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White Sox acquire catcher Matt Thaiss from Cubs

The White Sox acquired catcher Matt Thaiss from the Cubs on Tuesday in exchange for cash considerations.

Thaiss, 29, who could make the Opening Day roster as a backup to catcher Korey Lee, spent the 2024 season with the Los Angeles Angels. The Cubs acquired him for cash considerations on Nov. 20.

Thaiss, a left-handed hitter regarded as average at best defensively, batted .204/.323/.299 with two homers in 56 games and 176 plate appearances last season. He’s a career .208/.313/.342 hitter with 22 homers in 245 games over six seasons with the Angels. He has appeared in 142 games at catcher, 47 at third base, 31 at first, one at second and one in left field.

He was an Angels first-round draft pick in 2016 out of Virginia, the same school attended by top Sox catching prospect Kyle Teel, who was acquired last week from the Red Sox in a trade for Garrett Crochet.

Teel, who played at the Double-A and Triple-A levels in the Red Sox organization last season, could reach the majors this season.

The Cubs signed catcher Carson Kelly to a a two-year free agent deal last week, making Thaiss expendable.

The Sox’ 40-man roster is at 40.



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UnitedHealthcare CEO murder suspect indicted on new charges

UnitedHealthcare CEO murder suspect indicted on new charges – CBS News

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A New York grand jury has indicted Luigi Mangione, the man accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, with first-degree murder and killing as an act of terrorism. Lilia Luciano has the latest on the case.

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Police searching for motive in Wisconsin school shooting

Police searching for motive in Wisconsin school shooting – CBS News

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Police in Madison, Wisconsin, said a number of factors may have led a 15-year-old student to open fire in a classroom on Monday, killing two people before taking her own life. Two of the injured were still in critical condition on Tuesday. Charlie De Mar reports.

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Damen Silos owner Michael Tadin Jr. moves step closer toward demolition

The owner of the historic Damen Silos on the West Side moved a step closer toward demolishing the former grain storage structures, though city officials still have to sign off on the plan.

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers gave the green light on Monday to Michael Tadin Jr., whose family business acquired the property from Gov. JB Pritzker’s administration two years ago. The Army Corps became involved with the process because of the silos’ location by the Chicago River.

Tadin can tear the structures down as long as he installs historic markers memorializing the silos that include salvaged materials, according to a memorandum of agreement announced by the Army Corps. Tadin signed an agreement with the corps and Illinois Historic Preservation officials.

Preservationists sought to save the structures as a symbol of city’s historical ties to agricultural commodities. The silos and surrounding buildings have been dormant for decades, though they made an appearance in the 2014 movie “Transformers: Age of Extinction.”

Tadin, who bought the 23-acre property for $6.5 million, said Tuesday he still hasn’t decided what to do with the land. Tadin separately owns MAT Asphalt, 2055 W. Pershing Road, in McKinley Park and has said that he has no plans for another asphalt plant.

Tadin still needs clearance from city reviewers, including those with the Department of Buildings and the Department of Public Health.

Because of its size, the teardown is considered by the city to be an “environmentally complex” demolition, a term developed after the 2020 Crawford coal plant implosion debacle in Little Village. Chicago officials had given a private developer, Hilco Redevelopment, the go-ahead to take down an almost 400-foot smokestack through implosion.

It’s unclear how long the process will take or when demolition will begin on the silos.

“Other permits are still outstanding from the city before demolition can proceed,” a city spokeswoman said. “Specific timing is not yet known.”



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Demolition starts at infamous former E2 nightclub building

Demolition began Tuesday of the nearly 115-year-old Near South Side building that formerly housed the E2 Nightclub, where 21 people died in a stampede in 2003.

City officials last month issued an emergency order to demolish the two-story building at 2347 S. Michigan Ave., running contrary to the Commission on Chicago Landmarks’ denial of the property owner’s request to demolish the building in August.

The landmarks commission had denied the request on a recommendation by city planning officials.

The building dates back to 1910 when it opened as a Fiat showroom in the historic Motor Row District during the early days of the automobile. It later became infamous in Chicago as the home of the E2 nightclub, where, on the night of Feb. 17, 2003, a security guard used pepper spray after a fight broke out on the crowded second floor, triggering a rush down a stairwell leading to a narrow doorway. Twenty-one people were crushed to death and 50 others were injured.

The Chicago Department of Buildings and the property owner, Randy Shifrin, could not be immediately reached for comment.

Shifrin previously said he had plans to construct affordable housing and a memorial for the E2 victims.



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QB Caleb Williams watches peers race toward playoffs as he picks up the pieces of rookie season gone wrong

As if it wasn’t bad enough for Bears rookie quarterback Caleb Williams to watch Jayden Daniels, picked second by the Commanders after Williams went No. 1, outshine him in his hometown as he leads the Commanders toward the playoffs and sprints away with Offensive Rookie of the Year, the other first-round picks have delivered some gut punches along the way.

Patriots quarterback and Williams’ longtime pal Drake Maye, the third pick, came to Soldier Field last month and walked away with a 19-3 win in which he outplayed Williams.

The Broncos’ Bo Nix, a former Pac-12 rival, was the last first-round quarterback at No. 12, and he’s made more progress than Williams as he leads the rookies with 20 touchdown passes.

Nix and Daniels have opportunities to clinch playoff spots this week, while Williams will have to watch them on TV next month as he waits for a new coach amid a major reset that probably will include substantial roster overhauling.

And two of the first-round picks haven’t even gotten going yet. The Falcons’ Michael Penix (No. 8 overall) and Vikings’ J.J. McCarthy (No. 10) likely will enter the race next season.

There has been good and bad in Williams’ rookie season, and Bears general manager Ryan Poles owes some explanations for a poor coaching staff and offensive line, but the hard truth is that he wasn’t as NFL-ready as he or most others thought.

Daniels not only leads the rookies with a 101.2 passer rating and 70.5 completion percentage this season, but he’s top-10 in the NFL in both. Williams is third in his class with an 87.7 passer rating, fourth in completion percentage (61.9) and tied for second with Daniels with 17 touchdown passes despite walking onto a more talented roster than any of the other rookies.

Williams has thrown the fewest interceptions at five and is third in the league with picks on just 1.1% of his passes, but that’s partly due to an overly conservative approach. In the 30-12 loss to the Vikings on Monday, he threw deeper than five yards past the line of scrimmage just once in the first half before opening it up somewhat in the second.

Williams described his rookie season as “frustrating and encouraging” after the game, with the bothersome part including his poor play at times, the team’s eight-game losing streak and 4-10 record and the November firings of coach Matt Eberflus and offensive coordinator Shane Waldron.

It’s a long game, and Williams will get at least three seasons to prove himself, but the story of this season has been written. The Bears’ remaining games are more of an epilogue than anything else, and everything has deteriorated so badly that they can’t even be certain these will be a helpful lead-in to next season.

While Williams has shown more potential than previous Bears first-round picks Justin Fields and Mitch Trubisky, he didn’t look much better against the Vikings than he did in Week 2 against the Texans.

Williams completed 18 of 31 passes for 191 yards and a meaningless late touchdown for an 86.9 passer rating. The offense went 1 for 12 on third downs and didn’t score until a field goal halfway through the third quarter — a thudding disappointment after having first-and-goal at the 1-yard line.

That calls into question how much he has actually developed and whether the incoming coach will essentially have him start from scratch. Williams has seen a lot, playing 936 snaps and dropping back 523 times, but has that made him any better?

Indecision is still an issue, and that’s the biggest concern. Every rookie quarterback walks in with talent — Williams more than most, perhaps — but the ones who solve the ever-changing puzzle of NFL defensive schemes are the ones who flourish.

Williams missed open receivers Monday, as ESPN broadcaster and Hall of Fame quarterback Troy Aikman illustrated, and waiting too long in the pocket also is part of the equation on his league-high 58 sacks.

“He’s slow to anticipate, slow to react, and that’s the difference between punting the football or picking up a first down,” Aikman said after Williams didn’t throw to an open Rome Odunze on a third-and-four.

Williams said afterward he had some bruises and was fatigued, and he looked like it on the sideline. Aikman said, “You can tell he’s a defeated guy… what you worry about is a rookie quarterback losing confidence.” Williams would dispute that, but he looked and sounded flatter than usual after the game.

He’s picking up the pieces, trying to sort out how he ended up here and what to do about it. And meanwhile, two of his peers are looking eagerly toward the playoffs.



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Adam Fravel sentenced to life in prison for Madeline Kingsbury’s murder

Madeline Kingsbury’s father decries that she was murdered by “someone she once loved”


Madeline Kingsbury’s father decries that she was murdered by “someone she once loved”

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WINONA, Minn. — Adam Fravel, the 30-year-old southern Minnesota man convicted of killing 26-year-old Madeline Kingsbury, was sentenced to life in prison without the possibility of parole on Tuesday afternoon.

Fravel spoke briefly before he was sentenced.

“I never caused harm to Maddi and I am innocent,” Fravel said.

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Kingsbury’s family, including her mother, father and sisters, gave emotional victim impact statements before his sentencing. Winona County Attorney Karin Sonneman asked the court to adhere to sentencing guidelines, which mandate life in prison for first-degree premeditated murder, the most serious of the four counts on which Fravel was convicted.

“Mr. Fravel’s actions put an entire community in mourning, a community in shock, left her family devastated, left the lives of her children changed forever because of their father’s evil act,” Sonneman said. “But your honor, justice has caught up with Adam Taylor Fravel and justice will be served for Madeline Jane Kingsbury, her family, her friends, her community, this community, by this court sentencing Adam Taylor Fravel to life in prison without the possibility of parole.”

Last month, a jury found Fravel guilty of murdering Kingsbury, the mother of his two young children.

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A judge ruled last week in favor of allowing cameras and livestreaming of the sentencing hearing after the defense, prosecution and Kingsbury’s family agreed to it, according to a court filing.

March will mark two years since Kingsbury disappeared after dropping off the two kids she shared with Fravel at a daycare in Winona. Her body was found two months later near the Iowa border. 

The trial was moved to Mankato, about 136 miles west of Winona, because of extensive pretrial publicity

CBS News’ 48 Hours has also been tracking this case since Kingsbury disappeared. On Tuesday night, they’re airing their hour-long investigation on the new 48 Hours streaming channel. 

Watch “The Disappearance of Maddi Kingsbury” at 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. CT,  wherever you stream CBS News Minnesota – including the CBS News app, Pluto and Paramount Plus.  

Domestic Violence Resources: For anonymous, confidential help, people can call the National Domestic Violence Hotline at 1-800-799-7233 or 1-800-787-3224.

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Chance the Rapper’s wife, Kirsten Corley, files for divorce

Kirsten Corley, Chance the Rapper’s wife for almost six years and the mother of his two daughters, has filed for divorce.

The Dec. 13 filing in the Circuit Court of Cook County comes about eight months after the couple released a statement saying they had reached an amicable decision to part ways. In that statement posted to Chance’s instagram account in April, the couple noted: “After a period of separation, the two of us have arrived at the decision to part ways” and that “we came to this decision amicably and with gratitude for the time we spent together.”

In the new court documents, Corley cites “irreconcilable differences” as the reason for seeking a divorce.

The couple signed a pre-marital agreement in 2018, although the specifics of that agreement aren’t outlined in the divorce papers. Corley and Chance currently live separately in Chicago, according to the filing.

According to the divorce documents reviewed by the Sun-Times, Corley is seeking child support, “majority parenting time” and an “equitable share of their marital property.”

Chance and Corley wed in March 2019. The two exchanged vows during a ceremony held in Newport Beach, California, before a crowd that included comedian Dave Chappelle, rapper Ye (then called Kanye West) and his then-wife, Kim Kardashian West.

Days before their nuptials, Chance confirmed he and Corley were tying the knot in an X thread about how he met his soon-to-be bride. He said the two met in 2003 when he was 9 at his mother’s office party.

Contributing: USA Today



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Bulls defense turning it around and they may have a rookie to thank

It was initially just a one-word answer from Lonzo Ball.

“Effort,” the Bulls guard replied a few weeks back when asked about how to improve the sinking defense.

He wasn’t wrong, but he also wasn’t 100% accurate. There’s another reason the Bulls have had the sixth-best defensive efficiency rating (114.1) in the month of December so far.

Actually, make that six reasons.

Brooklyn, San Antonio, Indiana, Philadelphia, Charlotte and Toronto.

Those have been the six opponents for the Bulls so far this December, and not one of them is in the top half of the league in offensive efficiency for the month. Brooklyn and Charlotte were bottom four.

So yes, the effort has been better but so has the schedule. And the good news for coach Billy Donovan and his staff is they still have the third-easiest schedule left this season.

Why is this defensive improvement – schedule or not – suddenly important? For the roster as a whole or the standings it’s not, but the fact that there is a focus on that side of the ball individually and rookie Matas Buzelis seems to be embracing his role in that? Priceless in his development.

Individual defensive efficiency is a very subjective statistic.

There’s a lot of ways to bend it.

Take this season’s Bulls for example. Ball leads the team (112.5) in that stat and there’s no argument in his defensive abilities. It passes the eye test.

But Josh Giddey is fifth overall (116), and there have been way too many blow-bys from opposing guards to come away thinking Giddey is a top five defender on the roster.

Buzelis, however, is third (114.7) and feels like an up-and-coming force in the frontcourt defensively. He’s added some physicality to his game and within a few seasons there’s no reason that he can’t be an elite rim protector because of his athleticism and his ability to react on backside help.

That’s why several scouts have compared Buzelis to former Utah standout Andrei Kirilenko. Known as “AK-47,” Kirilenko was built similar to Buzelis – even an inch smaller at 6-9 – but led the NBA in blocks (3.3 per game) in 2005 and was an All-NBA defender three times.

Even as a rookie, Kirilenko flashed as a rim protector, averaging 1.9 blocks in 26.2 minutes per game. Over this stretch of six games, Buzelis has averaged 19 minutes and was registering 1.3 blocks per game.

There’s something there with the 20-year-old, and something the Bulls could build on as they figure out how to navigate the rest of the season.

What Bulls fans need to prepare themselves for is a scenario in which the front office finds out they can’t move trade assets like Ball, Nikola Vucevic and Zach LaVine – as hard as they will try – and rather than focusing on the loaded 2025 draft class, they turn the attention to a ’26 draft class that is also gaining momentum as being elite.

Thanks to Monday’s win in Toronto, the Bulls entered Tuesday 12-15, holding down the 10th-worst record in the Association. If the Bulls finish outside the top 10 in the lottery that ’25 first-round pick goes to San Antonio.

Executive vice president of basketball Arturas Karnisovas knows the numbers and sitting 10th only gives him a 3% chance to land No. 1, a 13.9% chance to be in the top four, 65.9% chance to stay at No. 10, and 19% to fall to No. 11 and draw dead as far as the pick goes.

In the meanwhile, making sure that Buzelis continues developing on both ends of the floor is key for his next drafted running-mate, whether the team finds him this June or June of ’26.



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After nine weeks of testimony, prosecutors close to resting their case in Madigan corruption trial

Federal prosecutors appear on the cusp of resting their wide-ranging case against former Illinois House Speaker Michael J. Madigan — but jurors wound up leaving the courthouse early Tuesday without hearing any such announcement.

That’s despite a prediction made by prosecutors Tuesday morning to U.S. District Judge John Blakey that they would likely rest their case in the afternoon. Instead, the judge sent the jury home at 2:30 p.m.

After the panel left the courtroom, Assistant U.S. Attorney Amarjeet Bhachu told the judge “we’ve got a little homework to do on our side.” He didn’t elaborate.

Still, all parties seem to be preparing to shift Madigan’s trial into a new phase, in which defense attorneys get to call their own witnesses. Jurors have so far heard from about 50 witnesses summoned by prosecutors over the last nine weeks.

Madigan and his longtime ally, Michael McClain, are on trial for an alleged racketeering conspiracy. Prosecutors say Madigan led a criminal enterprise designed to enhance his political power and financial well-being, with McClain as his agent.

Two schemes alleged in the case involve former state Rep. Edward “Eddie” Acevedo, who took the stand briefly Monday but was threatened by Blakey with contempt after he failed to bring his eyeglasses to court.

When Acevedo returned to the witness stand Tuesday morning, Bhachu kicked things off by asking if Acevedo had brought his glasses.

“Right here,” Acevedo said, holding them up.

“Congratulations,” Bhachu retorted.

Acevedo’s attorney has warned that he has dementia, and the former lawmaker gave several “I don’t know” and “I’m not sure” answers Tuesday. When defense attorneys had their chance to question him, they painted a dire picture of Acevedo’s health.

Acevedo testified that he began experiencing memory loss in 2016, when he was still in the Illinois General Assembly, and also suffered from anxiety, hearing loss and confusion.

He also testified that he has been diagnosed with a brain tumor and dementia. He acknowledged to Madigan attorney Dan Collins that he couldn’t always remember the names of his grandchildren.

That came up again while Acevedo was being questioned by McClain attorney Patrick Cotter.

“Are you confident in your memory?” Cotter asked him. “That you remember correctly?”

Acevedo began to choke up and said, “No sir, that’s one reason why it hurts me so much because when he asked me about my grandkids’ names. It hurts so much that I can’t remember their names.”

Acevedo fought back against claims that he did no work for $22,500 he was paid by AT&T Illinois in 2017. Prosecutors say Acevedo was paid in an alleged bid to bribe Madigan. They say Acevedo, a leading Latino politician, was valuable to Madigan because of a growing Latino population in Madigan’s 22nd District.

“Did you ever ask McClain for a no-show job?” Cotter asked Acevedo.

“I never asked anyone for a no-show job,” Acevedo said.

But Bhachu later reminded jurors that Acevedo also pleaded guilty to tax evasion in 2021.

“That’s for basically hiding your income?” Bhachu asked.

Acevedo insisted he “was not trying to hide anything.”

Acevedo also testified that he’d given information to AT&T lobbyist Michael Lieteau. However, prosecutors summoned Lieteau after Acevedo left the stand, and Lieteau testified that he was unaware of Acevedo doing any work for AT&T in 2017.

The feds also took issue with another part of Acevedo’s testimony. He claimed on the witness stand Tuesday that he told the presiding judge about his dementia diagnosis when he pleaded guilty in December 2021.

FBI Special Agent Kyle Scherrer took the stand and testified that a transcript from that hearing shows Acevedo did not mention that diagnosis.

However, Collins pointed out on cross-examination that Acevedo did not see a neurologist until January 2022, the month after his guilty plea.



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