court on May 17.

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Man charged with deadly shooting outside funeral repast in Lawndaleon April 28, 2021 at 8:28 pm Read More »

Police bodycam video shows officer shoot Anthony Alvarez as he ran from cops with a gun in his handon April 28, 2021 at 5:59 pm

Video released Wednesday morning shows a Chicago police officer fatally shoot Anthony Alvarez as he ran from police with a gun in his hand in the Portage Park neighborhood.

A Chicago police officer yells “Drop the gun! Drop the gun!” before firing five shots from close range, according to the police bodycam video released by the city’s Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which investigates police shootings.

Anthony Alvarez, 22, collapses onto the front sidewalk of a home on the 5200 block of West Eddy Street in the early-morning hours of March 31.

A gun can be seen in Alvarez’s right hand in the footage captured by the body camera of the officer who pulled the trigger.

A camera mounted to the home feet from where Alvarez collapsed shows a gun fall from his hand as he fell to the pavement.

“Why you shooting me?” Alvarez asks the officer.

“You had a gun,” said the officer, who then tells his partner to place handcuffs on Alvarez.

“No, I’m going to render aid,” his partner says before applying a tourniquet and administering chest compressions.

The video doesn’t show Alvarez pointing a gun at the officers in pursuit.

Alvarez was wounded twice, once in the right side of his back with an exit wound in the upper right chest, and once in his right thigh, according to a police document released Wednesday. Alvarez was pronounced dead at Illinois Masonic Medical Center.

The Chicago Police Department and COPA said Alvarez ran off as tactical officers approached him at a gas station, leading to a foot chase. What the officers wanted from Alvarez wasn’t disclosed.

However, at an unrelated news conference before the video was released, Mayor Lori Lightfoot referred to it as “a minor traffic offense,” saying: “We can’t live in a world where a minor traffic offense results in someone being shot and killed. That’s not acceptable to me and shouldn’t be acceptable to anyone.”

COPA said it has recommended the officer who shot Alvarez be relieved of police powers during the investigation.

Police Supt. David Brown said Wednesday at a news conference following the release of the video that he hadn’t been notified of the COPA recommendation.

Brown will have 90 days to decide whether he agrees or disagrees with the recommendation, at which time he must share his decision with the police board, which will ultimately decide the officers fate.

Brown declined to share additional details of the shooting, what led to it or his thoughts on it, saying it was important he refrain from sharing his opinion so COPA could conduct a “clean and clear” investigation.

The 30-year-old officer who fired the fatal shots joined the force in 2015, according to the Invisible Institute, which tracks police discipline. The Institute’s website says the officer was accused of misconduct in a South Side traffic stop in 2017, but the case was closed without being sustained. The Sun-Times isn’t naming him because he isn’t officially accused of wrongdoing.

Lightfoot and attorneys representing the Alvarez family issued a joint statement Wednesday morning that called for peace.

“Both parties are acutely aware of the range of emotions that will accompany the release of these materials, and we collectively issue this statement and ask that those who wish to express themselves do so peacefully and with respect for our communities and the residents of Chicago,” the statement said.

“The Alvarez family … has advised that they believe that the release of these videos will be the beginning of a long process of healing for the family, and for all those who knew and loved Anthony,” the statement said.

“COPA’s investigation is ongoing, and both parties expect and have the utmost confidence that officials will determine the complete and unbiased set of facts in this case. … We ask that all continue to respect the Alvarez family’s right to privacy as they grieve during this incredibly painful time.”

Alvarez’s family saw the video footage Tuesday.

“I want more answers, the videos I saw do not explain what I saw in the morgue,” Veronica Alvarez, Anthony’s mother, told Fox32 Chicago in Spanish on Tuesday. “I want to know why they were chasing him. As of now, I don’t have answers.”

Todd Pugh, an attorney for the family, told the station that “it was incredibly difficult, it was an absolutely chilling scene, and as his mother indicated already, it has left us with more questions than answers.

“But I know what I saw, and I saw Chicago police officers shoot their son as he ran away from them,” Pugh said.

Ald. George Cardenas (12th), former chairman of the City Council’s Hispanic Caucus, called the video a “tough one” to watch and the shooting of Alvarez difficult to justify.

“The fact that this young man is walking with something in his hands. … As far as I could see, he didn’t rob anybody. Then, all of the sudden, the cop comes in pretty aggressive,” Cardenas said.

“The guy didn’t look like he was a threat to the officer. … It appears he had a gun, but he was obviously not facing the officer. That’s not where it should end,” said Cardenas, whose ward includes the location where 13-year-old Adam Toledo was shot by Chicago police last month.

“If he faces the officer with the gun, then maybe that’s a reason to kind of react. … But if he’s not facing you, you’ve got to give him time to … get on his knees, put his hands behind his back. The whole thing was, `Drop the gun. Drop the gun.’ Then, pow, pow, pow. That’s a sequence that is very fast for somebody who is running and has adrenaline. The situation is not good.”

Cardenas noted that Illinois’ concealed carry law “allows you to carry a gun, so a lot of people are gonna have guns in their hands. That’s not a reason to shoot anybody.”

“If we keep this up, we’re gonna go broke” as a city, Cardenas said, in a clear reference to a stream of multi-million settlements stemming from police-involved shootings.

“We’ve got to reform this stuff. We’ve got to come up with a way to handle and de-escalate. Wait ’til more backup arrives. If he’s a threat to you, then I understand. You’ve got to protect yourself. But that has to be beyond a reasonable doubt. If he faces you with a gun, I understand why you’ve got to shoot him. But that was not the case here.”

Ald. Ariel Reboyras (30th), whose ward includes the 5200-block of West Eddy, where the Alvarez shooting occurred, could not be reached for comment.

Neighboring Ald. Felix Cardona Jr. (31st) urged COPA to complete its investigation of the Alvarez shooting post-haste.

“The family needs answers. The city needs answers,” Cardona said.

Cardona was non-committal on whether he considers the Alvarez shooting justified or whether it appears to him that the young man was shot in the back.

“We’re gonna have different camera angles. You’re gonna have different interpretations and different ways of how people see this, depending on the lens,” the alderman said.

The shooting happened two days after an officer shot and killed Toledo on March 29 in Little Village. Toledo’s killing also happened during a foot chase, prompting Lightfoot to direct CPD to draft a new foot pursuit policy.

“For the second time in weeks, the people of Chicago are presented with video footage of a young Latino man being shot and killed by police during a foot pursuit. Again, a family suffers as the Alvarez family experiences the grief and pain of witnessing the last moments of a loved one,” Colleen Connell, executive director of ACLU of Illinois, said in a prepared statement.

“The lack of meaningful police reform in Chicago is not only costing the city lives, but also taking a psychological toll on communities of color. The city must abandon the current snail’s pace of police reform and become serious about making real changes that serve all neighborhoods.”

Ald. Michael Rodriguez (22nd), who represents the ward where the Toledo family lives, called the Alvarez video “gut-wrenching.”

“I’m sick of watching these videos,” Rodriquez said. “I saw a guy with a gun running from police get shot. A guy running away from a police officer. These foot chases are one of the glaring omissions of execution by our police department.”

After talking to “a couple of people inside” CPD, Rodriguez said, “there’s some questions whether there was probable cause for the pursuit” of Alvarez. “I can’t say more because I don’t know more.”

WARNING: GRAPHIC VIDEO

The mayor said Wednesday that CPD “is making progress on my directive to revise the foot chase policy. As I’ve said before, it’s one of the most dangerous activities that officers engage in. Dangerous for themselves. Dangerous for the person being pursued. And it’s dangerous for members of the public.”

Lightfoot urged everyone to “look at both the raw footage” of the Alvarez shooting “at real speed” as well as the “frame-by-frame” of what happened.

“I understand, having investigated many of these shootings, that officers are, in many instances, called upon to make split-second decisions, particularly in instances like this one where there’s a gun,” said Lightfoot, a former Police Board president.

“Nonetheless … a traffic incident … should not result in the death of anyone. So we have more work to do to be sure.”

Lightfoot said she hopes to have that new foot chase policy ready for public review sometime next month.

But, she said, it’s got to be done “the right way” with plenty of input.

“What I’ve encouraged the department to do is to make sure they’re engaging on the front-end with key stakeholders, not the least of which is line police officers who are gonna be responsible for implementing whatever the new policy is. We have to have their voices, as well as community voices, in those discussions … and reflected in the new policy,” the mayor said.

“It’s really important that we get it right,” Brown said of the policy.

Contributing: David Struett

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Police bodycam video shows officer shoot Anthony Alvarez as he ran from cops with a gun in his handon April 28, 2021 at 5:59 pm Read More »

Boeing posts loss, takes a hit on Air Force One workon April 28, 2021 at 6:14 pm

Boeing Co. reported a wider-than-expected first-quarter loss on Wednesday and took another charge on its program to build two new Air Force One presidential planes after firing a contractor it hired to help perform the work.

The company did not provide a timetable for fixing the latest problem with its 737 Max jet, an electrical issue that has forced airlines to park about 100 of the planes.

The combination of self-inflicted damage and a coronavirus pandemic that has depressed demand for new planes pushed Boeing to its sixth straight quarterly loss. However, CEO David Calhoun said the company is at an “inflection point,” with an increase in vaccinations against COVID-19 raising hopes for a rapid recovery in air travel that could translate to aircraft orders.

Boeing lost $561 million — $537 million attributable to shareholders. Revenue was roughly in line with Wall Street forecasts as the company generated cash by delivering more new airliners than it did a year ago.

After the quarter ended, Boeing suffered a new setback with its 737 Max jetliners, the grounding of dozens of the planes because of issues around electrical grounding of some parts. Boeing continues to say that the fix is simple and will take three or four days per plane once the Federal Aviation Administration approves Boeing’s repair method, but airlines including Southwest, American and United have now been without some of their Max jets for nearly a month with no certainty about when they will be able to use them again.

Boeing has halted Max deliveries while it works on a fix for the electrical issues, which Calhoun said will make April aircraft deliveries — a key source of cash — “very light.”

Boeing only recently resumed deliveries of its two-aisle 787 jets after discovering flaws in the fuselages. And the debut of its next plane, the 777X, is behind schedule because of design changes.

The company is also dealing with delays in its work to build replacements for the current Air Force One planes, which are specially modified 747 jumbo jets. The program is not crucial to Boeing’s financial health but carries prestige, building the presidential planes that are recognizable around the world.

Boeing took a first-quarter charge of $318 million charge related to its $3.9 billion contract with the Air Force for new presidential planes. Boeing fired and sued subcontractor GDC Technics, which in turn laid off about 200 workers and filed for bankruptcy protection this week. GDC, hired for interior work on the planes, filed a countersuit against Boeing.

It is not clear whether Boeing will meet its December 2024 deadline for delivering the planes.

“We continue to make steady progress on this program and are working closely with our customer to assess impact and mitigate risks to the delivery schedule,” Boeing spokeswoman Deborah VanNierop said in an email.

Air Force spokesman Joshua Benedetti said Boeing recently recommended a new schedule for the work, which the Air Force is analyzing. He did not describe the change Boeing wants to make.

During a call with executives, a Bank of America analyst challenged Calhoun about issues affecting a half-dozen different Boeing models.

“These programs are big and they are complicated,” Calhoun said, adding that the company will get “a whole lot better.”

Jeff Windau, an analyst for Edward Jones, said he believes Boeing leaders “are trying to change their culture and revitalize the engineering approach. Time will tell how things progress.”

Calhoun said in a memo to employees that while the pandemic continues to challenge the airplane market, the company sees 2021 as a turning point as vaccines distributed more rapidly.

Excluding one-time items, Boeing’s loss was $1.53 per share. Analysts expected a loss of 97 cents per share, according to a FactSet survey.

The loss was smaller than the $628 million loss Boeing reported a year earlier, when the pandemic was just starting to hit the airline industry. In the first quarter of pre-pandemic 2019, the company earned $2.15 billion on revenue of $22.92 billion.

Revenue fell 10% from a year earlier, to $15.22 billion, nearly matching the $15.23 billion that analysts expected. Boeing generated cash when regulators in the U.S. and other countries allowed the company to resume deliveries of 737 Max jets, which were grounded for nearly two years after two crashes that killed 346 people.

Boeing delivered 77 commercial planes in the quarter, up from 50 in the same period last year, although revenue from those sales dropped.

The company’s defense and space business accounted for nearly half of Boeing revenue, and it earned a profit as revenue climbed 19%.

Last week, the company announced that the board raised Calhoun’s retirement age from 65 to 70, meaning he won’t be forced to step down next April. At the same time, Boeing said Chief Financial Officer Greg Smith, 54, will retire in July, a move that caught Wall Street off guard. Analysts speculated that Smith saw his path to the top job closed off by Calhoun’s extended term.

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Boeing posts loss, takes a hit on Air Force One workon April 28, 2021 at 6:14 pm Read More »

Deadly California arrest carries echoes of George Floyd caseon April 28, 2021 at 6:37 pm

SAN FRANCISCO — Police in Alameda, California, are under fire over the death of a Hispanic man who was pinned to the ground for more than five minutes in a video-recorded arrest that unfolded as a jury in Minneapolis was deliberating in the George Floyd case.

Autopsy findings on the cause of death have not been released, but the family of 26-year-old Mario Gonzalez blamed police, accusing them on Tuesday of using excessive force and escalating what should have been a minor encounter with the unarmed man.

“The police killed my brother in the same manner they killed George Floyd,” Gerardo Gonzalez said.

In a statement, the San Francisco Bay Area city said it is “committed to full transparency and accountability in the aftermath of Mr. Gonzalez’s death.”

The death is under investigation by the Alameda County Sheriff’s Department, the district attorney’s office and a former San Francisco city attorney hired by Alameda to lead an independent probe. The three officers involved in the arrest have been placed on paid leave.

Gonzalez stopped breathing following a scuffle with police on the evening of April 19 at a park, where officers had confronted him after receiving 911 calls that said he appeared disoriented or drunk. A police statement said Gonzalez had a medical emergency after officers tried to handcuff him.

The arrest took place just hours after the jury at the trial of former Minneapolis police Officer Derek Chauvin began deliberating. The next day, Chauvin was convicted of murder and manslaughter for pinning Floyd to the pavement with his knee on the Black man’s neck in a case that was likewise documented on video and touched off a national reckoning over racism and police brutality.

In Alameda, the nearly hourlong video from two officers’ body cameras released late Tuesday shows police talking to a seemingly dazed Gonzalez, who struggles to answer questions.

When Gonzalez doesn’t produce any identification, the officers are seen on video trying to force his hands behind his back to handcuff him, but he resists and they take him to the ground. They repeatedly ask him for his full name and birthdate.

“We’re going to take care of you, OK. We’re going to take care of you,” one officer says on the video.

“I think you just had too much to drink today, OK? That’s all,” the officer says. Later, he adds, “Mario, just please stop fighting us.”

Gonzalez, who weighed about 250 pounds, is seen grunting and shouting as he lies face down on wood chips while the officers restrain him. One officer puts an elbow on his neck and a knee on his shoulder.

“He’s lifting my whole body weight up,” an officer says at one point.

One officer also appears to put a knee on his back and leaves it there for about four minutes as Gonzalez gasps for air, saying, “I didn’t do nothing, OK?”

Gonzalez’s protests appear to weaken, and after about five minutes he seems to lose consciousness.

Shortly before he stops breathing, one officer asks the other: “Think we can roll him on his side?”

The other answers, “I don’t want to lose what I got, man.”

The video shows officers rolling Gonzalez over and performing cardiopulmonary resuscitation. They are also seen administering at least two doses of Narcan, which is given to counteract opiate overdoses. Gonzalez was later pronounced dead at a hospital.

Police also made public two calls dispatchers received about Gonzalez that prompted them to send officers to the park, which sits at the end of a cul-de-sac of well-kept homes with manicured gardens. One caller said Gonzalez was “kind of talking to himself” and “not making any sense”

The caller added: “I mean, he’s not doing anything wrong, he’s just scaring my wife.”

A second man told a dispatcher that Gonzalez had two drugstore baskets with alcohol bottles and that it appeared he was breaking the security tags off them.

Gonzalez had a 4-year-old son and also was the main caretaker of his 22-year-old brother, who has autism, his family said.

Geoffrey Alpert, a professor of criminology at the University of South Carolina and an expert on police use of force, said officers should have rolled Gonzalez over as soon as they could. Keeping him on his stomach was “probably the worst thing that could have happened,” Alpert said.

“Once they’re controlling him, as we learned from the Floyd trial with all those medical experts, this position or compression is deadly,” he said.

He added: “Obviously he’s in some sort of mental crisis, and what’s the goal? What are they trying to do with him? Was he a danger?”

___

Associated Press writers Olga R. Rodriguez and Robert Jablon in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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