Home Blog Page 42

Bears injury report: DL Gervon Dexter ruled out

Defensive tackle Gervon Dexter, who leads the Bears with five sacks this season, was ruled out of Monday’s game against the Vikings after missing practice all week with a knee injury.

Dexter, who has started all 13 games for the Bears this season, was one of three Bears ruled out after Saturday’s practice. Running back Roschon Johnson and guard Ryan Bates have concussions.

Running back D’Andre Swift is questionable with a groin injury. The other three Bears who missed practice time with injuries this week — cornerback Josh Blackwell, safety Elijah Hicks and running back Travis Homer — will play.

The Bears have struggled to pressure the quarterback all season. Their 31 sacks rank 19th in the NFL. Dexter ranks ahead of defensive end Montez Sweat in sacks. Sweat, whom the Bears gave a contract extension after trading for him last year, has just 4 1/2. Only two other Bears have more than two.



Source link

Suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO hires former Manhattan prosecutor

Luigi Mangione, the suspect in the killing of UnitedHealthcare’s CEO, has added a prominent defense lawyer to his legal team as Manhattan prosecutors work to return him from Pennsylvania to face a murder charge.

Mangione will be represented by Karen Friedman Agnifilo, who was a high-ranking deputy in the Manhattan district attorney’s office for years before entering private practice. Friedman Agnifilo’s law firm, Agnifilo Intrater LLP, confirmed in a statement late Friday that she had been retained to represent Mangione. The firm said she will not be commenting on the case at this time.

According to her firm’s website, “A public servant for nearly three decades, Karen Friedman Agnifilo left the government as the Chief Assistant District Attorney in the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office, a role she held from 2014 through 2021.”

UnitedHealthcare CEO Killed
FILE – Assistant District Attorney Karen Agnifilo attends a news conference in Manhattan Supreme Court, in New York, Feb. 14, 2017.

Richard Drew / AP


Mangione was arrested Monday after a customer at a McDonald’s in Altoona, Pennsylvania, saw him eating breakfast and noticed a resemblance to the person being sought by police in the Dec. 4 killing of Brian Thompson in Manhattan.

Police say Mangione was found with a gun, mask and writings linking him to the ambush outside the New York Hilton Midtown, where Thompson was arriving for his company’s annual investor conference. 

The New York Police Department told CBS News that there are no indications that Mangione was a UnitedHealthcare customer. 

Mangione, 26, remained jailed without bail Saturday in Pennsylvania, where he was initially charged with gun and forgery offenses. Altoona is about 230 miles west of New York City.

Mangione’s lawyer there, Thomas Dickey, has cautioned against prejudging the case and said that his client would contest his extradition to New York.

But Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg said Friday that there were indications Mangione may now give up on that fight.

“We going to continue to press forward on parallel paths, and we’ll be ready whether he is going to waive extradition or whether he is going to contest extradition,” Bragg said at an unrelated press conference in Times Square.

Hours after Mangione’s arrest on Monday, Bragg’s office filed paperwork charging him with five counts, including intentional murder, criminal possession of a weapon and criminal possession of a forged instrument.

New York Gov. Kathy Hochul has said she’s prepared to ask her Pennsylvania counterpart, Gov. Josh Shapiro, to intervene and issue a governor’s warrant requiring Mangione’s extradition if he does not agree to be moved voluntarily.

Mangione’s new lawyer has made frequent TV appearances, including as a CNN legal analyst, co-hosts a weekly podcast and is the legal adviser for “Law & Order.”

Her husband and law partner Mark Agnifilo is representing Sean “Diddy” Combs in the hip-hop mogul’s Manhattan federal sex trafficking case.

Source link

Bulls need to do right thing with ‘Derrick Rose Night’ just weeks away

There remains a cloud of mystery over “Derrick Rose Night.”

We know the venue. That’s obvious.

We know the date: Jan. 4, perfectly timed for when former Bulls coach Tom Thibodeau and the Knicks are in town.

The unknown? The magnitude of it.

By all accounts, the Bulls have no plans to announce a statue for Rose. Fair considering being fitted in bronze for immortality should be reserved for those that brought a championship trophy to a city. Rose failed in that department.

But what should happen – and is still up in the air – is the announcement of the No. 1 forever being retired by the organization and raised to the rafters.

I’ve been as critical of the Rose era as anyone. It was basically three stellar years of basketball followed by four years of headaches, talk of “meetings and graduations,” all the while chasing the ghost of Christmas past. Rose does not deserve to be in the NBA Hall of Fame and he’s not even the best all-around player the Bulls have had in the last 20 years. That honor goes to Jimmy Butler.

What Rose represents, however, is a heartbeat of an organization that flatlined after the Michael Jordan Dynasty.

And the topper was he was “one of ours.”

The iconic introduction of “… and from Chicago …” meant something. When Rose was at his best it almost came across as a warning for the opposing team that night. This kid from the streets of Englewood, who was born and raised here, is coming to take your soul and there’s nothing you can do about it.

Even when Rose was no longer MVP-caliber because of the knee injuries, “… and from Chicago …” still sent the United Center into a frenzy with the hope that a derailed career could still somehow find traction back to a legendary journey.

So why not give Rose that final nudge with a jersey retirement?

After all, it’s not like the Bulls have allowed anyone else to wear it. Well, not for more than a few days. Back in the 2016-17 season, after Rose was traded to New York and the Bulls acquired Michael Carter-Williams from the Bucks, Carter-Williams posted a picture of him wearing the No. 1. The torches were lit and the villagers were outraged.

Carter-Williams quickly pivoted to No. 7, wanting nothing to do with the outpouring of criticism directed at him and the organization for approving it.

But the No. 1 jersey controversy didn’t end there.

Never afraid of making waves and sticking his middle finger up at the establishment, Butler then tried to switch to the No. 1 in Rose’s absence, but the organization knew how that would look. After all, Rose and Butler didn’t exactly play nice all the time in Rose’s final two seasons with the Bulls, so the idea of Butler decked out in No. 1 wouldn’t exactly be a good look, so Butler backed down.

That’s why for an organization that seldom does the right thing, it’s time to do the right thing: Announce that Jan. 4 is not just a “night” for Rose, but an everlasting celebration that will see his jersey retired.

Friday’s win over Charlotte was the latest reminder of just how much Rose and that Bulls team meant to the city. Long-time forward Taj Gibson, now with the Hornets, was given a standing ovation when he came into the game late, and afterwards was asked by reporters about the emotion he showed and the upcoming Rose night.

“I expect everyone to scream loud, drop some tears,” Gibson, who will be in attendance, said. “If I’m tearing up from just this end-of-the-game thing (on Friday), I know it’s going to be crazy for him.”

It will be crazy, but the Bulls have a chance to also make it iconic.

No. 1’s don’t come along often. Do the right thing. It’s time.



Source link

COPA investigating after exchange of gunfire involving off-duty Chicago police officers in Austin

A man was injured after a shooting in Austin early Saturday morning, according to Chicago police.

The man, 26, was getting out of a parked vehicle that had four others inside, including two off-duty Chicago police officers, in the 100 block of South Mayfield Avenue at 1:28 a.m. when he was shot, police said. One of the occupants of the vehicle he was getting out of shot back as the person who shot the 26-year-old fled.

The man was taken to a nearby hospital by the off-duty officers and the two other passengers, and he is in serious condition, police said. No other injuries were reported.

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability and Investigative Response Team are investigating the incident, officials confirmed to the Sun-Times Saturday. No one is in custody.



Source link

Man critically injured in Chatham shooting

A man was injured in a shooting in Chatham early Saturday morning, according to Chicago police.

The man, 42, was sitting in a parked vehicle in the 400 block of East 87th Street at 2:49 a.m. when he heard a shot fired and felt pain, police said. He was shot in the hip and taken to University of Chicago Medical Center in critical condition.

No one is in custody.



Source link

Bears go into Week 15 with No. 9 pick in draft, still alive for No. 1

The Bears are 4-9 going into their game at the Vikings on Monday, which is a brutal reality after their 4-2 start. But the upside to their spiral is it has them in position for a valuable draft pick.

They hold the No. 9 pick heading into Week 15 and have the NFL’s hardest remaining schedule, starting with the Vikings (11-2), followed by home games against the Lions (12-1) and Seahawks (8-5) and the finale at the Packers (9-4).

ESPN Analytics’ latest calculation projects them to pick 10th and gives them less than a 1% chance of landing the No. 1 pick and a 6.1% chance of picking in the top five. The Bears are sitting behind two 2-11 teams and six 3-10 teams. Only one of the teams ahead of them in draft order, the Patriots, beat them this season.

It’ll be a high pick either way, and the Bears have major needs to address with a premium resource like that. They could land a starting pass rusher, offensive tackle or defensive tackle and still have two picks in the second round that currently are slotted at Nos. 36 and 41.



Source link

Chicagoans prepare to defend rights of immigrants

All people in the U.S. have rights, regardless of immigration status, and regardless of what rhetoric President-elect Trump’s incoming “border czar” Tom Homan chooses to use to demonize immigrants — on a national stage or at a holiday party here in Chicago.

Chicago’s legal and immigrant communities are preparing to defend our immigrant neighbors and the rule of law during the next Trump administration. We must all be prepared to come together to defend our shared values of fairness and due process, including ensuring people have access to a fair hearing, legal counsel and a basic understanding of their rights before the U.S. government subjects them to detention or deportation.

Trump and Homan have made it clear that Chicagoans should expect swift and cruel anti-immigrant actions in our city after Inauguration Day, including unlawful enforcement operations that could put people at risk of detention and deportation regardless of their immigration status. We are working together with many other Chicagoans to prepare for these neighborhood and workplace raids. We are educating people about how to ensure their families’ safety and protect their rights during an encounter with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. We also are training volunteer attorneys who are ready to step up and represent people in deportation proceedings, or to take the Trump administration to court when its actions inevitably violate state or federal law.

Polling shows that voters support relief and pathways to legalization and don’t favor an extreme enforcement approach. All of us must demand that our elected officials stop pouring billions of tax dollars into punishing immigrants and instead invest in solutions and programs that make our communities healthier and more welcoming for all.

Mary Meg McCarthy, executive director, National Immigrant Justice Center

SEND LETTERS TO: [email protected]. To be considered for publication, letters must include your full name, your neighborhood or hometown and a phone number for verification purposes. Letters should be a maximum of approximately 375 words.

Republicans are hypocrites on law and order

Thank you for your editorial “Trump’s border czar acts like a bully, not a leader who wants to fix immigration.” The piece was absolutely right on!

Tom Homan came to Chicago to speak to the Republican Law & Order PAC. Republicans calling themselves “law and order” is like Catholic nuns calling themselves atheists. They simply gave up on that philosophy when they backed Trump. They backed a convicted felon for president and they refused to pass a bipartisan bill that would have gone a long way to help with illegal immigration. It is Congress’ job to figure out immigration, according to our Constitution, not the Executive Branch (Article 1, Section 8).

Now Homan is saying that asylum seekers are not fleeing a dangerous situation at home but are only looking for jobs. How could he possibly know that? Isn’t that what our courts are for? But a party that does not believe in laws would not allow the legal process to play out. It would be too slow and would not carry as much bravado as a mass deportation plan.

And now Trump is saying he wants to deport babies born in the U.S. to undocumented parents. Has he heard of the 14th Amendment?

The big problem is that as hypocritical or anti-Constitutional as this party becomes, a huge chunk of the voting public does not seem to mind.

Jan Goldberg, Riverside

Deport undocumented immigrants

Americans, and dare I say a large portion of Chicago and Illinois residents, voted to have President Trump and Tom Homan do exactly what Homan discussed in his meeting last week. Apparently, the Sun-Times hasn’t been paying attention to the citizens of Chicago who are fed up with aliens who entered the country illegally overrunning the city. Keep supporting failed policies. This is why the mainstream media has been left behind.

Keith Heerdegen, Libertyville

Rooting for border czar

Wednesday’s editorial about Tom Homan cast him as a schoolyard bully and someone uninterested in “fixing” immigration. Only the latter is true — it is not his job to fix immigration. It is his job to address the result of illegal immigration and because he speaks in a no-nonsense manner he was labeled a bully.

We need more people like him in politics. We need politicians who aren’t afraid to give it to us straight. The hardworking, taxpaying citizens of Chicago and Illinois are having a hard time understanding why our mayor and governor are more concerned about the care of illegal migrants versus their own constituents.

Tom Homan stating that our mayor and governor “suck” is an understatement. So maybe he should have been labeled as a “no bull” czar.

Joe Ferro, Garfield Ridge

Kudos for coverage of Chicago

As I page through the Sun-Times I am reminded what an incredible, quirky, violent, joyful, corrupt and compassionate city we have, and how fortunate we are to have the Sun-Times there to give us the script of each day’s action.

Where else would we find Neil Steinberg’s moral dilemma as a cabby tries to rip him off and Neil winds up giving him a tip? There’s the latest on the Bears and Arlington Heights. I see that Michael Jordan’s mansion was sold and see that Robbie Gould is the new head coach at St. Viator. We are given daily updates on corruption trials but note that more space is given to saying goodbye to a fallen cop. It’s an incredible array that adds up to Chicago.

The Sun-Times is more than a newspaper. It’s a daily gift. Thank you.

Ray Boyer, Evanston



Source link

Dear Abby: I just got divorced, and new man pushes me to marry before I’m ready

DEAR ABBY: I recently ended an 18-year marriage that should have ended many years earlier. While I was deciding to leave, I met the most wonderful man, “Winston.” He treats me like a queen — the polar opposite of my former husband.

My former home was sold during divorce proceedings, and I took Winston up on his offer to move into an empty trailer on his property. We get along so well, and I’m sorry we didn’t meet years ago and have a life together.

Winston is my best friend. He has been nothing but respectful since our meeting a year ago. We didn’t take our relationship to the next level until my divorce was final six weeks ago. I have been in the trailer for three months now, and I’m very happy. He lives next door in a house with his sister. Neither she nor he has ever married.

We have already talked about marriage. He would like us to be married in around six months. I was thinking of getting ENGAGED in six months, simply because I need time to breathe and I’ve gone through a lot with moving, changing my name, changing my address, etc. This has now caused a rift in our relationship.

I told Winston I DO want to get married, but I haven’t been divorced even two months yet. I need more time to adjust to such a different, more normal, relationship. Previously, he told me “no pressure,” and he knows I need time, so I was kind of floored when he expressed wanting to get MARRIED in six months.

I don’t think I’m being unreasonable, do you? What should my next step be? I do want a life with him, but I’m just not ready so soon. — PAUSING TO BREATHE IN THE EAST

DEAR PAUSING: You are fresh out of an unhappy marriage. You met Winston on the rebound. You DO need time to recover and establish who you are before committing to another marriage. You stated that after you told Winston you needed to take your time, it created a “rift.” That is a big red flag, and it does not bode well for what a marriage with him would be like.

People are advised to make no important decisions for one YEAR after a traumatic event. I concur. Get to know Winston AND HIS SISTER a lot better before walking to the altar. I’m also advising you to find a place other than his trailer to live so you can learn to be independent again.

DEAR ABBY: I’m a lonely girl without many friends. The friends I do have I hold on to tightly. One of them is now moving to a different state. She said we would stay in touch and I’d see her once more before she leaves, but she hasn’t been answering my calls or texts. She hasn’t been talking to another friend, either. My mom says I should stop calling her and she will answer when she has a chance. What should I do? — LONELY FRIEND IN VIRGINIA

DEAR FRIEND: Your mother is a wise woman. There could be more than one reason why your friend hasn’t responded to your efforts to reach out. She could be busy. She could be having separation anxiety, just as you are. Or she could be feeling smothered and overwhelmed. Listen to your mother and take a step back.

Dear Abby is written by Abigail Van Buren, also known as Jeanne Phillips, and was founded by her mother, Pauline Phillips. Contact Dear Abby at www.DearAbby.com or P.O. Box 69440, Los Angeles, CA 90069.

Good advice for everyone — teens to seniors — is in “The Anger in All of Us and How to Deal With It.” To order, send your name and mailing address, plus check or money order for $8 (U.S. funds), to: Dear Abby, Anger Booklet, P.O. Box 447, Mount Morris, IL 61054-0447. (Shipping and handling are included in the price.)



Source link

WBEZ’s 2024 Chicago news crossword puzzle

Well, it’s been a year in Chicago news. We’ve seen a wreck of the Wienermobile on the Tri-State and a wreck of a baseball team on the South Side. We’ve seen Riot Fest first here, then there, and Pitchfork here, then nowhere. We’ve seen the Chicago Symphony Orchestra appoint a new music director who was not yet born when Jordan unretired (the first time). We’ve distilled some highlights of the year in Chicago news into this crossword puzzle, which will surely bring our city so much joy that we will instantly have a budget and a teachers’ contract. Or at least divert us for a few minutes.

Oh! And this being the season for joy, WBEZ is offering eager solvers who finish the puzzle the option to enter a lottery for a $100 gift card. Simply complete the form below to enter to win. The deadline is Friday, Dec. 20, at 9 a.m. Happy solving.




Source link

Chicago outdoors: Kestrel feeding frenzy

Notes come from around Chicago outdoors and beyond.

WILD OF THE WEEK

The balminess on Monday was perfect for Paul Vriend, who emailed Tuesday, “There’s always one day in December when winter retreats, temperatures raise well above freezing, and insects return to the surface of the earth to poke their heads out. This is the type of day when I go to look for American kestrels in Rosehill Cemetery hitting prey on the ground. During this feeding frenzy, the birds really don’t care if I’m around, and they strike repeatedly knowing they need to bulk up for winter. This kestrel was squawking about missing its catch on the ground.”

This was all new to me.

WOTW, the celebration of wild stories and photos around Chicago outdoors, runs most weeks in the special two-page outdoors section in the Sun-Times Sports Sunday. To make submissions, email [email protected] or contact me on Facebook (Dale Bowman), Twitter (@BowmanOutside), Instagram (@BowmanOutside). or Bluesky (@Bowmanoutside).

WILD TIMES

HUNTER SAFETY

Jan. 8-9: Morris, Earl at (815) 693-8344 or [email protected]

SHOWTIME

Sunday, Dec. 15: Final day, Wisconsin Ice Fishing Expo, EAA Grounds, Oshkosh, Wis., icefishexpo.com

The master list of outdoors shows, classes, swap meets and major ice fishing events is at https://chicago.suntimes.com/outdoors/2024/11/28/outdoors-shows-master-list-for-2025-around-chicago-and-beyond

FISH GATHERINGS

Wednesday, Dec. 18: Wisconsin guide Colin Schlicht on Wisconsin River, Pewaukee and Okauchee lakes, Fox River Valley chapter of Muskies, Inc., Schaumburg Golf Club, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, Dec. 18: Christmas party, full meal, raffles, $20, South Side Muskie Hawks, Village Sportsmen’s Club, Alsip, 7 p.m.

Wednesday, Dec. 18 (note date change because of Christmas): Violetta Talley, “Deep Water Bass Fishing Tactics and an Introduction to Forward Facing Sonar,” Walleyes Unlimited, Gurnee American Legion, 6 p.m.

ILLINOIS PERMITS/SEASONS

Sunday, Dec. 15: Muzzleloader deer season ends

Tuesday, Dec. 17: Duck season, north zone, ends



Source link