The Blackhawks’ last remaining playoff hopes, existing only in implausible scenarios entering the day, died quietly Tuesday.
A 7-4 loss at the hands of the Lightning, tying a neat bow on yet another eight-game season series in which the Hawks won just once — identically to their Predators series — snuffed out the last flame.
Hawks coach Jeremy Colliton had subtly admitted earlier Tuesday that he knew the playoffs had become unrealistic. But he nonetheless hoped his team could stay alive a bit longer to test the team’s many young players in pressure situations.
“Our hope coming in…is that we could be competitive and play meaningful games for as long as possible and of course do it with a lineup full of young guys, which we’ve delivered there,” Colliton said.
“The longer we can stay in the race, the better for everyone. It’s a lot easier to prepare for these types of games, especially with no fans, if the games mean something in the standings. That’s something we want to get a win tonight to extend it just a little more, understanding the situation we’re in.”
Colliton unfortunately won’t get his wish. The Hawks are still mathematically alive, but no sane human can look at either the standings — where the Hawks still trail the Predators and Stars by big margins — or the Hawks’ 9-15-0 record since March 6 and see any possible route.
Colliton also called on the Hawks to “go down fighting” and they did do that to an extent Tuesday, cutting a 6-2 deficit to 6-4 to make the game semi-interesting late.
It obviously wasn’t enough, though. The Hawks began Tuesday with a 0.8% playoff chance, per MoneyPuck; after the loss, it might take a microscope to read their updated odds.
Much of the night was spent down to four defensemen. Adam Boqvist left during the second period with a serious-looking right wrist injury after being spun into the ice by an Erik Cernak hit and didn’t return.
Connor Murphy, meanwhile, missed 17 minutes due to penalties for fighting Cernak, who’d waited impatiently for the duel since tempers first flared between the two teams in early March.
Goalie Kevin Lankinen was pulled for the second time in four games after allowing eight goals on 11 first-period shots. Ridden harder than the Red Line over the season’s second half, Lankinen has finally faltered lately, posting an .866 save percentage over his last nine appearances.
On the forward end, Mike Hardman made his NHL debut and Dylan Strome reentered the lineup after two eye-opening games as a healthy scratch, but it didn’t particularly matter. Nothing does anymore this season, at least when it comes to wins and losses.
The Hawks still have some things they can use their seven now-meaningless remaining games to learn. Do Strome, Nikita Zadorov, Adam Gaudette and others fit moving forward — and if so, where? How many minutes of experience can they give their plentiful first- and second-year players? Will Collin Delia ever start in goal again?
But the most significant question — “Can they make the playoffs?” — was answered for good Tuesday.
Actor Joseph Sikora taking a break from shooting Power 4ce with a Chinook caught with In the Box Charters out of St. Joseph, Michigan. | Provided by Chris Belz
Wisconsin’s general fishing season opens Saturday, a hometown actor made good with a big king, big largemouth bass being caught, bluegill moving shallower, and a mix of big fish at Clinton Lake are part of the sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report.
This sprawling raw-file Midwest Fishing Report contains everything from a Chicago actor meeting a king to big bass pulling up to lots of varied big fish at Clinton Lake.
Actor Joseph Sikora, product of Notre Dame College Prep and Columbia College, found some time for fishing between some recent shoots.
Lifelong friend Chris Belz emailed the photo at the top and this:
Hey Dale,
Appreciate your column and have enjoyed it for years thank you!
Find attached photo of Chicago’s very one, actor Joseph Sikora, who caught this 18lb King off of St Joes thanks to In the Box Charters.
Joe is currently filming Power 4ce in Chicago and had time to go fishing in between shoots.
Thanks, Chris Belz
Sikora has and is starring as Tommy Egan in various incarnations of Power.
WISCONSIN OPENER
Wisconsin’s general fishing season opens Saturday, May 1.
The Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources (DNR) reminds anglers that the 2021-2022 fishing season will open May 1, without any changes to season dates. All regulations and license requirements still apply.
Prospects look generally good. Weekend weather looks generally mellow. Various breakdowns for individual waters are in their usual places.
CHICAGO RIVER NOTE
The Daley Park launch (31st and Western) on the Sanitary Ship Canal/South Branch of the Chicago River is rented out Monday, May 3, and Tuesday, May 4, and will not be accessible to launchers.
LAKEFRONT PARKING
Chicago Park District’s parking passes for the fisherman’s parking lots at DuSable and Burnham harbors are on sale at Henry’s Sports and Bait in Bridgeport and Park Bait at Montrose Harbor.
Readers suggest SpotHero app downtown. Otherwise, here are some basics: Foster (free street parking or pay lot); Montrose (free street parking); Belmont (pay lots on north and south sides); Diversey (pay lot or street parking); DuSable Harbor (pay lot or fisherman’s lot); Northerly Island/Burnham Harbor (meters, pay lot or fisherman’s lot); 31st/Burnham (meter parking between McCormick Place and 31st Street Harbor); Oakwood/39th (meters); 63rd Street/Casino Pier (pay lot); Steelworkers Park (free street parking at east end of 87th); Cal Park (free parking).
AREA LAKES
Some bigger largemouth are starting to go; crappie vary from good to scarce and bluegill should heat up with the weather.
Provided by Rob AboucharJelainie Gutierez with a largemouth bass from Busse.
Rob Abouchar emailed the photo above and this update, mostly from Busse:
Hi Dale
I wanted to email before things get real busy with school, music and other things. It was a great day at Busse Lake South Pool on Saturday. It was an outing that reminds one why we fish. I had the Leyden Bass Club out for sectionals practice and it was the kind of morning you could tell they might be hitting. Muskrats, White Egrets, and red wingers were abundant and the lake was like glass. Fish were bioiling and jumping, with minnows moving in the shallows. First time fisherman and new club member Jelainie Gutierez had a day she will most likely remember for a long time. 40 bluegill and other panfish; possibly shiners caught on her first time fishing ever. Beginners luck or a natural I don’t know. Other club members got in on the panfish action as the bass were still very reluctant to bite. Even Robert the Bus driver got in on the action as he was due to catch just a fish. To cap the day off coach Mike Hurt was able to coax a pre-spawn Largemouth out of the still cold waters with a Jointed Rapala in black and white as the sun started to come out and the temps warmed.
Next up hopefully a trip to farmer Bobs farm pond in Wisconsin Kettlemoraine area near Alpine valley this weekend.
Tight Lines and Good Health
Rob
OK, that just makes me happy.
ProvidedBryan Missey with big largemouth bass.
Bryan Missey emailed the photo above and this:
Hi Dale,
This bass weighed 6.07lbs on my digital scale. I caught it on a spinnerbait at a Cook County pond. She put up an awesome fight, but I managed to bring her in on 8lb test line. Keep up the good work.
Sincerely,
Bryan Missey
He added:
That’s the third six pounder I’ve caught and released there. Let them spread their genes.
Bryan
ProvidedKen “Husker” O’Malley with a nice crappie.
Ken “Husker” O’Malley emailed the photo above and this:
Hey Dale,
Here is a recap of this past weeks fishing.
Area lakes- the cold front that hit during the week had waters temps going down the the low 50’s. Fish have pushed off fom the shallows to the main basin and outside weed lines .
Bass have been decent on lipless crank baits fished in the main basin. Ripping the bait off the top of the weeds caused a reaction bite. Slow crawling a jig and craw trailer along the bottom got a few bigger bass.
Crappie are along the outside weed lines. Use crank baits to find the schools with active fish. Then follow-up with a variety of plastics fished under a float. A few decent bluegill can be had as well with this presentation.
Here is the nature pic of the week. A reminder that spring is still present.
TTYL
—
Ken “Husker” O’Malley
Husker Outdoors Waterwerks fishing team
ProvidedRico Cantu with a good largemouth bass.
Rico Cantu emailed the photo below and this on Monday:
Hey Dale I got this nice bass last Friday it weighted about 4-1/2 lb and was 20 inches, I’m still looking for the crappies to start but this spring has been a strange one and we need rain, we’ll take care and be safe.Rico Cantu Lockport IL.
Rico Cantu from Lockport IL.
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery reported that when targeting largemouth in west suburb ponds you need to work through the slow periods to the sporadic windows.
Pete Lamar emailed:
Hi Dale,
Interesting weekend. I fished three different bodies of water and found 55 degree water in all of them. The warming appeared to have leveled off last week: those temperatures weren’t very different than I’d found the week before. However, with three consecutive days near 80 degrees, the warming trend has likely resumed.
I fished a couple of Kane County F.P. ponds/lakes on Friday and Saturday. I got a mix of bluegills and bass, nothing noteworthy as far as size. Fish did bite well, but once hooked were pretty docile in the cold water. A lot of the bass were in very close (staging for the upcoming spawn?) in shallow water. I probably spooked more of them than I hooked. Bluegills were out deeper.
. . .
Pete
BRAIDWOOD LAKE
Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset. Click here for the preview.
CHAIN O’LAKES AREA
Provided photoPat Karpinski with a PB muskie.
Pat Karpinski sent the photo above and this:
Got my pb musky 41 3/4 last week on the chain had a great day we boated the 3 fish that ate and had action from another dozen fish! It was an amazing day
Arden Katz said crappie were still in the channels, but will probably move out by the end of the week; bluegill are starting to pull into the channels.
Staff at Triangle Sports and Marine in Antioch said largemouth are prespawn with lots on riprap and in the channel mouths; crappie are in the deeper channels and starting to move out to the brushpiles; walleye are spawned out and good in the river or around bridges and some are on shad schools; white bass slowed; lots more smallmouth in the river; panfishing has picked up; a few flatheads have been caught already and otherwise channel catfish being caught.
NOTE: Check updates on water conditions at foxwaterway.com or (847) 587-8540.
NOTE 2: The Stratton Lock and Dam reopens Saturday, May 1. Here is the word from the IDNR:
IDNR Announces 2021 Operating Schedule for Stratton Lock
MCHENRY, Ill. – The Illinois Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) today announced the operating schedule for the William G. Stratton-Thomas A. Bolger Lock facility on the Fox River in McHenry County.
The lock will open Saturday, May 1 for the 2021 navigation season. Normal operating hours will be seven days per week from 8:00 a.m. until midnight for the months of May through September, and 8:00 a.m. until 8:00 p.m. for the month of October.
The Stratton-Bolger Lock facility is closed for the winter season each year from November 1 through April 30.
DELAVAN/GENEVA/WALWORTH COUNTY, WISCONSIN
Dave Duwe emailed this preview:
Outlook for Opening Day; Walworth County
It’s like Christmas for most outdoor enthusiasts, the opening day of inland fishing season. After a long winter it’s time to catch some game fish. Opening day for game fish on most inland waters is the first Saturday in May.
Walworth County in Southeastern Wisconsin is blessed with many great fishing waters. The county has one of the deepest lakes in the state in Lake Geneva along with a bunch of shallow fast warming bodies of water such as Lake Como and Whitewater Lake.
In early May, Lake Geneva has some disadvantages being so deep and big. The water tends to be really cold and the fish aren’t usually that active. Most of the smallmouth bass are being caught suspended, not associating with any structure. They can also be very active chasing bait fish pods near their spawning flats. I work the suspended fish in 12-15 feet of water. My preferred presentations are Kalin Grubs in Avocado color fished on a darter head or Arkie Jigs Shinee Hinnee (a small crappie hair jig that resembles a shiner). The spawning flats I focus on are the near the South Shore Club (formerly the Military Academy), Elgin Club or near Knollwood.
Largemouth bass will be the most active in the shallows, in such places as Trinkes, Abbey Harbor or in Geneva Bay. I like using baits such as a Yum Dingers or a Texas rigged plastic worm. Green pumpkin or watermelon are always my best colors.
The larger bluegills will be in the warmer shallow waters around the emerging weeds and shallow structure. The best presentation is Thill slip bobbers with Lindy’s Toad ice jigs. I prefer using wax worms or leaf worms. My favorite bluegill spots are Abbey Harbor, Geneva Bay near the library or by the South shore club.
Statewide, Delavan Lake is known as one of the best fishing lakes. Since it is so well known as an awesome fishery, it will also be one of the busiest lakes on opening day. The crappie fishing has already been pretty good for the first few weeks of April. The best depth is in the 8-12 foot depth range. I like mini-mites or small plastics in purple or yellow. For live bait fishermen, Thill slip bobber rigs tipped with small fat head minnows also produces a lot of fish. Look for the fish by Browns Channel or by the island on the west end of the lake.
Walleyes in early May are shallow. Delavan is very clear this time of year and that can make the walleyes a bit skittish. The fish are in the emerging weeds in 5 to 10 feet of water. Night or low light conditions produce the most fish. Trolling shallow diving crankbaits typically produces the most fish.
Largemouth bass will be cruising the shallows in pre-spawn. The best approach is Yum Dingers fished Texas rigged in 3-5 feet of water near the outlet and by Lake Lawn Lodge.
While Delavan and Geneva are both great for fishing, personally I prefer some of Walworth Counties shallower lakes for opening day. The lakes tend to have a much higher water temperature and that helps keep the fish more active. The smaller lakes also receive a lot less fishing pressure and can be very productive. My favorite lake choices are Whitewater, Como and Tripp lakes. Work the shallow emerging weeds in 3 to 5 ft of water for largemouth bass. My lure choices are a Booyah white spinnerbait in ¼ oz or a Texas rigged Yum Dinger in Green pumpkin. Being such shallow lakes, the weed growth can be tremendous so early May can be the best fishing of the year on these bodies of water.
Shore anglers in Walworth County can have good action as well on opening day throughout the county. Turtle creek has a decent smallmouth and pan fish bite along with the requisite suckers and carp. Shore anglers are welcome to fish in the Town of Delavan’s community park for a small fee. The Kettle Moraine State forest also has some great shore opportunities on and near Whitewater lake.
The opportunities are abundant here is Walworth County. Come and enjoy opening day. For guide parties contact Dave Duwe of Dave Duwe’s Guide Service at 262-728-8063.
DOWNSTATE
There are updates on Hennepin-Hopper and Emiquon.
Provided by Jim ShellCasey Shell with a 28-pound blue, one of a variety of big fish caught at Clinton Lake.
CLINTON: Jim Shell emailed the photos above and below and this:
Dale,
Here’s a report to go along with the pics..
Fished Clinton Lake this past Saturday, late afternoon and Sunday morning. Our target species were the wipers (hybrid stripers). We ended up boating 3 adult wipers (biggest was 6lb-11 oz), several smaller ones, (2) 15” walleye, many large drum and some BIG blue catfish. The (3) biggest weighed 20, 28 and 37lbs! ALL fish were caught trolling a Buck Perry spoonplug, the series 250 which has a running depth of 6 to 9 ft. All fish caught were very active. It was a very fun trip for the both of us!
Jim & Casey Shell
Hello Buck Perry.
Here’s their video:
POWERTON: Summer hours, 6 a.m. to 8 p.m., beginning Saturday, May 1.
EMIQUON: As of Saturday, May 1, access permits and liability waivers are again required. They are available from Tuesday to Saturday at Dickson Mounts Museum, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Dicky’s Bait Shop in Montgomery reported slower fishing, but some smallmouth are hitting below the dams and in the shallows as water levels remain very low; water was 59 on Monday (probably into the 60s now); reports come of the first flatheads, primarily in the North Aurora area.
Provided by Pete LamarAn 18-inch smallmouth bass from a Fox River tributary with a fly rod.
Pete Lamar emailed the photo above and this:
Hi Dale,
Interesting weekend. I fished three different bodies of water and found 55 degree water in all of them. The warming appeared to have leveled off last week: those temperatures weren’t very different than I’d found the week before. However, with three consecutive days near 80 degrees, the warming trend has likely resumed.
. . .
I fished a Fox trib on Sunday. Near the mouth, just upstream of the Fox, the stream bottom was covered with suckers on their spawning run. I made a few casts and drifts through the pool. It was far more likely that I would foul hook a sucker, but somehow a smallmouth found my marabou leech in that crowd. It too, was pretty docile and came to hand quickly. Farther upstream, I hooked the 18 inch smallmouth in the photo. It also ate the marabou leech.
Pete
GREEN LAKE AREA, WISCONSIN
ProvidedDane Kirk with a 20.5-inch bass caught during a recent guide trip with Mike Norris.
Guide Mike Norris texted the photo above and emailed this:
Fishing Report 4/26/2021
Mike Norris
Lake Puckaway – Puckaway is best known for its northern pike and walleye fishing and very few anglers target bass on this body of water. Well, that may change. The Wisconsin Elite Series stages both bass and walleye tournaments across Wisconsin. One week after staging a walleye tournament on Puckaway the group returned there last Saturday to hold their first bass tournament of the 2021 season. The results were impressive. The winning weight for five bass was 19.59 lbs. and the big bass was a smallmouth bass weighing in at 5.46 lbs.
Big Green Lake – The smallmouth bass bite remains good. The bass are holding on secondary drop offs waiting for the shallows to warm. Water temp remains in the low 40’s but I’m hoping to see bass show up in the shallows as warmer weather approaches this week.
Fox Lake (Dodge Co) I’m continuing to target this lake for early season largemouth bass and northern pike. While my clients are not catching numbers of bass, the size has been impressive. Blade baits worked over shallow rocky points is the ticket right now.
To book me for a guide trip reach out to me via my Facebook page at mike.norris.7773 or email me through my website at www.comecatchsmallmouth.com
SMELT: Season, such as it was or wasn’t, ends Friday, April 30.
The winds haven’t helped with a slow-down in shore fishing; more smallmouth bass being seen. The warmup today should bring out more anglers, which might help with the catches.
No reports on smelt. Cold weather slowed down anglers and reports.
Stacey Greene at Park Bait at Montrose Harbor texted:
Hi Dale Fishing around Montrose area has been slow. Waiting on the baitfish to move into the harbors and then hopefully a few Trout and Salmon will follow them in. Absolutely no word on any smelt or smelters.Have a great week.
Capt. Bob Poteshman of Confusion Charters said that out of North Point on Tuesday (where the wind switched north midday and temperatures dropped nearly 30 degrees) fishing was so-so for coho (the bait has disappared) and most of their bites came in 40-150 feet (one caught shallow) with some big lake trout in 40-50 and a couple steelhead in 140-150. Coho had bugs in their bellies, lakers all had gobies. Out of Chicago, as of Sunday, no coho, but the good laker bite continues in 35-60 from off McCormick Place to the R-4.
Capt. Scott Wolfe emailed:
Hi Dale
Waukegan and Northpoint boat anglers had to be adaptable. Tuesday through Friday fishing was good for coho, browns and lakers in 15 to 30 feet from Great Lakes NTS to north of the state line. Saturday things changed. The shallow coho chasing the alewife moved North. Waukegan and Northpoint boats had to move out to 70 to 100 feet off Waukegan and 80 to 130 off Northpoint to find the bug eater coho. 2.0 to 2.5 inch slider style files were the key in Blue/Green/Gold, Green/Gold, and Pearl/White from Jimmy Fly, Stanley Stinger or Lake Michigan Angler run in the top 5 feet. There were some suspended lake trout taken from 20 to 60 feet down. The lakers preferred spoons, mostly orange Warrior spoons in Orange Killer, Steelhead Candy and Halftime patterns on divers and downriggers. A couple of boats had the first kings of the year.
Chicago and Wilmette had catches of mostly lake trout with a king or coho here and there. Again spoons were most effective in the patterns above.
I saw some nice bass moving around Waukegan harbor this weekend. But most shore fishermen were targeting salmon, since they will have the whole summer to catch the warmer water species. Early in the week when the shallow alewife eating coho were in, the shore guys were doing very well, with the casters outperforming the power liners.
Open daily 6 a.m. to sunset. Click here for the preview of prospects.
MADISON LAKES, WISCONSIN
Going into the opener, Gene Dellinger at D&S Bait said water levels are low; bass have been pretty good during the catch-and-release season; water is cold (Mendota was 46 Tuesday); some catfish on the north end of Mendota; bass regulations go to the state regulations on opening day.
Both units are open for open-water fishing or ice fishing.
NORTHERN WISCONSIN
General fishing season opens Saturday, May 1 and weather looks stunning good for opening weekend.
Kurt Justice at Kurt’s Island Sport Shop in Minocqua said that the warm early April has walleye post-spawn, so target them around fresh green weeds with jig and minnow or something similar; pike are on the weeds, too, but deeper; largemouth season opens Saturday, too, target shallow soft-bottom bays that warm faster; crappie moved out with cold, expect them to come in in with weekend warmup (60s and 70s).
NORTHWEST INDIANA
ProvidedCapt. Rich Slezak texted, “Coho catch this a.m. fishing the mouth of the Port of Indiana to the Donut aboard Triplecatch.”
Capt. Rich Sleziak at Slez’s Bait in Lake Station texted the photo above and this:
Fishing good from Michigan city to burns ditch in 40 to 50 ft of water using spoons and dodgers and flys best
a few kings around also
Crappie on lake George in Hobart using minnows
Bluegill and redear will really heat up next couple weeks use crickets,red wigglers and waxworms
Catfish decent fishing deep river and burns ditch using cut bait as the water warms up triple s stinkbait really takes over for best bait
Hi, Dale. Here’s what the past week’s news has been. Hope you’re enjoying this gorgeous weather!
Fishing is starting to heat up with more and more Kings showing up on the lakefront & subsidiary waters everyday. Anglers are catching a lot of limits (mostly Coho), but Kings are in the catches also. A few Walleye are being caught on Leeches & Nightcrawlers, but it’s a little early yet. Inland lakes are doing good with Bluegill and Crappie, mostly on Spikes/Beemoths, Butterworms, & Worms.
ROOT RIVER, WISCONSIN
The Wisconsin DNR emailed:
The spring steelhead migration is winding down, and the Root River Steelhead Facility has been shut down for the season. A total of 596 steelhead were handled in the facility this spring. Operations will resume in the fall for the Chinook and coho salmon runs.
Click here for the Wisconsin DNR’s report, usually on Tuesday or Wednesday.
SOUTHWEST MICHIGAN
Note the photo at the very top, so there are at least a few good kings out of St. Joseph, as Joseph Sikora showed.
In recent days, fishing is relatively slow fishing or hampered by wind on Lake Michigan.
Site hours through Oct. 31 are 6 a.m.-10 p.m. daily
Concessions are closed and for sale.
SOUTHEAST WISCONSIN LAKEFRONT
Click here for the southern Lake Michigan reports from the Wisconsin DNR.
WOLF RIVER, WISCONSIN
Guide Bill Stoeger in Fremont texted:
Walleye action is picking up with the water dropping. Minnows on jigs or rigs, and dragging crawlers on jigs working best. White bass action still slow with water temp around 50 degrees
In this June 22, 2018, file photo a sample copy of a Washington drivers license is shown at the Washington state Dept. of Licensing office in Lacey, Wash. Americans will have more time because of the pandemic to get the Real ID that they will need to board a flight or enter federal facilities. The Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday, April 27, 2021, extended the Real ID deadline until May 3, 2023. | AP Photo/Ted S. Warren, File
The deadline had been Oct. 1, 2021, but it was becoming clear that many people wouldn’t make it, in part because the COVID-19 outbreak has made it harder for states to issue new licenses.
WASHINGTON — Americans will have more time to get the Real ID that they will need to board a flight or enter federal facilities.
The Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday extended the Real ID deadline until May 3, 2023. The deadline had been Oct. 1, 2021, but it was becoming clear that many people wouldn’t make it, in part because the COVID-19 outbreak has made it harder for states to issue new licenses.
Congress passed the Real ID Act in 2005 to establish minimum security standards for state-issued driver’s licenses and ID cards following a recommendation from the 9/11 Commission.
The updated cards will be required for airport check-in and to enter federal facilities.
People are getting compliant IDs as they renew, but it takes time and the process has been slowed by the pandemic, with many state agencies operating at limited capacity.
DHS says only 43% of all driver’s licenses and identification cards are compliant.
Older IDs will be suitable to allow people to drive, buy liquor or other age-regulated products, and gamble at casinos. Travelers also can use military IDs or passports to access flights and federal facilities.
Police Chief Daryl Green from Lansing, Michigan and Toledo Mayor Wade Kapszukiewicz, were among those speaking at a Gun Safety Consortium news conference Tuesday. | Screenshot
“We have to make them theft-proof, child-proof, and as accident-proof as possible. In an age of technological innovation, this is not an unsolvable problem,” said Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain.
Some Chicago-area officials have joined a multi-state effort to seek out ideas for gun-safety products.
The Gun Safety Consortium, a group of elected officials, religious leaders, and law enforcement officers from across the country, called Tuesday on gun vendors and other innovators to submit proposals for technologies and features that can make guns safer.
“We have to make them theft-proof, child-proof, and as accident-proof as possible. In an age of technological innovation, this is not an unsolvable problem,” Kane County Sheriff Ron Hain said during an online news conference.
Proposals received by June 1 will be screened by a panel of law enforcement officials from the consortium. They will identify those with the most promise and purchase limited quantities for hands-on evaluations by police officers.
Some gun owners won’t use safety features because they fear won’t be able to fire their weapon quickly when they need to defend themselves, explained Daryl Green, chief of police from Lansing, Michigan. That’s why products will be evaluated for usability and mobility that ensure security while also granting owners quick access.
“Whether you’re a global gun manufacturer, or a startup in a garage or basement, we want you to bring us what you’ve got. If you’ve got a product that can help gun owners secure their firearms, we want to know about it. We want the opportunity to fully evaluate it, and we may want the opportunity to purchase it,” Green said.
When the evaluation ends in early fall, the group will share findings with all participating cities, identify which products fill a need for both police officers and civilians. The process will then likely be repeated.
“Throughout all of this, the consortium will continue to build more buying power. We’ve got some of our key recruiters from the consortium here today,” said DiAne Boese, mentioning Park Ridge Police Chief Frank Kaminski by name.
Boese is with Do Not Stand Idly By, a campaign organized by the Metro Industrial Areas Foundation aimed at ending gun violence.
“We’ll be asking cities, who are large-scale purchasers that haven’t joined yet, to commit, Boese said. “Cities like Chicago and New York.”
Other local participants in the consortium are Deerfield, Highland Park, Oak Park, the Hazel Crest Police Department and the Cook County and Lake County sheriffs’ offices.
Swaysee Rankin (left) was critically wounded in a shooting Monday, six months after he helped save the life of his close friend La’Mya Sparks (right) in another shooting. | Provided photos
Swaysee Rankin, shot along with his 14-year-old cousin Monday, had applied pressure to the wound of the young girl at a park in October
When 10-year-old La’Mya Sparks was shot in the back last fall, her 13-year-old friend Swaysee Rankin took off his shirt and applied pressure to her wound, staying with her until paramedics arrived.
Six months later, tragedy struck the friends again. This time it was Swaysee who was shot as he walked with his 14-year-old cousin Monday night in the South Chicago neighborhood, just a block from the earlier shooting.
“After we got the news, La’Mya ran through the house screaming, ‘Swaysee got shot!’” said the girl’s mother, Shawnta Williams.
Her daughter was one of the first people to check on Swaysee at the hospital, just like Swaysee had done for her every day. Swaysee’s family said he and his cousin were out of surgery Tuesday and were talking.
The teens were walking on a sidewalk in the 8200 block of South Coles Avenue around 9:30 p.m. when someone in a car fired shots, according to Chicago police. The car, possibly a red Jeep Cherokee, backed up south on Coles and sped off.
Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-TimesTwo teenage boys were shot April 26, 2021, in South Chicago.
Swaysee’s mother, Ashley Jackson, told reporters outside Comer Children’s Hospital Tuesday that the shooting appeared to be random.
“My son is absolutely not gang-affiliated from my knowledge. It was a drive-by shooting, just something random,” she said. “He left out of one house and he was on the way to the next with a group of friends and somebody just pulled up and started shooting.”
Swaysee suffered gunshot wounds to the back and abdomen, while the 14-year-old was shot in the chest and abdomen, police said. They were both listed in critical condition when brought to the hospital.
Jackson credited police officers for rushing her son by squad car to Comer. “The police transported him in the police vehicle instead of waiting for EMS, which ultimately saved his life,” she said. “So I feel like my baby was a hero to somebody, and somebody returned the favor.
“Some people don’t make it outta this at all, and for them to be little boys, they’re strong, super strong, and it’s a blessing,” Jackson said.
Swaysee has not said much while in the hospital but did tell his family, “I can’t believe I got shot,” according to the boy’s stepfather, Wayne Looney.
“They were walking like regular little boys having fun outside,” he said as he waited with Jackson outside the hospital Tuesday afternoon.
Pat Nabong/Sun-TimesWayne Looney, the stepfather of 13-year-old Swaysee Rankin, talks to a reporter outside Comer Children’s Hospital in the Hyde Park neighborhood, Tuesday afternoon, April 27, 2021.
So far this year, eight children 13 years or younger have been shot, according to Sun-Times’ records. Two of those children died: Jaslyn Adams, 7, and Ny’Andrea Dyer, 11.
The youngest victim this year, 22-month-old Kayden Swann, was moved out of the intensive care unit last week after he was struck in the temple during a road-rage shooting on Lake Shore Drive near Grant Park.
The number of shootings involving young children is still behind the pace of 2020, when 12 children 13 or younger had been shot over the same period.
La’Mya’s mother said her daughter is still traumatized by the shooting last October at Russell Square Park, and she worries about Swaysee. The two met at Powell Academy at 75th and South Shore and have remained close friends since, Williams said.
“They spent almost every day together at the park. They played, just being kids. You’d never think your kid playing at the park would lead to them getting shot. But that’s what ended up happening with La’Mya,” Williams said.
La’Mya was shot in the middle of her back as she ran from gunfire at the park’s tennis courts. She collapsed, got up and then fell again, according to a police report. That’s when Swaysee rushed to her, took off his shirt and pressed it on La’Mya’s wound until paramedics arrived, the report states.
La’Mya underwent two surgeries and still uses a feeding tube, Williams said.
“Physically, she’s getting there. But mentally, it’s going to take some time,” she said. “When she hears the gunshots, whether it’s during the day or night, she screams and hollers. She’s so traumatized by the sound of a gunshot.”
Williams said Swaysee was a “good … man of a boy” who often checked in on La’Mya after she was shot. He recently supported La’Mya’s sale of chocolate-covered strawberries, coming over to buy a box and give hugs, Williams said.
“I don’t understand why this happened to him,” she said.
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Markers identify bullet casings as police investigate a crime scene where Jontae Adams, 28, and his daughter, Jaslyn, 7, were shot at a McDonald’s drive-thru at the corner of Roosevelt Road and Kedzie Avenue in Lawndale, Sunday, April 18, 2021. | Anthony Vázquez/Sun-Times file photo
Jaslyn and her father were in a silver Infiniti on April 18 at a McDonald’s, 3200 W. Roosevelt Road, when two gunmen got out of an Audi and fired into the vehicle, authorities said.
A second man has been charged in the shooting death of 7-year-old Jaslyn Adams at a McDonald’s drive-thru in Homan Square earlier this month.
Demond Goudy, 21, of Homan Square, was charged Tuesday with first-degree murder and attempted murder in the April 18 attack, Chicago police said.
Goudy was taken into custody about 6:50 p.m. Monday after he left a home in the 1500 block of South Springfield Avenue, police said. A SWAT team assisted in his arrest.
Chicago Police DepartmentDemond Goudy
Last week, a man suspected to also be involved in the shooting was shot by police while allegedly trying to carjack a family on the Eisenhower Expressway.
Prosecutors said Marion Lewis, 18, was the getaway driver but did not fire any of the shots that killed Jaslyn or wounded her father, 28-year-old Jontae Adams. Lewis was ordered held without bail last weekend.
Jaslyn and her father were in a silver Infiniti about 4:20 p.m. at a McDonald’s, 3200 W. Roosevelt Road, when two gunmen got out of an Audi and fired into the Infiniti, authorities said. One of the shooters was using a “Draco,” AK-47-style assault weapon with a “banana clip,” prosecutors said.
Police would not confirm whether Goudy was believed to be one of the shooters.
Members of the Jackie Robinson West All Stars Little League baseball team are shown at an August 2014 rally celebrating the team’s U.S. Little League Championship. | Associated Press
A lawsuit against two volunteer coaches was dismissed. But in settling a separate lawsuit, Jackie Robinson West acknowledged some players from the 2014 squad were ineligible. The team’s title won’t be reinstated.
A lawsuit involving Jackie Robinson West, the Little League team that captivated the country in its historic championship run in 2014, has been settled and a separate lawsuit against the team’s two coaches has been dismissed, according to those involved with the case.
Volunteer coaches Darold Butler and Jerry Houston were caught up in the legal battle over whether Jackie Robinson West used ineligible players. Eventually, Little League stripped the team’s national title.
John Bowley, an attorney for Butler and Houston, said the dismissal has exonerated his clients.
The team’s title, however, will not be restored, a Little League spokesman said Tuesday.
“Little League International is pleased that this matter is now concluded, and that the players can move forward with our best wishes for success in their future endeavors,” said Kevin Fountain, spokesman for Little League International. “The settlement agreement speaks for itself, and Little League International will have no further comment on this matter.”
Fountain said Little League stands by its decision to disqualify the 2014 team, and that the Jackie Robinson West organization acknowledges certain players were ineligible.
The players themselves, however, did not know they were ineligible, he said.
Jackie Robinson West was the talk of the spring and summer of 2014 as they earned a chance to compete in the Little League World Series. The team was made up of 13 boys, ages 10 to 12, from Chicago’s South Side.
The all-Black team spent two weeks on the road, eventually defeating a team from Las Vegas to win the U.S. Championship, though they lost to a team from South Korea in the World Championship game.
In Chicago, the team was celebrated with a pep rally at the Pritzker Pavilion in Millennium Park. They also went to the White House to meet with President Barack Obama and were invited by Major League Baseball to attend that year’s World Series in San Francisco.
But not long after the historic run, coaches from a rival team came forward and accused Jackie Robinson West of using ineligible players from outside league-approved boundaries.
Little League teams are assigned specific areas in which players must live or go to school to be eligible to play for that team. Little League initially denied the allegations but later said the president and treasurer of Jackie Robinson West created a false league boundary map.
Little League then demanded the pair be removed and, ultimately, revoked the championship title.
Anthony Vazquez/Sun-TimesFormer Jackie Robinson West coach Darold Butler speaks about the settlement of legal disputes involving the Jackie Robinson West Little League team. Behind him is coach Jerry F. Houston.
Each of the 13 players later sued Little League Baseball, Jackie Robinson West Little League, Inc. and its administrators — though the players did not sue the two coaches.
Little League responded with a counterclaim against Jackie Robinson West’s administrators and also Butler and Houston.
Those cases involving the players and administrators of Jackie Robinson West were settled this week. The case against Butler and Houston were dismissed last week.
“Some adults involved in the 2014 Jackie Robinson West program cheated. They created fake eligibility documents to make it look like some kids on the team lived where they didn’t,” Bowley said during a news conference Tuesday. “My clients, however … were not among them.”
Bowley said three years of litigation and over six years of investigation by Little League International failed to produce “a single document showing or even suggesting that either Darold or Jerry had anything to do with any fake map scheme.”
Bowley went on to say it was a shame Little League didn’t reinstate the championship, considering the players and coaches had no idea anyone was ineligible. He said the punishment was too harsh and noted the Houston Astros kept their 2017 World Series championship even after a sign-stealing scandal.
“There’s no question that grown adults, including players on the Astros, cheated in that scandal. Yet they didn’t lose their title,” Bowley said. “But a group of children who everyone agrees did nothing wrong, and their volunteer coaches, should face the ultimate penalty?”
Butler and Houston said they remain committed to Little League and will continue to coach, but are saddened by the last six years.
“The way these kids have fought from 2014 until now, it was only right for us as coaches to do the same thing and show the same example,” Butler said.
Houston agreed that. as both a father and coach, it was important to not settle with Little League, just as, during the championship run, they had told the players to never give up.
“We knew we had … no involvement with all of the things that they were saying,” Houston said. “So it was important for us to fight, like we had asked the kids.”
Sun-Times fileThe Jackie Robinson West Little League team was honored with a rally in Millennium Park in August 2014.