Stories by WTTW News
Police, Lightfoot Call Friday Protest ‘Ambush,’ ‘Anarchy’ as Protesters Decry Police Brutality
| Matt Masterson
Police Superintendent David Brown said officers faced organized mob action “designed to provoke violent responses” during a protest that started peacefully but turned violent, leaving several officers and protesters injured.
Thousands to Walk Off Job to Protest Racial Inequality
| Associated Press
Organizers of a national workers strike say tens of thousands are set to walk off the job Monday in more than two dozen U.S. cities to protest systemic racism and economic inequality that has only worsened during the coronavirus pandemic.
Protesters Gather Near Mayor’s Home Following Clash With Police in Grant Park
| Erica Gunderson
Hundreds of protesters gathered near Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s Logan Square home late Saturday, continuing calls to defund the police, end police presence in Chicago Public Schools and implement remote learning in the fall amid the pandemic.
For 105 Days, Kenwood Couple Made Their Front Porch a Stage
| Erica Gunderson
Married musicians and educators Yakini Ajanaku and Jean-Paul Coffy kicked off the daily concert series in March as a way to help their block stay connected through the long days of quarantine due to COVID-19.
Trump Not Ready to Commit to Election Results if He Loses
| Associated Press
President Donald Trump is refusing to publicly commit to accepting the results of the upcoming White House election, recalling a similar threat he made weeks before the 2016 vote.
Petition Urges Trader Joe’s to Change Ethnic Food Labels
| Associated Press
Responding to calls for Trader Joe’s to stop labeling its international food products with ethnic-sounding names, the grocery store chain said it has been in a yearslong process of repackaging those products.
Police Contracts Can Stand in The Way of Accountability
| Associated Press
Collective bargaining agreements for officers provide protections that stand in the way of accountability, even when the federal government is overseeing an agency through a consent decree, experts said.
New Mural — and Push For Bike Lanes — To Commemorate Boy Killed By Hit-and-Run Driver While Cycling
| Nick Blumberg
The family of Issac Martinez and members of Chicago’s cycling community announced plans to gather Saturday to remember the 13-year-old killed last month and to push for safer conditions for cyclists.
Illinois Reports 1,276 New Coronavirus Cases, 18 Deaths, and Sets New Testing Record
| Nick Blumberg
Saturday marks the state’s fourth consecutive day in which more than 1,000 new cases of COVID-19 were confirmed. After falling below 1,000 new cases per day from June 6 to July 8, this month has so far seen seven days above 1,000.
‘A New Low’: Activists, Elected Officials Decry Police Response to Attempted Teardown of Columbus Statue
| Nick Blumberg
Activists and elected officials condemned violence by Chicago police and again called on Mayor Lori Lightfoot to remove a Christopher Columbus statue that became the site of a clash between demonstrators and officers Friday evening.
Amid Dangerous Heat, City Asks Residents to ‘Be on the Lookout’ for Vulnerable Chicagoans
| Nick Blumberg
The city is directing residents without air conditioning to its cooling centers and park district splash pads and renewing calls for people to check in on elderly and vulnerable family members, friends and neighbors.
Justice Ginsburg Says Cancer Has Returned, But She Won’t Retire
| Associated Press
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said Friday she is receiving chemotherapy for a recurrence of cancer, but has no plans to retire from the Supreme Court.
John Lewis, Lion of Civil Rights and Congress, Dies at 80
| Associated Press
John Lewis, a lion of the civil rights movement whose bloody beating by Alabama state troopers in 1965 helped galvanize opposition to racial segregation, and who went on to a long and celebrated career in Congress, has died. He was 80.
The Week in Review: Madigan Faces Calls to Resign
| Alexandra Silets
A federal bombshell alleges a massive bribery scheme involving ComEd and Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan. Has Madigan’s political reign come to an end? And Chicago Public Schools announces a hybrid reopening plan for the fall.
Lightfoot Vows to Hold ComEd to ‘Account’ After Bribery Charge
| Heather Cherone
Mayor Lori Lightfoot vowed Friday to hold Commonwealth Edison to “account” for its conduct after the state’s largest utility agreed to pay a $200 million fine to resolve federal corruption charges stemming from a “yearslong bribery scheme.”
Russia is Hacking Virus Vaccine Trials, US, UK, Canada Say
| Associated Press
Western governments on Thursday accused hackers believed to be part of Russian intelligence of trying to steal valuable private information about a coronavirus vaccine, calling out the Kremlin in an unusually detailed public warning to scientists and medical companies.
Aldermen Endorse Effort to Tighten Rules That Allow CPD to Impound Cars
City lawyers recommend $5M settlement for suit claiming program is unconstitutional
| Heather Cherone
Aldermen endorsed a measure Friday that would scale back the power of the Chicago Police Department to impound cars that may have been used to commit a crime, as city lawyers recommended officials settle a lawsuit claiming the program is unconstitutional.
ComEd Charged with Bribery; Madigan Implicated But Denies Wrongdoing
| Amanda Vinicky
Longtime Illinois House Speaker Michael Madigan denies having done anything criminal or improper despite being implicated Friday in court filings that charge utility Commonwealth Edison with bribery.
Woman Who Killed Her 5-Year-Old Son Gets 35-Year Prison Term
| Associated Press
A northern Illinois woman who subjected her young son to years of physical and emotional abuse culminating in his beating death last year was on Friday sentenced to 35 years in prison.
Movement to Rename Douglas(s) Park Gets a Second Wind, Campaign Relaunches Saturday
| Patty Wetli
The movement to rename Douglas Park after Frederick Douglass had hit a bureaucratic brick wall. Recent shifts in the political and social landscape encouraged activists to keep forging ahead with their campaign, which relaunches Saturday.
CPS Pitches Hybrid Learning for Fall, But Parents Can Opt Out of Sending Kids Back Into Schools
| Matt Masterson
CPS released its long-awaited reopening framework on Friday. But these plans are just preliminary recommendations, and a final decision on in-person instruction will not be made until late August.
Pritzker Considering Whether to Extend Ban on Evictions Past July 31
| Heather Cherone
With Illinois’ ban on evictions set to expire in two weeks, Gov. J.B. Pritzker is considering extending the coronavirus-spurred prohibition as state officials work to set up a program to distribute more than $300 million in help to landlords and tenants.
Pay $500K to Settle Case That Sought 48 Years’ Worth of Misconduct Files: City Lawyers
| Heather Cherone
The city of Chicago should pay $500,000 to settle a lawsuit that sought to force the Chicago Police Department to turn over nearly five decades’ worth of secret files detailing allegations of misconduct by officers, city lawyers recommended.
‘Chicago Tonight’ in Your Neighborhood: Hermosa
| Quinn Myers
Much of the neighborhood sits in the 60639 ZIP code, which has seen the most COVID-19 cases in the entire state. How businesses are faring and reopening.
Preckwinkle, Cook County Officials Sound the Alarm on Rising Opioid Overdose Deaths
| Kristen Thometz
COVID-19 is disproportionately impacting Black and Brown communities, but the opioid crisis is also taking a “devastating toll” on Chicago-area residents this year, Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle said.
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