Stories by Heather Cherone
City Council Votes to Pay $50M to 4 Men Who Each Spent Nearly 20 Years in Prison for Double Murder They Didn’t Commit
| Heather Cherone
The proposed settlement calls for taxpayers to pay $21 million and the city’s insurance company to pay $29 million.
Johnson Defends Decision to Begin Evicting Migrant Families With Children From City Shelters
| Heather Cherone
“We are still living up to our values,” Mayor Brandon Johnson said. “We are providing care in a way that nowhere else in the country you’re seeing.”
At Stateville Closure Hearing, Agreement Over Poor Conditions Yet Questions Remain on Path Forward
| Blair Paddock
Hundreds of people gathered Tuesday night to try to sway a vote by the Commission on Government Forecasting and Accountability (COGFA) over Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administration’s recommendation to close and rebuild Stateville Correctional Center.
Riot Fest Leaving Douglass Park and Moving to Bridgeview’s SeatGeek Stadium
| Patty Wetli
Riot Fest has announced it’s leaving its longtime home in Chicago’s Douglass Park and is setting up RiotLand in Bridgeview’s SeatGeek Stadium for the 2024 event, set for Sept. 20-22.
Judge Faces Inquiry After Illinois Attorney Was Kicked Out of Court and Handcuffed to Chair
| Associated Press
Cook County's top judge has asked state regulators to review allegations that an attorney was handcuffed to a chair after a judge kicked him out of her courtroom.
Harry Leinenweber, Longtime Federal Judge Who Presided Over High-Profile Trials of R. Kelly, ‘ComEd Four,’ Has Died
| Matt Masterson
“Judge Harry D. Leinenweber was a friend, mentor, and model jurist,” Rebecca Pallmeyer, chief judge for the Northern District of Illinois, said in a statement. “My colleagues and I are deeply saddened by Judge Leinenweber’s passing.”
June 11, 2024 - Full Show
| WTTW News
Prosecutors push for prison time for Chicago’s longest-serving alderperson. One on one with the founder of the animal rights group PETA. And cruising the Chicago River on a kayak conservation tour.
PETA Founder Protests Pork Industry Practices, Reflects on History of Activism
| Paul Caine
For more than 40 years, PETA has worked to change the way many people think about animals. Attention-grabbing media campaigns have raised the public’s awareness of practices like factory farming, fur production and animal testing — while also drawing backlash at times for the group’s tactics.
Explore the Chicago River With Shedd Aquarium’s Kayak for Conservation Summer Tours
| Joanna Hernandez
Shedd Aquarium is once again offering an opportunity to explore the Chicago River while learning about efforts to take care of it. The Kayak for Conservation program offers pay-what-you-can tours.
Send Ex-Ald. Ed Burke to Prison for 10 Years for ‘Multiyear Crime Spree,’ Prosecutors Urge Judge
| Heather Cherone
Despite having a net worth of $30 million, now former Ald. Ed Burke was “steeped in corruption,” repeatedly choosing “spite and greed – not the public interest,” prosecutors told U.S. District Court Judge Virginia Kendall.
Thousands of Drivers in Illinois, 2 Other States File Arbitration Claims Against Amazon for Unpaid Wages and Other Losses
| Associated Press
Two law firms spearheading the action said about 15,860 Amazon Flex drivers have submitted arbitration claims with the American Arbitration Association, where 453 similar cases are already being litigated.
NASCAR’s Chicago Street Race Gets the Blues, Adds Buddy Guy to Music Lineup
| Patty Wetli
Guy joins a previously announced list music lineup for NASCAR weekend, which includes the Black Keys and Keith Urban.
Cicada-Induced Vitamin Deficiency Linked to Mystery Disease in Illinois Birds
| Patty Wetli
All signs point to a cicada-induced vitamin deficiency as the cause of a mystery disease that affected some birds during a 2021 emergence and now again in 2024.
Facing Shortfall of Nearly $400M, Chicago Public Schools Pushes Back Budget Release to July
| Matt Masterson
CPS on Tuesday announced the CPS CEO Pedro Martinez had informed network and school leaders the final draft of its FY25 budget would now be presented in July as the district continues “finalizing the total budget.”
This Summer’s Weather Forecast is Bad News for the US After an Exceptionally Disastrous Start to the Year
| CNN
The U.S. has been thrashed with 11 extreme weather disasters with costs exceeding $1 billion so far this year, with a total price tag of $25.1 billion, according to an updated tally from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. It’s tied for the second-most such disasters on record and doesn’t even include the extreme weather in the second half of May, said Adam Smith, an applied climatologist with NOAA.
Hunter Biden, President Joe Biden’s Son, Convicted of All 3 Felonies in Federal Gun Trial
| Associated Press
Jurors found Hunter Biden guilty of lying to a federally licensed gun dealer, making a false claim on the application by saying he was not a drug user and illegally having the gun for 11 days.
Angel Reese, Caitlin Clark and Other Rookies Draw Near-Record Crowds, Record Ratings for Start of WNBA Season
| Associated Press
The figures are the latest evidence of the surging popularity of the WNBA since it added prominent rookies including Indiana’s Caitlin Clark, Chicago’s Angel Reese and Los Angeles’ Cameron Brink, all of whom drew big audiences playing in college.
June 10, 2024 - Full Show
| WTTW News
A controversial push to make Chicago’s downtown curfew for teens even earlier. How updating identifying documents could become easier for transgender people. And a look at Illinois’ gun laws in our latest installment of WTTW News Explains.
New Bill Awaiting Pritzker’s Signature Would Help Transgender Illinois Residents Update Documents Issued by Other States
| Emily Soto
The bill allows Illinois residents to get a judicial order to alter the name and sex on birth certificates and other documentation issued in another state. Currently in Illinois, the process no longer requires certification from a health professional, making it easier to request this change.
Proposal for Curfew of 8 p.m. for Minors Downtown Receives Mixed Response
| Shelby Hawkins
Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd Ward) came up with the idea following a violent attack on May 31 when a group of teenagers allegedly assaulted a couple in the Streeterville neighborhood. The man was hit in the head several times, and the woman was kicked in the stomach, which she said caused her to suffer a miscarriage.
Vast Majority of Patients at Planned Parenthood of Illinois’ Newest Clinic in Carbondale Come From Out of State
| Amanda Vinicky
Three-quarters of the patients served by the Carbondale clinic have come from out of state, the organization said in numbers released Monday. Of those out of state patients, 88% reside in states where abortion access is restricted, including Tennessee, Kentucky, Indiana and Missouri.
Chicago Receives $3M Grant to Inventory Its Trees and Create Plan to Manage City’s Urban Forest
| Patty Wetli
The Chicago Park District also received nearly $1.5 million to conduct an inventory. Morton Arboretum's Chicago Region Trees Initiative is administering the grants on behalf of the Illinois Department of Natural Resources.
‘I Just Want Everybody to Know That I See You’: Barack Obama Visits Presidential Center Construction Site in Chicago as Structure Reaches Full Height
| Matt Masterson
The former president shook hands with construction workers and signed a beam that will be used in the ongoing construction of the center in Jackson Park.
Alzheimer’s Drug That Can Slow Disease Gets Backing From FDA Advisers
| Associated Press
Food and Drug Administration advisers voted unanimously that the drug’s ability to slow the disease outweighs its risks, including side effects like brain swelling and bleeding that will have to be monitored.
CPS, CTU to Hold First-Ever Contract Negotiation Session Open to the Public Friday
| Matt Masterson
The CTU announced the sides have agreed to schedule an open contract bargaining session Friday from 5-7 p.m. at Marquette Elementary School, 6550 S. Richmond St., in the Chicago Lawn neighborhood.
8 People Killed by Gunfire Over Weekend Across Chicago: Police
| Matt Masterson
An 18-year-old woman fatally shot as she sat in a vehicle early Sunday morning in West Englewood was among eight people killed by gunfire over the weekend across Chicago.
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