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Gambling site touting 20-unit plays, which seems incredibly irresponsible

LAS VEGAS — The “20-unit” action first drew my X attention, and not in a good way. I dug deeper to be transported inside “The Producers,” the 1967 silver-screen gem by director Mel Brooks.

Fabulous actor Zero Mostel’s Max Bialystock peddles 25,000 percent of a play’s interest, hoping to flee to Rio de Janeiro with the embezzled funds.

Max’s partner Leo Bloom, played by the magnificent Gene Wilder, said, “Max, you can only sell a hundred percent of anything!”

On Dec. 11, the “The Bookie Crushers” site on X trumpeted a 20-unit play on Nevada, to score more than 76.5 points (at -115 odds, or risk $115 to win $100) against South Dakota State.

A 20-unit wager struck me as incredibly irresponsible, as expert punters typically operate in a precise manner in which they bet a unit, or one percent of a bankroll.

One hundred percent of a bankroll is considered to be 100 units. One-unit bets provide insurance and protection. Hopefully, the unit grows as the bankroll expands. The definition of professional success.

Rarely, I’ve been told, when solid information favors a hockey or baseball favorite, say, should that wager drift around two percent.

With a public note to Bookie Crushers, I inquired about the absurdity of a 20-unit play. I received a message admitting that such action isn’t common.

“Wish me luck,” he added. For this piece, let’s call him Max.

Nevada won 77-63. With 67 seconds left, 6-10, 240-pound junior Nick Davidson sailed in for a dunk and the Wolf Pack’s final points, to win that selection for Bookie Crushers.

By half a point.

I excavated to find that on that Wednesday, Crushers also touted three other 20-unit plays, four of the 10-unit variety, plus other bets that would cost 19, 9.9, 9 and 8.3 units.

In that single day, Max seemingly promoted risking 146 percent of a bankroll.

It appeared Zero Mostel, who died in 1977, had a worthy protégé.

BOOSTS AND BARKERS

It’s wise to be leery about social media, to parse through the bet-speak and camouflage and trickery and seek the truth.

ESPN’s “odds boost,” how it pushes its sports-betting appendage, is a fine example. It’s a flowery term for “parlay,” without using “parlay,” what every pro punter avoids like a stinky restroom.

On their popular The Bookie vs. The Bostonian podcast, which celebrated its third anniversary recently, Dave Sharapan and Matt Perrault regularly smoke out such industry duplicity.

Sharapan re-posted a Casino Reports piece that chronicled a hypothetical bettor, accustomed to $20 wagers, being down $437 on ESPN Bet over the course of 20 days by following its odds-boosting format.

In that three- and four-leg parlay world, a theoretical bankroll would have avoided further losses becuase of some high-odds wagers that did hit.

However, Casino Reports contends that such a profile of a typical recreational bettor wouldn’t have had the stomach to endure, to patiently await those winners, during a streak of 19 consecutive losing bets between Nov. 20-25.

I’ve also had several chats with Sharapan about NBAer Kevin Durant, who somehow was given a FanDuel platform to offer weekly NFL picks.

Commence widespread giggling.

After fans criticized his losers, Durant barked back, “When u [sic] lose, there’s finger pointing. When u [sic] win, there’s gloating about how smart you are about seeing the future. No gratitude to the service workers like myself.

“I’m sick of it.”

I’m sick of Durant’s carnival-barker posturing. He couldn’t possibly need the FanDuel money. Through this season, the service worker will have made nearly $400 million in the NBA, with another $106M due through 2027.

Nor could Durant have believed that he’d fare well. We’d venture that he’d do just as poorly selecting NBA games. That, though, would violate NBA rules.

It should be illegal for any pro athlete to offer gambling advice about any sports league, first. Second, FanDuel knows better. Then again, in that relationship it’s the lone benefactor.

A DIFFERENT SCALE

Which brings us back to Bookie Crushers, an X site for two years with 2,000 followers that boasts of winning “the long game.”

In my first DM to Max, he admitted that 20-unit plays “are rare and irresponsible,” but he is very risk-tolerant.

In fact, his 20 units are not 20 actual units. He operates on a scale in which 20 units represent three to four percent of his bankroll.

It’s just easier, he wrote, and more aesthetically pleasing than dealing with decimals. Max said, “It’s an inflated/aggrandized scale.”

That’s fair. He sometimes provides nutshell analyses and deals with all sports. Max has followers who praise him for his work.

At random, I picked two recent plays, a college hoops side and an Italian soccer under. Both lost. It’s a free service, so bettors can fade or follow Max, betting what they desire.

But it definitely appears Max puts a lot more into this than Durant.

“It’s a passion of mine so it doesn’t feel like work at all,” Max wrote. “I also found that posting on X made me practice more discipline, because of the accountability factor, which helps me be more profitable in the long run.

“I love the challenge and strategy of navigating the sports-betting landscape. The research/breakdown process in finding plays and allocating appropriate sizing is usually even more fun to me than picking the bet or watching the games.”



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Outreach bus spreading holiday cheer to communities in need

Juan Roca spent his 52nd birthday doing exactly what he wanted — helping spread holiday cheer to those in need.

“I can celebrate with my family another day,” Roca said. “This is where I want to be. I’m needed here more.”

Roca, along with other volunteers of the Night Ministry, gathered Wednesday at the corner of 54th and Halsted in Back of the Yards to pass out warm meals, hot chocolate and stockings full of goodies to unhoused community members.

The Night Ministry, headquartered in Bucktown, provides support and services to unhoused community members.

Roca, the manager of outreach operations, said he inherited his love for helping those in need from his mother who used to pass out warm meals to the unhoused in Peru.

He started working for the Night Ministry in 2019 and said the work he’s been able to do has been “fulfilling.”

“I used to work in a church helping students, but I was stuck in an office,” Roca said. “I wanted to do more. I wanted to be out in the street helping those in need. I love getting to know the people in these communities.”

A volunteer hands out food during The Night Ministry’s distribution of holiday stockings at its Health Outreach Bus near West 54th Place and S Halstead Avenue in New City, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

A volunteer hands out food during the Night Ministry’s distribution of holiday stockings from its outreach bus on Wednesday.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

The Night Ministry outreach bus makes weekly stops in several neighborhoods on the Lower West and South sides to hand out meals and provide other services. But during the holidays the group makes their stops a little more special.

Every year,Night Ministry volunteers pass out stockings filled with hats, gloves, personal hygiene kits and other necessary items as a gift to residents in need.

“During the holidays we want to celebrate the season with the folks that we serve,” said Burke Patten, communications manager at the Night Ministry. “The stockings are a way to show folks that we care.”

A chorus of “thank yous” and “Merry Christmases” were heard from the men, women and kids who lined up to receive their gifts. Kids were also given small toys to take with them.

Juan Roca, Manager of Outreach Operations, repacks a socking during The Night Ministry’s distribution of holiday stockings at its Health Outreach Bus near West 54th Place and S Halstead Avenue in New City, Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. | Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Night Ministry manager Juan Roca packs stockings to give to guests arriving at the health outreach bus. “We’re grateful to be able to help. We want them to feel important, because they are.”

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

Patten said the team hoped to pass out more than 370 stockings. About 60 were handed out at their stop in Back of the Yards.

“This could be their only meal of the day, we don’t know,” Roca said. “But we’re grateful to be able to help. We want them to feel important, because they are.”

Linet Babu Varghese, 20, started volunteering Monday, and for three days she’s driven from her home in suburban Des Plaines to hop on the outreach bus.

“I wanted to focus on helping the unhoused,” Varghese said. “I think it’s a community that is often overlooked. I’ve loved getting to know the people who stop by.”



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Judge dismisses most of TikToker’s claims against Hubbard Inn

A judge has dismissed nearly all of the allegations a woman made against a River North restaurant in connection with a viral video she posted claiming she was manhandled by a security guard and thrown down stairs.

In a since-deleted video on TikTok, Julia Reel, 22, alleged that a bouncer pulled her from a second-floor restroom and twice threw her down a set of stairs shortly after midnight March 10.

The restaurant posted its own TikTok video defending itself, juxtaposing security video of her being escorted out alongside Reel’s original video where she said she was assaulted.

Hubbard Inn later that month filed a lawsuit in Cook County alleging the woman defamed the business in her video and prompted an onslaught of negative reviews, threats and cancellations at the business at 110 W. Hubbard St.

In July, Reel filed seven counterclaims in the lawsuit accusing Hubbard Inn and the bouncer, who is not named in the allegations, of battery, inflicting emotional distress, defamation and false light regarding the alleged incident and the bar’s TikTok video posted in response to Reel’s video.

Cook County Judge Patrick Sherlock dismissed six of the seven claims Wednesday — allowing one allegation of battery against the establishment itself to continue.

The judge dismissed Reel’s claims of battery and infliction of emotional distress against the employee because the employee was not named in her allegations.

The other accusations of emotional distress, defamation and false light that Reel made against Hubbard Inn were dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence to support them, the judge wrote in his ruling.

Reel “has failed to provide any allegations that would lead to a finding that the bouncer’s conduct was extreme and outrageous for which [Hubbard Inn] can be held liable,” Sherlock wrote.

“By no means did [Hubbard Inn] make any insults or call [Reel] a liar, as [Reel] alleges. Additionally, although [Reel] claims [Hubbard Inn] acted with actual malice, the statements made by [Hubbard Inn] do not support malicious intent but rather a means by which to remediate the damage [Hubbard Inn] faced as a result of [Reel’s] original TikTok video.”

Hubbard Inn’s lawsuit against Reel was continued. A status hearing in the case was set for April.



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Male found fatally shot in West Pullman

A person was found shot to death Wednesday in West Pullman on the Far South Side.

The person, a male whose age was unknown, was found unresponsive about 3:30 p.m. in an alley in the 300 block of West 117th Street, Chicago police said.

He suffered gunshot wounds to his head and chest and was pronounced dead at the scene, police said.

No one is in custody.



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Shooting victim who took himself to Far South Side hospital dies

A shooting victim who took himself to a Far South Side hospital Wednesday has died, police said.

The 34-year-old drove himself to Advocate Trinity Hospital in the Calumet Heights neighborhood about 2:30 p.m. Wednesday with multiple gunshot wounds to his body, Chicago police said.

He was pronounced dead at the hospital, police said.

No arrests were reported, and no other information was released.



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Homeowners turn to pros to deck out homes with dazzling holiday light displays

Every year for Christmas, Christine and Tyler Roloff take their kids to walk through the interactive holiday light installation at the Kohl Children’s Museum. They were so inspired by the display that they wanted to re-create the scene for their holiday installation this year at their Glenview home.

Like the museum, their trees are wrapped in an array of colors and with matching ornaments that flash on and off like starbursts hanging from the branches.

The couple gave the display their own special touches by adding a blow-up Grinch and a scene displaying Snoopy and Woodstock playing hockey to represent their two kids who are ice hockey players.

While they weren’t short on ambition, they lacked the time because of their kids’ busy schedules, so they hired Ben Orr of Northern Holiday Lighting, who had done work in their neighborhood, to install the lights.

“When I found out Ben also did the museum lights I told him to take inspiration from that,” said Christine Roloff, 46. “They made a mini version of that in our house and it’s beautiful. It looks like a rainbow.”

The Roloffs spent $4,000 on their display this year — which includes lit-up garlands on the pillars of their home, lit-up wreaths on the windows and rainbow lights to highlight the evergreen trees in their yard. And they’re not alone. Though pricing depends on the quantity and size of the home, wealthier households will dish out between $2,000 and $4,000 for their outdoor decorations. One year, Orr had a customer who spent upwards of $18,000 to deck out their home.

From left: Cal Roloff, 10, Christine Roloff, Jordan Roloff, 9, and Tyler Roloff stand outside their home, which is decorated with Christmas lights, in Glenview, Ill., Wednesday, Dec. 18, 2024. | Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

(From left) Cal Roloff, 10, Christine Roloff, Jordan Roloff, 9, and Tyler Roloff stand outside their home, which is decorated with Christmas lights, in Glenview on Wednesday.

Local companies that light up people’s homes for the holidays said the interest in elaborate light displays has soared in the past few years.

Orr, 40, said he saw the biggest boom in business in 2020 during the pandemic. Before the pandemic, he said there wasn’t a shortage of customers, but every year since the number of requests has increased.

“During COVID everyone was locked in their home and couldn’t go anywhere,” Orr said. “They were looking for stuff to do and the easiest way to do that was to decorate their houses to bring some cheer.”

The Roloff home is adorned with Christmas decorations in Glenview.

The Roloff home is adorned with Christmas decorations in Glenview created by Ben Orr of Northern Holiday Lighting.

Kamil Krzaczynski/For the Sun-Times

Now Orr has eight full-time employees and hires about five more people during the busy season between October and December.

Rene Garcia, owner of The Rite Lites in Brookfield, thought the pandemic would affect his small business and he would lose clients, but it turned out to be his busiest year.

“I think people were sick of being indoors so they wanted to do something that would bring cheer to their home and doing the lights did that,” said Garcia, 37. “That year it was a big thing to walk around neighborhoods and see all the houses lit up.”

Garcia started his company in 2017, and although he only works seasonally he said he’s never short of business.

“Since COVID, it’s just gotten busier,” Garcia said. “We’ve been maxed out every year since, and I’ve had to turn people down because I can’t get to them in time. I don’t even advertise; it’s just all word of mouth.”

Garcia used to do all the installations on his own. These days, he hires at least five seasonal employees to get through the holiday season.

Between October and December, Orr installed holiday lights in over 160 homes in the north and northwest suburbs of Chicago, and Garcia tackled over 90 in the western suburbs.

“This all started by just lending a hand to someone who needed help and it’s just snowballed,” Garcia said. “I’m glad I’m able to help others get their homes ready for the holiday season.”

Holiday lights outside of a home in River Forest on Tuesday.

Jorge Neri’s River Forest home got the holiday treatment from Rene Garcia, owner of The Rite Lites in Brookfield.

After purchasing his River Forest house this year, Jorge Neri, 38, knew he would be calling Garcia to help decorate it for his family’s first Christmas in their new home.

Neri, a father of three and a business owner, said he looks forward to the holiday season but because of his busy schedule he isn’t able to decorate his home himself.

“I would rather spend my time with my family than spend it leaning over a ladder on the side of my house,” Neri said.

Neri budgeted $2,000 for the display in his new home. He said it was “worth it.”

“I like to support Latino-owned businesses, and Rene and his team have done a great job,” said Neri. “They’ve helped us get in the holiday spirit, and my kids love it. It’s a worthy investment.”

Neri first hired Garcia in 2021. In past years he’s enjoyed a colorful look. This year he decided to go more traditional, with garlands and warm white lights along the roof and wrapped around trees.

“We kept it simple, but my wife and I are already talking about what more we can add next year,” he said. “It just looks so beautiful, and it makes us feel happy when we drive in.”

Orr has been professionally installing lighting for homes and commercial businesses since starting his Glenview-based company in 2002.

“This was something that I just did on the side,” said Orr, who developed an eye for theatrics while setting stage lights for plays in high school.

He never thought his after-school hobby would later flourish into a booming business that he said has grown “exponentially,” with requests coming in for Christmas, Halloween, Diwali and Ramadan.

Decorating people’s homes also gives him the opportunity to express his creativity, he said.

“I love the challenge of figuring out how we can use lights to make something look unique,” Orr said. “Lighting, especially during COVID, was an expression of happiness and peace. I love being able to do this and bring that into people’s homes.”

The Fagin family home adorned with Christmas decorations in the 1300 block of Pleasant Lane in Glenview, Illinois, Monday, Dec. 16, 2024.

Brandie Fagin and her family tried decorating their house themselves, but the results weren’t as pleasing as the work done by Ben Orr and his crew.

Kamil Krzaczynski/For the Sun-Times

Orr’s longtime client Brandie Fagin tends to lean toward a more “classic” Christmas look of white, red and green for her holiday display at her Glenview home.

Fagin has had her lights professionally installed since 2017 and said that although her style hasn’t changed, she adds more every year.

“So much of what you do inside your home is so beautiful and lovely for the holidays, but no one ever really gets to see it,” said Fagin, 48. “Bringing it outside so that others can enjoy when they walk by is why we decided to do light installations. Now every year I add a wreath to another window or lights to another bush.”

Fagin’s Georgian-style home is decorated with wreaths with red bows on every window, mini Christmas trees on her front porch and bushes and trees flashed in warm white lights on the roof.

“We tried to do it ourselves for years, but it just didn’t look that good,” Fagin said. “The work is just so professionally done. There’s no loose cables. The finishing touch is just so beautiful.”



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Teacher, student killed in Wisconsin school shooting identified

A teacher and student killed in a shooting earlier this week at a school in Madison, Wisconsin, were identified Wednesday by authorities.

The Dane County Medical Examiner’s Office said in a news release provided to CBS News that 42-year-old Erin West and 14-year-old Rubi Vergara were fatally shot Monday morning at Abundant Life Christian School.

Preliminary examinations determined the two died of “homicidal firearm related trauma.” Both were pronounced dead at the scene, the medical examiner said.

An online obituary on a local funeral site stated Vergara was a freshman who leaves behind her parents, one brother, and a large extended family. It described her as “an avid reader” who “loved art, singing and playing keyboard in the family worship band.” 

West’s exact position with the school was unclear.   

The medical examiner also confirmed that a preliminary autopsy found that the suspected shooter, 15-year-old Natalie Rupnow — a student at the same school — was pronounced dead at a local hospital Monday of “firearm related trauma.” Madison Chief of Police Shon F. Barnes had previously told reporters that Rupnow was pronounced dead while being transported to a hospital. 

Police had also previously stated that she was believed to have died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

The shooting at the private Christian K-12 school was reported just before 11 a.m. Monday. In addition to the two people killed and the shooter, six others were wounded.  

Police said the shooting occurred in a classroom where a study hall was taking place involving students from several grades.

A handgun was recovered after the shooting, Barnes said, but it was unclear where the gun came from or how many shots were fired. A law enforcement source said the weapon used in the shooting appears to have been a 9 mm pistol.

Aliza Chasan,

and

Pat Milton

contributed to this report.

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COPA investigating detective convicted of threatening to kill fellow officer

Police oversight officials are investigating allegations against a Chicago police homicide detective who last month was convicted of assaulting a fellow officer with whom he was carrying on an extramarital affair.

Det. Marco Torres has been on unpaid leave. In November he was convicted in a bench trial on a misdemeanor count of assault for threatening to kill the female officer during an argument on the street in front of his house in September 2022. The same detective had filed more than 20 complaints against Torres, and a whistleblower lawsuit alleges she was told to transfer out of the homicide unit after she made reports to internal affairs.

Last month, Judge Laura Bertucci-Smith sentenced Torres to a year of probation and left in place a restraining order that prevents him having a firearms license that is required for all police officers. He also will remain on GPS monitoring and is barred from being near the victim or CPD’s Area 1 and Area 4 headquarters. It is not clear whether he will be able to get his badge back after the protective order expires.

At Torres’ sentencing hearing, the detective tearfully told the judge she lived in fear of Torres, who she said once threatened to kill her “with her own gun and make it look like a suicide.”

Torres also was acquitted of a felony count of battery for allegedly hitting the woman and shaking her violently during the encounter, though the judge said she believed the testimony of an eyewitness who said she saw Torres strike the victim.

The victim, who is not being named by the Chicago Sun-Times because she is the victim of a crime, in 2023 sued Torres and the department in a whistleblower lawsuit under the name Jane Doe.

In the lawsuit, Doe claims that after she reported instances of threats and abuse by Torres to supervisors and internal affairs, and was told to transfer out of the homicide division, she was warned “not to cite a hostile work environment as the reason” for the transfer because it “would upset the department.”

Records from the Civilian Office of Police Accountability indicate the oversight agency received multiple complaints against Torres made by the victim in the assault case, complaints in 2023, before Torres was charged criminally in March 2024. Records indicate that investigations into multiple complaints were closed, but the agency often consolidates cases that involve multiple, similar allegations against an officer.

The trial and civil lawsuit have surfaced other allegations by women who claim they were romantically involved with Torres and were threatened or abused by him. Ahead of testifying at a hearing in Torres’ criminal case, another woman sought a protective order against him. The woman said she was in a relationship with Torres from 2023 to 2024 and said that Torres, whose wife filed for divorce last year, grew angry at her when she asked him to prove that he was no longer married.

In the months following, she claims Torres contacted her boyfriend on several occasions. The woman said she expected Torres to be upset when he learned from her testimony that he was “stalking” Doe and that she had warned her.

Two CPD detectives, who had remained friendly with Torres after attending the same police academy class in 2009, testified that Torres called and texted them, trying to get them to keep Doe and other witnesses from cooperating with prosecutors.

Torres called one detective from a number that appeared as “No Caller ID,” then sent texts, opening with a plaintive request: “This is my life. Please don’t testify.” The message went on to explain that Torres believed he could conceal calls by using “burner” phones that were “paid for by other people in cash” and included a sort of confession, prosecutors said.

“I always cover my tracks. Both of them I was able to control how they talked to me. I didn’t mean to hit [Doe]. It was an accident.”

In the run-up to Torres’ trial, a third woman sought to protect her address and phone records from being subpoenaed by Torres’ lawyers, claiming that Torres had hit her and smashed her phone after she testified in another case that Torres offered to pay her not to testify — a filing that included pictures of her bruised jaw and cracked cellphone.

At trial, Torres’ lawyers pointed out that though the two officers said they recognized Torres’ voice, there was no proof that the calls came from his phone or “burner” phones he allegedly used. They also pointed out inconsistencies in Doe’s testimony, and that she had continued the relationship with Torres even after he allegedly hit her.

Torres denied making the calls, and in fact claimed that he never hit Doe. He said that it was she who was stalking him and his wife and threatening to make false accusations against him. Messages he exchanged with Doe that included seeming threats of violence were part of sexual role play, he said.

At his sentencing hearing, Torres gave a rambling statement that he wanted to get away from Doe, who was stalking him.

“I just want an opportunity to get my life back,” Torres said. “I want to go back to work, any kind of work. I apologized to my wife, my mom, my kids for bringing something like that to my home, to our home.”

This is not the first time Torres has been investigated by COPA. In 2014, he was cleared of wrongdoing in a bizarre on-duty shooting in which he claimed his gun accidentally fired when he bumped into a man he was chasing, with the man claiming the bullet grazed his head.

Torres was suspended 15 days for accidentally discharging his weapon, but investigators found that it was more likely that the man’s head wound came from falling and striking his head on a rock found near where Torres fired his gun.



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Canada geese die after ingesting lead pellets in DuPage County

A conservation group and law enforcement are investigating what they call a large uptick of Canada geese being diagnosed with lead poisoning near the Lombard Lagoon in the western suburb.

Between Nov. 14 and Dec. 10, more than two dozen geese were found to have lead toxicosis, commonly called lead poisoning, according to Sarah Reich, head veterinarian at the DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center in Willowbrook. She said the birds were first discovered by volunteers with Chicago Bird Collision Monitors. In the 27-day period, she said, 26 geese tested positive for lead poisoning, up from 12 in all of 2023. Eleven of the birds died.

Most of the sick birds were found on the shore of Lombard Lagoon, but three were found at a retention pond in Addison and two were found at North Terrace Pond in Villa Park, Reich said.

She said several of the birds ingested several hundred lead pellets, which are smaller than the sprinkles on a doughnut and can cause many health problems.

“When they ingest lead, it needs to be broken down and gets into their blood, causing neurological problems like wobbling or what we call drunk walking, seizures, tremors and it can also cause GI tract and respiratory tract problems. Many of the birds get diarrhea, then refuse to eat and end up with a high-pitched honk,” Reich said.

She added that the pellets were probably ingested in the grass the birds eat.

Lead pellets seen in an X-ray of a Canada goose at the DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center in Willowbrook, where 26 birds were treated after ingesting lead between Nov. 14 and Dec. 10.

Lead pellets seen in an X-ray of a Canada goose at the DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center in Willowbrook, where 26 birds were treated after ingesting lead between Nov. 14 and Dec. 10.

Sarah Reich/DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center

“They aren’t purposely eating it. More than likely it’s mixed in the grass,” Reich said.

Reich said that based on the size of the pellets, she believes they are bird shot, noting that there are three clubs within a 10-mile radius that offer members skeet and trap shooting.

“We know what it’s from, we just don’t know how it’s happening,” Reich said. “The pellets they are ingesting are bird shot. There’s nothing else that looks like that and has the volume. Bird shot had hundreds of pellets in each gun casing.”

Reich believes the birds are ingesting lead shot, but an officer with the Illinois Department of Natural Resources said there could be another source. The officer, who did not want to be named, said “it looks like sediment that could have been at the bottom of a waterway. It could be runoff, which would be an EPA concern, but it’s still pending investigation.”

Annette Prince, director of Chicago Bird Collision Monitors, also said it was possible the lead was coming from a waterway.

A Canada goose being treated for lead poisoning at the DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center in Willowbrook.

A Canada goose being treated for lead poisoning at the DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center in Willowbrook. Twenty-six tested positive.

Sarah Reich/DuPage Wildlife Conservation Center

“This year, with the drought conditions we’ve had, almost every bank of the DuPage River and all the retention ponds are at really low water levels. I wonder if anything got into any of the waterways that these birds frequent?” Prince said.

Regardless of where the lead is coming from, the treatment for geese with lead poisoning is complex, Reich said.

“We pull the metal from the blood with medication,” Reich said. “We have to get that lead out of their bodies and one way to do that is to do a stomach pump, but the challenge is that they need to be intubated. Basically, we pump water into their stomachs and tilt them so that it flows out. Then we take X-rays to track the movement of the pellets,” she explained. “If you’re lucky, you can get all the pellets out in one try, but a few of the birds had to have a second procedure.”

Wildlife experts don't know the source of the lead pellets ingested by Canada geese at Lombard Lagoon.

Wildlife experts don’t know the source of the lead pellets ingested by Canada geese at Lombard Lagoon.

Bob Chiarito/For Sun-Times

Reich and Prince said the Lombard Police Department was also notified. Reached by phone, Deputy Chief Joe Grage confirmed for the Sun-Times that the department filed a report, but suspected no foul play and referred the matter to the IDNR.

The Glen Oak Country Club is located about 3.5 miles from the Lombard Lagoon. Medinah Country Club is 7 miles away, and the Maywood Sportsmen’s Club in Elmhurst is 6.1 miles away, and although all offer skeet and trap shooting, it has not been determined that they are the source of the lead.

Jim Cardamone, general manager at Glen Oak, said the club is now in its 102nd year of offering skeet and trap shooting and nothing has changed there that would cause an uptick in geese lead poisonings.

Officials at Medinah and Maywood Sportsmen’s Club did not return requests for comment.

Canada geese, like all waterfowl, are protected by the federal Migratory Bird Treaty Act and the state wildlife code. It is illegal to kill or remove geese or to destroy, move or disturb their active nests, eggs, or young without a permit from the IDNR.

IDNR spokesperson Jayette Bolinski said her agency was notified Dec. 10 of the poisoned geese, and an investigation is underway.

Illinois EPA spokesperson Kim Biggs said that the IDNR handles animals, but if the lead is determined to be coming from a specific site, her agency then would get involved.

Reich and other experts may not yet agree on where the lead is coming from, but they all seem to echo her sentiment on the recent uptick.

“It is bizarre. We’ve never seen this many birds from the same location with this many lead pellets. Lead is not an infectious disease. Previously, I’ve seen as many as two birds with lead poisoning, but to have more than 20 is kind of crazy.”



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CPS board moves to oust schools CEO Pedro Martinez

The Board of Education is moving to oust Chicago Public Schools CEO Pedro Martinez at a special meeting Friday evening, potentially ending a months-long leadership saga that has brought an onslaught of political tension to the school system.

The board placed two voting items on its agenda and could choose to pursue either: Martinez’s termination or a buyout agreement.

The schools chief’s ouster on the Friday evening before the Christmas holiday — with classes having been dismissed for winter break — would make for an extraordinary resolution to the battle between Martinez and Mayor Brandon Johnson. And it would come days before a deadline set by the Chicago Teachers Union to reach a contract agreement.

The Chicago Sun-Times and WBEZ first reported in August that the mayor’s administration was laying the groundwork to replace Martinez.

Martinez has already fought off two attempts to remove him from what he has called his “dream job” at the helm of the nation’s fourth-largest school system. Martinez said publicly that he rejected Johnson’s resignation request in September, and he did not accept a separation settlement earlier this month.

But Martinez’s hand could be forced this week, with the board prepared to consider items on Friday evening to either approve a settlement agreement or fire him. Sources have said Martinez wanted to stay until at least the end of the school year.

Martinez’s attorney, Bill Quinlan, didn’t immediately comment.

The meeting was announced Wednesday morning and set for 11 a.m. Friday. But the agenda, which is required by law to be posted 48 hours in advance of a public meeting, did not include any votes on Martinez — only closed session discussion of personnel matters. CPS officials and legal experts have said voting items would have to be explicitly listed in order for the board to take action.

Hours later, the board updated the agenda to include the votes on Martinez and moved the meeting to 5:45 p.m. Friday.

The new agenda included a vote to approve a settlement with Martinez and a separate vote to terminate his contract. Either vote could proceed or be postponed, according to the agenda.

The school board has been hesitant to fire him because of language in his contract.

The Board of Education amended Martinez’s contract in December 2022 — in former Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s last months in office — to require six months’ notice of termination without cause. During that time, Martinez would continue working and transition his duties to a new CEO. In that scenario, his contract calls for 20 weeks’ severance, which would come out to $138,733. Martinez’s five-year contract runs through June 30, 2026.

If the school board moved to fire Martinez for cause, it would have to cite misconduct, criminal activity, failure to perform his duties, fraud or other wrongdoing. His contract’s 2022 amendment says “any other conduct inconsistent with the CEO’s duties and obligations to CPS or the Board, or that may be reasonably perceived to have a material adverse impact on the good name and integrity of CPS or the Board.”

That decision should be made “in the sole judgment of the Board,” according to Martinez’s contract.

Supporters of Martinez have said that this language gives him the leverage to sue the school district and perhaps even school board members themselves. It was this obstacle, in part, that led all members of the school board to resign in October.

This comes as the CTU is trying to settle its contract by Christmas and is increasingly calling on Martinez to “provide transparent financial information.” The union for months has called for Martinez to be replaced, blaming him for slow contract negotiations. Johnson, the CTU’s staunch ally who rose to office with the union’s extensive campaign support, has not publicly said he wanted to replace Martinez, but his administration and handpicked school board have pushed behind the scenes to do just that.

CTU President Stacy Davis Gates said earlier Wednesday that Martinez needed to explain how he would handle the financial implications of a new CTU contract, noting that she would not take a deal just to have her members face furloughs or layoffs in the spring. CPS has said it doesn’t have enough money to pay for a new CTU contract.

Gates also raised the prospect again that the school district might need to take a short-term loan to get through this school year without budget cuts.

“This idea that he cannot get a short-term loan is absolutely ridiculous,” she told reporters during a media briefing.

The demand by the mayor’s office that the school district take a short-term loan to fill a budget deficit was the initial breaking point between the mayor and Martinez, who refused, saying it was fiscally irresponsible. But Martinez also did not include money in the district’s budget to pay for expected raises for teachers and principals, who were in the midst of contract negotiations. Nor did he put money in the budget to pay for a pension payment that City Hall had demanded CPS take on.



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