SORT Order Oldest FirstNewest First Has Video - Any -YesNo FILTER Date Range Start date End date Category - Any -Arts & EntertainmentBusinessCrime & LawEducationHealthPoliticsScience & NatureSports Keyword(s) Dec 11, 2023 Heads of Police Union, Oversight Agency Debate Who Should Decide the CPD’s Most Serious Disciplinary Cases The head of Chicago’s largest police union believes his officers in his union should have the right to go to arbitration over the most serious disciplinary decisions, but reform leaders believe doing so could “set us back decades.” Dec 11, 2023 Prosecutors Finish Making Case Ex-Ald. Ed Burke Tried to Help Developer Get Sign Permit After His Law Firm Was Hired Prosecutors are expected to rest their case-in-chief on Tuesday, setting the stage for disgraced former Ald. Danny Solis (25th Ward) to be called to the stand to testify in the landmark corruption trial of his former friend and colleague. Dec 11, 2023 Illinois Secretary of State Helps Launch First-of-Its-Kind State ID Program for People Leaving Cook County Jail Custody Regardless of how long a detainee stays in jail, however, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart said a state ID has consistently been at the “top of the list” of needs that those in jail reported to officials upon intake “because it unlocks everything else.” Dec 11, 2023 City Panel Endorses Proposal to Pay $8.75M to Family of Man Killed by CPD Officer After He Called 911 for Help If approved, the settlement would be the largest police misconduct settlement approved by the City Council in 2023, and the largest since May 2022, records show. Dec 11, 2023 Joe Biden Goes Into 2024 with the Economy Getting Stronger, but Voters Feel Horrible About It Pollsters and economists say there has never been as wide a gap between the underlying health of the economy and public perception. The divergence could be a decisive factor in whether the Democrat secures a second term next year. Dec 11, 2023 Alleged Highland Park Parade Gunman Will Represent Himself in February 2024 Trial In a surprise move Monday, Crimo III told the court he wishes to proceed pro se and will act as his own attorney. The 23-year-old also invoked his right to a speedy trial — pushing what had been expected to be a February 2025 trial date up to Feb. 26, 2024. Dec 11, 2023 City Council Will Once Again Consider Paying $2M to Family of Man Killed by Chicago Police Officer in 2014 The vote on Monday by the City Council’s Finance Committee, which came over the objections of at least seven alderpeople, means the full City Council will once again consider resolving the lawsuit filed by Darius Cole-Garrit’s family. Dec 11, 2023 Detroit on Pace for Lowest Homicide Rate in Nearly 60 Years, Michigan Officials Say The Michigan city has tracked an “unprecedented” reduction of homicides as of November 30, down 18% in the first 11 months of 2023 compared to that period last year, according to a joint news release from the Wayne County Sheriff’s Office and the Detroit mayor’s office. The city reported 228 homicides this year as of Nov. 30, compared to 278 homicides during that period last year. Dec 11, 2023 Private Trash Haulers Rarely Face Punishment for Illegal Pickups, City Data Shows Despite scores of noise complaints from residents jolted awake by garbage trucks, private trash haulers have been slapped with just five tickets for illegal pickups during quiet hours over the last two years, according to a WTTW News data analysis. Dec 9, 2023 Chicago Opera Theater Generates Great Fun With Shostakovich’s ‘The Nose’: Review Call “The Nose” the quintessential opera of the absurd. The show is receiving an elaborate Chicago Opera Theater production in a wildly zany, two-performance-only run. Dec 9, 2023 Portraits Unbound: Historic Prints of Indigenous People on View at the Newberry Library On display at the Newberry Library are selections from “History of the Indian Tribes of North America,” a set of early 19th century books rich with imagery. It’s one of the earliest and best records of what Indigenous people, including Seneca and Black Hawk, actually looked like. Dec 9, 2023 Chronic Fatigue Syndrome is Not Rare, Says New CDC Survey. It Affects 3.3 Million US Adults Doctors have not been able to pin down a cause, although research suggests it is a body’s prolonged overreaction to an infection or other jolt to the immune system. Dec 9, 2023 The Census Bureau Wants to Change How It Asks About Disabilities. Some Advocates Don’t Like It Disability advocates say the change would artificially reduce their numbers by almost half. At stake are not only whether people with disabilities get vital resources for housing, schools or program benefits but whether people with disabilities are counted accurately in the first place, experts said. Dec 8, 2023 Week in Review: State Pulls Migrant Camp Funding; Alleged Burger King Shakedown in Focus at Burke Trial Gov. Pritzker and Mayor Johnson at odds over migrant camp in Brighton Park. Ed Burke trial focuses on alleged Burger King shakedown. And the Bears are reportedly looking at land near Soldier Field for a potential stadium. Dec 8, 2023 Pritzker Signs Measure Allowing New Small-Scale Nuclear Technology in Illinois The measure does not allow new large-scale power generation facilities like the six plants that are already operational in the state, but rather allows for new smaller-scale emergent technology. Load More Thanks to our sponsors: