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Off-duty cop shot home intruder in face while wife shielded baby in Albany Park: prosecutoron April 2, 2021 at 9:27 pm

An Albany Park woman shielded her baby while the child’s father, an off-duty Chicago police officer, confronted and shot an intruder at the front door, Cook County prosecutors said Friday.

When Jose Mendoza began fiddling with the front door knob around 12:30 a.m. Monday, the couple — hearing the noise — muted the television as they sat in the living room with their 21-month-old daughter, Assistant State’s Attorney James Murphy said.

The wife shielded the baby while her husband retrieved a gun and went to the front door, Murphy said. The officer cracked the door open, peeked outside and allegedly saw Mendoza, 32, crouched nearby.

The officer told Mendoza to leave, but he refused and tried to enter the home, Murphy said. That’s when the officer fired his gun once, striking Medonza through his cheek.

Mendoza fell down in the inside hallway of the home, in the 3100 block of Belle Plaine Avenue, Murphy said.

Responding officers took Mendoza into custody. Mendoza remained in the intensive care unit at Illinois Masonic Medical Center, an officer said in court Friday.

The off-duty officer was taken to a hospital for chest pains and later released, Murphy said.

Area Five detectives and the Civilian Office of Police Accountability are investigating the incident, police said.

Mendoza has multiple arrest warrants and a pending DUI case in Rolling Meadows, prosecutors said.

Judge Susana Ortiz ordered Mendoza held on $1 million bail, for burglary, home invasion and criminal trespass.

If he is able to post bond, Ortiz recommended Mendoza, of Elk Grove Village, to be placed on electronic monitoring while he awaits trial.

Mendoza’s case is back in court on April 9.

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

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Off-duty cop shot home intruder in face while wife shielded baby in Albany Park: prosecutoron April 2, 2021 at 9:27 pm Read More »

‘Troubling’ video of police shooting of 13-year-old boy to be released ‘as soon as possible,’ authorities say, reversing previous stanceon April 2, 2021 at 9:28 pm

Authorities on Friday said police body camera and other videos that captured an officer’s shooting of a 13-year-old could be released “as soon as possible” — reversing a previous statement — although they did not say when the footage would be made available.

Initially, the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, which investigates all police shootings, said state law prohibited the release since the shooting early Monday morning in Little Village involved a minor, who has been identified as Adam Toledo. But it later said it was reviewing the law, after both Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Police Supt. David Brown called for the release.

“COPA has determined that certain provisions of state law intended to protect the confidentiality of juvenile records do not prohibit the agency’s release of material related to its investigation of a Chicago Police Officer’s fatal shooting of 13-year old Adam Toledo,” the agency said in a statement Friday. “COPA’s General Counsel concluded that the Juvenile Court Act does not bar publication of the body worn and third-party video camera footage the agency has obtained to date.”

The statement said COPA will follow “established city policy, which requires public posting of material at the earliest point possible but no later than 60 days after the incident.” It said officials were working with the Toledo family to arrange a viewing of the “troubling video footage.”

COPA spokesman Ephraim Eaddy said the video will be made public soon.

“As soon as possible, we’ll be looking to release it,” he said.

Boy first went missing last Friday

The announcement came as police on Friday released more information in an attempt to explain why authorities took days to identify Adam and release details of the shooting.

The public didn’t learn Adam’s identity and age until Thursday, four days after he was killed in what police called an “armed confrontation.” Even Adam’s mother didn’t learn he had been killed until Wednesday, when she was asked to go to the Cook County medical examiner’s office and identify him.

Police spokesman Don Terry said his family first reported Adam missing last Friday, days before the shooting. But on Saturday, in a follow-up interview, detectives were told he had returned home safely, Terry said. Police then removed Adam from a missing persons database.

His family did not report him missing again, Terry said.

Two days after the shooting early Monday, detectives attempting to identify Adam’s body found the inactive missing report form and contacted Adam’s mom at 1 p.m. Wednesday, believing the body may be Adams’, Terry said. Adam’s mom, Elizabeth Toledo, then told police that Adam had been missing for a second time, and was last seen by her over the weekend, police said.

Hours later, at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday, detectives then asked Adam’s mom to come to the morgue and identify Adam, Terry said.

The approximate location where Chicago police killed 13-year-old Adam Toledo, in an alley near 24th and Sawyer.
The approximate location where Chicago police killed 13-year-old Adam Toledo, in an alley near 24th and Sawyer.
Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Adam’s grieving mother said Friday she’s still waiting for more answers after her conversation with police on Wednesday.

“I haven’t heard nothing from the police department; they haven’t reached out to me … ,” Elizabeth Toledo said. “I am kind of upset because I want to know what happened.”

Police said Adam was shot early Monday by police in the 2300 block of South Sawyer Avenue. Officers responded to reports of gunfire and found Adam and a man in an alley, police said. An officer chased Adam, who police said was armed, and then shot Adam in the chest behind Farragut Career Academy High School.

Police shared a photo of a gun allegedly recovered at the scene.

The other person who ran from police, 21-year-old Ruben Roman Jr. of Edgewater, was arrested and charged with resisting arrest, police said.

Toledo said she doesn’t know Roman Jr. and said her son had not previously been in trouble and wasn’t in a gang.

She said she was with her son all day Sunday and that he later spent time with his girlfriend, but that at some point that day her son left his girlfriend. The mother said she has been in contact with the girlfriend, and she also doesn’t know where Adam went in the hours before he was killed.

“We were both clueless,” Toledo said.

$30,000 raised for boy’s family

Toledo has set up a GoFundMe page for memorial expenses.

“Another angel has gained his wings way too soon,” Toledo wrote.

By 4 p.m. Friday, more than 1,000 donations totaling more than $30,000 had been made.

“I just wanted to thank everyone that donated and gave their support. I really appreciate that from the bottom of my heart,” she said. “On behalf of Adam Toledo, I’m very grateful for everyone helping me through this. It’s been so hard.”

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‘Troubling’ video of police shooting of 13-year-old boy to be released ‘as soon as possible,’ authorities say, reversing previous stanceon April 2, 2021 at 9:28 pm Read More »

Porter Moser leaving Loyola after 10 seasons to coach at Oklahomaon April 2, 2021 at 9:32 pm

Porter Moser will be named the next men’s head basketball coach at Oklahoma, sources told the Sun-Times.

Moser, 52, earned the biggest opportunity of his career by turning Loyola into a Missouri Valley powerhouse and — twice in the last four years — a national story. The Ramblers reached the Final Four of the NCAA Tournament in 2018. This season, they won the MVC regular-season and tournament titles and made it to the Sweet 16.

A Naperville native, Moser was coach at Arkansas-Little Rock and Illinois State before a 10-season stint at Loyola. He has a career record of 293-241 and a 188-141 mark in Rogers Park.

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Porter Moser leaving Loyola after 10 seasons to coach at Oklahomaon April 2, 2021 at 9:32 pm Read More »

Lieutenant: Kneeling on George Floyd’s neck ‘totally unnecessary’on April 2, 2021 at 9:35 pm

MINNEAPOLIS — Kneeling on George Floyd ‘s neck while he was handcuffed and lying on his stomach was top-tier, deadly force and “totally unnecessary,” the head of the Minneapolis Police Department’s homicide division testified Friday.

“If your knee is on a person’s neck, that can kill him,” said Lt. Richard Zimmerman, adding that when a person is handcuffed behind their back, “your muscles are pulling back … and if you’re laying on your chest, that’s constricting your breathing even more.”

Zimmerman, who said he is the most senior person on the police force, also testified at Derek Chauvin’s murder trial that once Floyd was handcuffed, he saw “no reason for why the officers felt they were in danger — if that’s what they felt — and that’s what they would have to feel to be able to use that kind of force.”

“So in your opinion, should that restraint have stopped once he was handcuffed and thrown on the ground?” prosecutor Matthew Frank asked.

“Absolutely,” replied Zimmerman, who said he has received use-of-force training annually — as all officers do — since joining the city force in 1985.

He said he has never been trained to kneel on someone’s neck if they’re handcuffed behind their back and in the prone position.

“Once you secure or handcuff a person, you need to get them out of the prone position as soon as possible because it restricts their breathing,” Zimmerman said, adding “you need to turn them on their side or have them sit up.”

He also testified that officers have a duty to provide care for a person in distress, even if an ambulance has been called.

Officers kept restraining Floyd — with Chauvin kneeling on his neck, another kneeling on Floyd’s back and a third holding his feet — until the ambulance arrived, even after he became unresponsive.

One officer asked twice if they should roll Floyd on his side to aid his breathing, and later said calmly that he thought Floyd was passing out. Another checked Floyd’s wrist for a pulse and said he couldn’t find one.

The officers also rebuffed offers of help from an off-duty Minneapolis firefighter who wanted to administer aid or tell officers how to do it.

Under cross examination, Chauvin attorney Eric Nelson peppered Zimmerman with questions about the use of force, pointing out that officers must consider the entire situation — including what is happening with a suspect, whether the suspect is under the influence, and other surrounding hazards, such as a crowd.

The defense has argued that Chauvin did what he was trained to do when he encountered Floyd last May and that Floyd’s death was caused not by the knee on his neck — as prosecutors contend — but by drugs, his underlying health conditions and adrenaline. An autopsy found fentanyl and methamphetamine in his system.

Chauvin is also heard on body-camera footage defending his decision to an onlooker after Floyd was taken away by paramedics, saying: “We gotta control this guy ’cause he’s a sizable guy … and it looks like he’s probably on something.”

Chauvin, 45 and white, is charged with killing Floyd by pinning his knee on the 46-year-old Black man’s neck for 9 minutes, 29 seconds, as he lay face-down in handcuffs. Floyd had been accused of passing a counterfeit $20 bill at a neighborhood market.

Zimmerman agreed with Nelson that a person who is handcuffed still can pose a threat and can continue to thrash around.

And he agreed when Nelson asked if officers who believe they’re in a fight for their lives could use “whatever force is reasonable and necessary,” including by improvising.

“Did you see any need for Officer Chauvin to improvise by putting his knee on Mr. Floyd for 9 minutes and 29 seconds?” Frank later asked Zimmerman.

“No, I did not,” said Zimmerman, who said that based on his review of police body camera footage, the officers did not appear to be in danger from Floyd or about 15 onlookers.

Nelson has suggested that the bystanders — many of whom were shouting at Chauvin to get off Floyd — may have distracted officers and affected their response. The prosecution, however, noted that officers on the scene did not call for backup.

“The crowd, as long as they’re not attacking you, the crowd really doesn’t, shouldn’t, have an effect on your actions,” Zimmerman said.

Floyd’s death triggered large protests around the U.S., scattered violence and widespread soul-searching over racism and police brutality. Chauvin, who was fired, is charged with murder and manslaughter. The most serious charge against him carries up to 40 years in prison.

___

Webber reported from Fenton, Michigan.

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Lieutenant: Kneeling on George Floyd’s neck ‘totally unnecessary’on April 2, 2021 at 9:35 pm Read More »

Chicago Blackhawks News: Vinnie Hinostroza is back via tradeon April 2, 2021 at 9:33 pm

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Chicago Blackhawks News: Vinnie Hinostroza is back via tradeon April 2, 2021 at 9:33 pm Read More »

Afternoon Edition: April 2, 2021on April 2, 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 will be sunny with a high near 50 degrees and wind gusts as high as 20 mph. Tonight’s low will be around 38 degrees. Tomorrow will be sunny and breezy with a high near 67 degrees, while Sunday will be mostly sunny with a high near 70.

Top story

Under federal scrutiny, Madigan, Solis collecting lucrative government pensions

Former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan, who resigned amid an ongoing federal investigation, just collected his first pension check — the initial payment in what could become one of the richest retirement payouts to any Illinois legislator.

Disgraced former Ald. Danny Solis has gotten nearly $170,000 in retirement pay since he quit the Chicago City Council two years ago after we revealed he’d been an FBI mole, secretly recording conversations with now-indicted Ald. Edward M. Burke and others at City Hall as part of a widespread investigation into government corruption.

They and others who are under federal scrutiny — caught up in ongoing federal grand jury investigations involving government officials in the city and suburbs — are facing jeopardy that goes beyond what any of them might face from the courts. If the investigations lead to criminal charges and convictions, that also could jeopardize the lucrative pensions they expected to collect for the rest of their lives.

Many of the others have resigned from office and put in for their pensions, knowing those checks will be cut off if they are convicted of felonies related to their official duties.

If that were to happen, they’d get a refund of the money that had been taken out of their paychecks over the years as their contributions toward their pensions. But that would be the case only if the amount they collect in retirement pay hasn’t already exceeded their own contributions — something that usually takes a couple of years.

Here’s a look, based on records from government retirement funds, at the pension status of a dozen retired and current officials, all Democrats, who have been caught up in the federal investigations involving City Hall, Cook County and the state of Illinois.

More news you need

  1. A Hazel Crest mother and her three kids are shaken after 20 bullets aimed at their home shattered windows on Tuesday, just minutes after one daughter, 13, had walked through the door. And the Hazel Crest police station was about a block away. “Me and my children could have been dead and gone. It was nothing but God’s grace and mercy,” she said.
  2. More than 6 million COVID-19 vaccinations have now gone into Illinois arms, public health officials announced today. But cases are still rising: The average statewide testing positivity rate is at a two-month high of 3.5%.
  3. On March 22, Evanston became the first U.S. city to approve a plan to make reparations available to Black residents to address the harm they suffered as a result of the city’s past discriminatory housing policies. Our Stefano Esposito interviewed Ald. Robin Rue Simmons, the driving force behind the reparations effort.
  4. Gov. J.B. Pritzker yesterday commuted the life sentence of Gerald Reed, who was convicted of a double murder in 1990. Reed is expected to walk out of Stateville Correctional Center near Joliet today, where his mother is waiting: “Mr. Governor, I want to say God bless you and happy Easter,” she said.
  5. The CTA announced today that six prototype electric buses are officially out on the roads, carrying passengers between the Austin neighborhood and Navy Pier on the #66 Chicago route. If the buses perform well on the road, the CTA said it will approve an additional 17 electric buses for use along various routes.
  6. A new documentary series on Ernest Hemingway by Ken Burns and Lynn Novick delivers the definitive biography of arguably the most famous, accomplished and celebrated writer of the 20th century, writes our film critic Richard Roeper. Read his full review of “Hemingway,” premiering on PBS Monday.

A bright one

In Back of the Yards, Chicago artist’s mural features characters he sketched in high school

A few blocks from the Western Avenue L stop in the Back of the Yards, an artist has taken doodles that he scribbled in a high school art class and used them in a mural that adorns a viaduct.

They’re part of a 50-feet-wide, 14-feet-high mural that transformed the viaduct at 49th Street and Damen Avenue into something the artist hopes will inspire kids in the Southwest Side neighborhood.

It includes images of a diverse group of kids and one bulldog and a banner unfurled above their heads that says “light the way for los ninos.”

The artist — who goes by the name FRILLZ — says someone who lives in the neighborhood who didn’t like the way the viaduct had been spattered with graffiti approached him about painting a mural there.

This mural, titled “Light the Way for Los Ninos,” was completed last year by a local artist who goes by FRILLZ at 49th Street and Damen Avenue.
Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

The cartoon-like appearance of the characters reflects the artist’s style — especially his signature bulldog.

But that’s also an artifact of the characters’ origins. FRILLZ, who’s 21, says he was always artistically inclined but didn’t start doing street art till his teachers asked him during his sophomore year at Schurz High School to help design a school mural. He says he “did a bunch of quick sketches” of his school’s bulldog mascot.

A few years later, doodles like those that he once drew in class ended up on stickers and murals across Chicago as his career as an artist took off.

Keep reading Rylee Tan’s story here.

From the press box

Bears coach Matt Nagy said he will resume play-calling duties next season. Offensive coordinator Bill Lazor took over those duties for the last seven regular-season games last season, with generally positive results. The Bears scored 30 or more points in four straight games in December, winning three of them, Patrick Finley writes.

The Cubs had a disappointing 2021 debut, but new Marquee Sports Network announcer Jon “Boog” Sciambi was a hit in calling his first regular-season game. Jeff Agrest has the story.

The Cubs continue their series against the Pirates this weekend, and the White Sox remain on the West Coast to face the Angels.

Your daily question ?

What do you want to get done or achieve before things get back to normal?

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: What’s the best April Fools’ Day prank you’ve ever pulled or had pulled on you? Here’s what some of you said…

“Saved the daily newspaper from one year ago and gave it to my husband in its plastic delivery sleeve as if it had just been delivered. His expression and remarks were priceless.” — Anne Grogan

“I checked the lottery numbers! Got excited, told my boys that we had matched all the numbers! They got so excited, ran into the bedroom to wake their dad who worked nights. I said April Fools’! Dad was not happy, neither were the boys.” — Maxine Henry

“I went to an all-girls high school. My mom warned me that my socks were out of uniform, so I had my teacher write me a fake detention. Mom’s reaction was priceless… we still have it from 1998!” — Shannon Bracken

“It was a week after Easter and I dyed a regular egg and gave it to a friend at lunch telling her it was hard-boiled… what a mess. It was at work and everyone yelled at me!” — Melinda Vaughn

“I sent a photo of two hands with wedding bands to my mother and told her I decided to get back with my toxic ex, and that we’d gotten married.” — Erik Raymond

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

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Afternoon Edition: April 2, 2021on April 2, 2021 at 8:00 pm Read More »

Judge lambasts gunman’s excuses for being ‘drunk and high’ when he fired his weapon, shooting an 11-year-old girlon April 2, 2021 at 8:04 pm

A Cook County judge Friday called the murder of an 11-year-old girl “despicable and tragic” and lambasted the alleged gunman’s excuses for pulling the trigger.

Marcus Starkey allegedly told detectives he started firing at a customer at a Far South Side gas station on March 1 because he was drunk and high, striking Ny’Andrea Dyer as she sat in a car with her mother and siblings.

Being intoxicated is “no defense whatsoever,” Cook County Judge John F. Lyke said as 27-year-old Starkey appeared before him Friday.

Ny’Andrea, who had her spine severed from the shooting, died on March 22.

The girl’s death was “despicable and tragic all in the same breath,” Lyke said.

On the night Ny’Andrea was shot, an 18-year-old man parked at a fuel pump at the BP gas station when he noticed two people wearing masks and hoods in the parking lot, Assistant State’s Attorney James Murphy said.

The teenager was filling his car with gas when the pair returned to the lot, at 150 W. 127th St.

He noticed one of the men pointing a gun. The teenager, thinking he was going to be robbed, starting walking away and tried going into the the gas station’s store. But the door was locked, Murphy said.

Then Starkey — one of the two hooded individuals — started shooting at the teenager, prompting the teenager to pull out his own gun and return fire, Murphy said. The teenager was struck several times.

One of the bullets fired by Starkey entered the rear driver’s side window of the car Ny’Andrea was sitting in, striking her face, Murphy said.

Starkey and his unidentified cohort fled, and the teenager drove to his mother’s home before he was transported to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, Murphy said.

Emergency personnel were called to the gas station and Ny’Andrea was taken to Comer Children’s Hospital, where she was determined to be brain dead and taken off life support.

Following the shooting, Starkey and his accomplice allegedly ran to Starkey’s car in an alley. The car wouldn’t start, so Starkey ran away and approached two workers at a Metra facility nearby, claiming he had been robbed, Murphy said.

Starkey offered the Metra employees $600 and then $900 to drive him somewhere but they refused the offer, Murphy said. Surveillance cameras at the Metra facility “very clearly” captured Starkey’s face before he left, Murphy said.

Surveillance video at the gas station also captured the shooting, as well as the dark-colored jacket Starkey was wearing at the time, Murphy said. The jacket was later found in a tree on the route Starkey allegedly used to flee.

A .45-caliber Springfield handgun was also found on the street and matched a bullet casing recovered at the crime scene, Murphy said.

Starkey was taken into custody on a warrant for his arrest on March 18 in St. Paul, Minnesota. He was returned to Cook County for first-degree murder and attempted murder charges.

Marcus Starkey
Marcus Starkey
Chicago police

Starkey first denied being involved in the shooting, but later admitted to firing first at the 18-year-old victim because he was intoxicated, although he also claimed the teenager he shot at didn’t have a gun. Starkey also allegedly said the gun he used belonged to his co-offender.

Prosecutors said the 18-year-old was charged with aggravated unlawful use of a weapon, but surveillance footage showed he did not take out his gun until he was fired upon first and could not have fired the bullet that struck Ny’Andrea.

The teenager’s weapon has not been recovered, prosecutors said.

Starkey, who works as a carpentry assistant, and does snow removal and landscaping jobs, “vigorously denies” the allegations and had previously participated in city anti-violence programs, an assistant public defender told Lyke .

Lyke ordered Starkey held without bail.

He is expected back in court April 22.

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

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Judge lambasts gunman’s excuses for being ‘drunk and high’ when he fired his weapon, shooting an 11-year-old girlon April 2, 2021 at 8:04 pm Read More »

Man charged with murdering pot dealer during botched robberyon April 2, 2021 at 8:48 pm

A Logan Square man asked to purchase marijuana from a man he shot to death moments later in an apparent robbery attempt in Chatham, Cook County prosecutors said Friday.

Jamie Richardson first approached Aaron Lawrence about noon on Nov. 24 while Lawrence was in line to place an order at Baba Philly Steak and Lemonade, 7859 S. State St.

When Richardson asked Lawrence about buying weed, Lawrence said he only had a small amount but asked Richardson how much he was looking for, Assistant State’s Attorney James Murphy said.

Richardson left the restaurant, but approached Lawrence in the parking lot, asking him about purchasing marijuana again. Shortly after that encounter, Lawrence sold an unknown amount to another person, Murphy said.

Richardson then asked for a lower price, pulled out a gun and told Lawrence to give him “everything he’s got” before opening fire, Murphy said.

Lawrence drove out of the parking lot, but crashed into a guard rail. Richardson fired his weapon two more times as Lawrence tried to get away, Murphy said.

Lawrence, of Stony Island Park, suffered a gunshot wound to his arm and chest and was later pronounced dead at University of Chicago Medical Center.

Richardson drove off in a stolen Hyundai Sonata following the shooting, Murphy said. The Sonata was found torched in the 5400 block of South Princeton Avenue the next morning.

Surveillance cameras captured the shooting, Richardson in a face mask in the restaurant, and the stolen Sonata’s license plate as it drove away, Murphy said. Separate surveillance cameras recorded Richardson driving the car at a gas station about six hours before the murder. An individual wearing clothes that matched Richardson’s was also caught on camera being picked up by an SUV near where the stolen car was found, Murphy said.

Two days after the shooting, Richardson was taken into custody after he was arrested for two separate carjackings and an armed robbery at a Dunkin Donuts, Murphy said.

A .40-caliber handgun was found in Richardson’s pocket following his arrest, Murphy said. The gun matched shell casings found after Lawrence’s murder and GPS data from Richardson’s cellphone placed him at the crime scene at the time of the shooting, Murphy said.

Jamie Richardson
Jamie Richardson
Cook County sheriff’s office

Richardson was being held at the Cook County Jail when he was charged with first-degree murder this week, court records show.

Richardson was recently working at a McDonald’s while trying to earn his GED, an assistant public defender told Judge John F. Lyke.

Lyke called Richardson “a one person violent crime spree” and ordered him held without bail for Lawrence’s murder.

Richardson is expected back in court for his murder case on April 21.

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

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Man charged with murdering pot dealer during botched robberyon April 2, 2021 at 8:48 pm Read More »

Keepin It 100 – Bears RB Takeover with Special Guests David Montgomery and Ryan NallNick Bon April 2, 2021 at 4:52 pm

Draft Dr. Phil and Shayne “The Smartest Man” are joined by Bears’ running backs David Montgomery and Ryan Nall to talk offense, offseason and more in a guest spot for the ages!

The post Keepin It 100 – Bears RB Takeover with Special Guests David Montgomery and Ryan Nall first appeared on CHI CITY SPORTS l Chicago Sports Blog – News – Forum – Fans – Rumors.Read More

Keepin It 100 – Bears RB Takeover with Special Guests David Montgomery and Ryan NallNick Bon April 2, 2021 at 4:52 pm Read More »