Capitol Fax.com - Your Illinois News Radar » Illinois
SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax      Advertise Here      About     Exclusive Subscriber Content     Updated Posts    Contact Rich Miller
CapitolFax.com
To subscribe to Capitol Fax, click here. To inquire about advertising on CapitolFax.com, click here.
Reader comments closed for Thanksgiving week

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Isabel and I are taking next week off. Have a great holiday.

And, now, allowing perfunctory time for the clerk, we’ll adjourn with our annual tradition

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Sun-Times

Suburban communities in Illinois are failing to meet the requirements set out for them in a 22-year-old law aimed at increasing the state’s affordable housing supply.

The Illinois General Assembly passed the Affordable Housing Planning and Appeal Act in 2003 to “address the shortage of affordable, accessible, safe, and sanitary housing,” the law says. It requires eligible municipalities to submit reports to the state every five years, detailing their plans to build more affordable housing units.

A new report found only around a quarter of submissions were compliant, according to Impact for Equity, a nonprofit focused on legal and policy issues in Illinois. All but one of the 44 jurisdictions that need to submit plans are located in the Chicago area.

“The law is … not doing what it needs to do to get us to a place that we need to be as a state,” Suni Kartha, coauthor of the report and attorney at Impact for Equity, said. The organization successfully advocated to amend the law in 2023, in an effort to boost compliance.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | Trump administration to strip protections for wetlands and streams, leaving Illinois habitat at risk: At the heart of the proposal announced earlier this week is a new, stricter definition to the long-debated legal term, “Waters of the United States,” the federal guidance that determines which bodies of water are protected under the 1972 Clean Water Act. The proposal codifies a 2023 Supreme Court decision that limited federal protection to wetlands indistinguishable from larger, relatively permanent bodies of water like streams, rivers and lakes. Effectively, the new definition excludes seasonal streams and wetlands, which remain dry for much of the year.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | 9 months after federal bribery conviction, former Speaker Madigan disbarred: On Wednesday, the Supreme Court approved Madigan’s motion, although the official order mistakenly listed his middle name as “James” two of the five times it appeared on the document. The others correctly stated it as Joseph.

* Alton Telegraph | State’s top doc, others blast change in CDC site linking vaccines to autism: U.S. Health and Human Services spokesman Andrew Dixon said in a statement that “studies supporting a link have been ignored by health authorities” and that prompted the change. Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. is a longtime vaccine critic and has made multiple claims of a correlation between autism and vaccines and acetaminophen use during pregnancy. Saying the medical community is unhappy would be an understatement, with many lashing out — including Illinois Department of Public Health Director Sameer Vohra.

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Program that allows police to directly file some gun charges to expand citywide: The program, which means prosecutors in the office’s Felony Review Unit will not first assess charges in some cases, has been controversial among some advocacy groups and community members, who objected to the pilot programs starting out in majority-Black neighborhoods and argued that an initial review was an important oversight measure. But officials with the state’s attorney’s office said prosecutors still review the charges early in the case, adding that the process change has eased bottlenecks and freed up prosecutors and police officers for higher priority, victim-centric work.

* Tribune | Federal gun charges unsealed against man arrested after alleged shots at immigration agents in Little Village: A few hours before Gómez’s arrest, U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents had called 911 to report that someone in a black Jeep had fired at them one block to the north. Law enforcement sources said the 9mm pistol Gómez had on his lap at the time of his arrest was being analyzed to see if it matched shell casings found on the street near that shooting.

* Crain’s | British menswear brand Charles Tyrwhitt plans Mag Mile store: The deal helped push the slowly recovering shopping strip’s vacancy rate down slightly to 28.7% at the end of the third quarter, according to data from Chicago-based retail brokerage Kirsch Agency. It’s also a sign of life at a property that traded hands via a deed in lieu of foreclosure last year. Global asset management firm Barings took over the retail space in June 2024 after the former landlord, New York investor Ashkenazy Acquisition, defaulted on a $61 million loan in 2023. Barings didn’t respond to a request for comment on the Charles Tyrwhitt lease.

* Sun-Times | Off-duty Chicago cop accidentally shoots himself in groin outside police station in Gresham: The man, 22, was in the parking lot of the station, 7808 S. Halsted St., when the firearm in his waistband went off around 10:05 p.m. and grazed him in the groin, police said. He was “wearing street clothes” and “heading for duty” when the gun discharged and “he accidentally shot himself in the testicles,” according to Office of Emergency Management and Communications records obtained by the Sun-Times. An officer in distress call was made around the time of the shooting.

* Tribune | Feld, Ever and Kasama react to Chicago Michelin awards: ‘I don’t think we ever cooked with a star in mind’: On the heels of a newly coveted Michelin star, chef Jake Potashnick of Feld is still just processing the fact that his Ukrainian Village restaurant lives to see another winter. He’s chuffed — completely. Creating his own restaurant has been a dream since he was 7 years old. But a star within 16 months of being open is unmistakably impressive, and something he struggles to wrap his head around.

* Chicago Mag | Why Are There So Many Old Style Signs in Chicago?: Old Style, which controlled a third of the local market in the 1980s, isn’t as popular here as it used to be. (Budweiser took its place as the Cubs’ official beer in 2014.) Still, the Old Style sign remains as a symbol of a classic Chicago tavern, labeled “Cerveza Fría” in Latino neighborhoods and “Zimne Piwo” on the Polish Northwest Side. The Old Style Bar Project has documented hundreds of Chicago-area signs on its website, out of the 2,000 installed throughout the Midwest. We may not drink as much Old Style as we once did, but no other beer is so beloved.

* Crain’s | Forget dinner. Chicago execs are helicoptering clients to Michigan wine country: Vertiport Chicago, a commercial helicopter facility located blocks from the Illinois Medical District, is ramping up its business with tours that take clients winery hopping on the southwestern coast of Michigan. The round-trip tours, which start north of $9,000, have attracted both international and local business folks, said Vertiport executive director Daniel Mojica. They’re looking to entertain, incentivize or reward employees and clients.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Cook County townships to reopen property tax appeals window: The Cook County Board of Review is reopening the property tax appeals window in townships that have closed it for the 2025 appeal season. The Board typically gives taxpayers in townships a 30-day filing window to appeal assessed property values after bills are sent. But “unprecedented circumstances” following a four-month delay in mailing second installment bills has led the Board to reopen the window in every closed township, the Board of Review said in a news release Thursday.

* Crain’s | ​River Forest doctor charged with $1M Medicaid, Medicare fraud scheme: The Illinois attorney general’s office alleges Dr. Mohammad Khamis received more than $1 million in Medicaid and Medicare payments for care and prescriptions not rendered by Khamis himself, but by his unlicensed medical student. Khamis, 56, is detained at the Cook County Department of Corrections, according to a press release yesterday from Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office.

* Daily Herald | Ex-cop working as school security officer charged with breaking into kids’ bedroom in Bloomingdale: A former Bensenville police officer has lost a job as a high school security officer after being accused of breaking into the bedroom of two Bloomingdale children in the middle of the night. The Fenton High School District 100 school board terminated Carmen Mirandola on Wednesday night. In a letter to parents, the district announced it had fired someone who was involved in a Nov. 8 “law enforcement incident.” The incident was a home invasion, according to charges filed against Mirandola in DuPage County Circuit Court.

* Pioneer Press | Elmwood Park’s lead pipes become poster child in push for EPA funds for replacement: A group of area mayors and other politicians gathered in Elmwood Park recently to make a plea for financial support for efforts to replace aging lead pipes used in water delivery systems statewide. U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi, who is running for the U.S. Senate, stepped just outside of his 8th District to Elmwood Park to announce a proposal urging the federal Environmental Protection Agency to create a grant program that would eliminate lead pipes that can lead to contaminated drinking water in household taps.

*** Downstate ***

* BND | Metro-east employees are first in Illinois to get workers’ comp for radiation: Roughly 70 former employees of a metro-east factory tied to the Manhattan Project—and the spouses of deceased workers—have become the first group in Illinois to receive workers’ compensation for radiation exposure. “I am literally a landmark decision,” said Larry Burgan, one of the former employees of Spectrulite Consortium Inc.

* WSIL | Former pastor from Southern Illinois jailed for COVID relief fraud: A former pastor from Hamilton County received a 21-month prison sentence for fraudulently acquiring COVID-19 relief funds meant for his church. The US Department of Justice, United States Attorney’s Office Southern District of Illinois, said Terry Hall, 58, of McLeansboro, pleaded guilty to wire fraud and making false statements. The attorney’s office said he was ordered to repay $199,900 plus interest to the Small Business Administration and will serve two years of supervised release after imprisonment.

* WSIL | Cairo families to receive Thanksgiving meals from Comptroller: The initiative is supported by donations from Laborers’ Local 773 and Operators 318 in Marion, Sen. Dale Fowler of Harrisburg, and the Polish and Slavic Federal Credit Union. Krispy Kreme in Marion is contributing boxes of donuts. This marks the ninth year the Illinois Office of Comptroller has provided Thanksgiving meals to Cairo families. Employees in Chicago and Springfield have also collected canned goods and toiletries for the Cairo Women’s Shelter.

* IPM News | This niche card game has a loyal following in an Illinois prison: In 2001, Danville Correctional Center banned the family and friends of those incarcerated from sending them Magic: The Gathering cards. “At the time, the cards were identified as a potential security risk because of their perceived value and their ability to be used in trading,” Illinois Department of Corrections spokesperson Naomi Puzzello said in an emailed statement. But in 2021, the prison began hosting Magic: The Gathering tournaments, using old cards it had from before the ban.

*** National ***

* ProPublica | “We’re Broken”: As Federal Prisons Run Low on Food and Toilet Paper, Corrections Officers Are Leaving in Droves for ICE: And at some facilities, staff said the agency had even stopped providing basic hygiene items for officers, such as paper towels, soap and toilet paper. “I have never seen it like this in all my 25 years,” an officer in Texas told ProPublica. “You have to literally go around carrying your own roll of toilet paper. No paper towels, you have to bring your own stuff. No soap. I even ordered little sheets that you put in an envelope and it turns to soap because there wasn’t any soap.”

* CNBC | Fed won’t get key inflation data before next rate decision as BLS cancels October CPI release: The Bureau of Labor Statistics said it was canceling the release of the October consumer price index, leaving the Federal Reserve without a key piece of inflation data to ponder when it next decides on interest rates on Dec. 10. The CPI data, previously scheduled to be released on Nov. 7, was canceled because the government shutdown made it impossible for the BLS to “retroactively collect” certain parts of survey data, the agency said on its website.

* AP | Fugees rapper Pras Michel sentenced to 14 years in prison over illegal donations to Obama campaign: In April 2023, a federal jury convicted Michel of 10 counts, including conspiracy and acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government. The trial in Washington, D.C., included testimony from actor Leonardo DiCaprio and former Attorney General Jeff Sessions. Justice Department prosecutors said federal sentencing guidelines recommended a life sentence for Michel, whom they said “betrayed his country for money” and “lied unapologetically and unrelentingly to carry out his schemes.”

  1 Comment      


CTA board chair inadvertently makes strong case for busting up the transit fiefdoms

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Tribune op-ed by Lester L. Barclay, who chairs the Chicago Transit Board: “Transit funding was secured, but the CTA paid a price”

But as we celebrate this moment, we must be honest with the people of Chicago: This funding victory comes with a price for the city of Chicago and the CTA. And it’s fair to ask: What did we give up in exchange for this historic investment?

Alongside new funding, the bill introduces sweeping regional governance reform meant to improve coordination and accountability among agencies. The bill establishes the Northern Illinois Transit Authority, a 20-member board that will oversee the CTA, Metra and Pace.

Chicago’s mayor will appoint only five members. The rest will come from the governor, Cook County and the collar counties. Under this new structure, practically all policies and operational decisions that previously received final approval from the CTA will now be subject to the final authorization by the NITA board — an arrangement that, while designed to promote coordination, risks diluting the local accountability and autonomy that have been essential to delivering responsive, community-centered service. The CTA — and by extension, Chicago — now faces limits on how we can acquire property, procure goods and services for our daily operations, lead construction projects and manage programs that have long driven economic growth. Those changes may seem technical, but they have real implications for how we serve our riders.

For one of the nation’s largest and most complex transit systems, this could challenge our ability to operate efficiently and responsively. This bill marks the end of Chicago’s autonomy over its own transit system.

Hilarious.

“Local accountability” that delivered “responsive, community-centered service” while the CTA operated “efficiently and responsively”?

Right.

  9 Comments      


Pritzker says graduated tax not his priority for spring session

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Gov. JB Pritzker was asked about Ald. Sigcho-Lopez’s recent criticism that the governor isn’t doing enough to tax the rich. His response seemed to contradict itself. First, he said

By the way, the governor is not the one who ultimately proposes those bills or even signs them. When it’s an amendment to the Constitution, the governor really has almost nothing to do with it other than perhaps advocacy.

And then, in defense of his own history, Pritzker said

The very first thing that I did, or one of the very first things that I did in office, was propose and ask the General Assembly to put on the ballot the amendment that would have a graduated income tax in the state.

Um.

* More from his response

I think it’s something that is being talked about by members of the General Assembly. We’ll have to see if it gets proposed. It’s not something that’s been a priority for me going into the next session. We clearly want to make sure first that we are looking at finding efficiencies in government. That’s always the very, very first thing. But I do think a graduated system is better than a flat tax system, and so if there’s a possibility for us to have a system like that, it’s better than the one we have.

  9 Comments      


Campaign updates (Updated)

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Politico

A crush of petition challenges put Illinois’ election machinery into high gear this week as hearings began to examine the validity of signatures — a process that could knock some candidates off the 2026 ballot.

By the numbers: Despite a crowded field in the U.S. Senate and congressional races, the volume of challenges to petition signatures is relatively stable this year, according to the Illinois State Board of Elections. The board has logged 78 objections — only slightly higher than the 75 filed ahead of the 2022 midterms.

Ready for duty: To keep pace, the Board of Elections is “running three, three-hour shifts daily with 13 staff members in each shift,” said board spokesperson Matt Dietrich. Chicago and Cook County election officials are conducting the same painstaking signature-verification process on stacks of nominating petitions.

Election attorney Burt Odelson says the number of questionable signatures is up this year for two reasons. First, “there are more professional and semi-professional people circulating petitions, and they’re from out of state — not just Indiana or Wisconsin. We’re seeing people hired from California, Oregon and Georgia,” he said. That’s a problem, he said, because “they’re not loyal to the candidate. They’re only in it for the money.”

* The Sun-Times’ Tina Sfondeles has this piece today: “Stratton vows to not take corporate PAC money in Senate bid, but has history of getting corporate backing.” Her story included this important bit of context

In the 1998 Democratic primary for governor, then-U.S. Rep. Glenn Poshard, a conservative Democrat from Marion, vowed to continue his streak of not accepting contributions from PACs.

His strategy was to take the moral high ground — win the lion’s share of the downstate vote and about a fourth of the vote in the Chicago area, and have his rivals split the rest. And it worked, at least in the primary.

In the general election, he opted to double his self-imposed limits on campaign donations, allowing individual contributions of up to $4,000 and political candidate contributions of up to $50,000 — but still no PACs.

His loss to then-Illinois Secretary of State George Ryan was partly influenced by hamstringing himself with the no-PAC-money pledge, with Ryan outspending him fourfold. It kept him from being able to afford an aggressive advertising effort to highlight Ryan’s ties to the 1994 vehicle crash that killed six of Scott and Janet Willis’ children and the ensuing corruption probe that ultimately landed Ryan in federal prison. The state Democratic Party helped fund one ad on the Willis tragedy — but the lack of money and his inability to, as an anti-abortion and pro-gun candidate, rally Democrats ultimately alienated him from his base.

[From Rich: One of the other big problems that Poshard faced was that when he tried to get around his contribution restrictions, he was portrayed as the bad guy in the race. As this story shows, it could happen to Stratton this time around as well.]

* Raja Krishnamoorthi rolled out another batch of endorsements…

In a major show of statewide momentum, 11 Democratic County Chairs from across Illinois have announced their endorsement of Raja Krishnamoorthi for U.S. Senate. The announcement marks a powerful moment of unity among the region’s influential Democratic leaders and signals the rapidly growing downstate coalition lining up behind Raja. […]

Illinois Democratic County Chairs Supporting Raja Include:

    - Chair Jay Briney, Mason County
    - Chair John Spencer, Clay County
    - Chair Jackie Knackmus, Edwards County
    - Chair Russell Knight, Fayette County
    - Chair Dennis Austin, Hardin County
    - Chair Robert Alexander, Jasper County
    - Chair Jason Hulbert, Jefferson County
    - Chair Roy Pesch, Lawrence County
    - Chair Sandra Cummings, Pope County
    - Chair Tami Smith, Shelby County
    - Chair Len Piasecki, Washington County

These leaders join the following Downstate Democratic County Chairs who have already formally endorsed Raja’s bid for Senate:

    - Chair Andy Asadorian, Madison County
    - Chair Cindy Given, Richland County
    - Chair Jacob Brisbin, Tazewell County
    - Chair Ross Clymer, Woodford County
    The Chairs’ unified endorsement sends a clear and unmistakable message: Raja is the downstate candidate in this race. His Peoria roots and years of delivering tangible results for working families show he understands what every Illinoisans are up against. This summer, Raja embarked on a downstate listening tour that included events in the Quad Cities, Rockford, Petersburg, Bloomington, Springfield, Metro East, Carbondale, and more. These leaders know he will go to the mat for the towns, rural areas, and small cities too often left out of the conversation in Washington.

* The Center Square

Despite having to push through a potentially crowded primary field, Republican U.S. Senate candidate Don Tracy says Illinoisans need a statewide Republican to bring balance.

Twenty-two candidates that have filed to get their party’s nomination for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Springfield Democrat Dick Durbin. Petition objections are being considered for six of the 14 Democrats running. Two of the eight Republican candidates face petition objections. […]

Illinois hasn’t had a statewide Republican officeholder since former Gov. Bruce Rauner. Tracy said that needs to change.

“We need to make this a two party state again,” he said “And the way to start that is by electing an Illinois Republican, for this open US Senate seat. And that would be me.”

* Dan Biss’ campaign released a poll this month that is more recent than the independent poll we talked about earlier today. Biss’ poll was taken November 4-9. From the memo

Democratic primary voters know and like Daniel Biss more than any other candidate. He’s known to three-quarters (74%) of the Democratic primary electorate, of whom nearly all are favorable (61% favorable / 13% unfavorable). His favorability rating and name recognition is the highest in the field, above Kat Abughazaleh (39% favorable / 19% unfavorable), Laura Fine (35% favorable / 11% unfavorable), Hoan Huynh (25% favorable / 6% unfavorable), Bushra Amiwala (24% favorable / 7% unfavorable), Mike Simmons (23% favorable / 6% unfavorable), and Phil Andrew (7% favorable / 2% unfavorable).

• Biss is the clear leader in the Democratic primary with a double-digit advantage over the field. In a crowded field, only Biss has been able to break away from the pack, consolidating 31% of the vote when no other candidate breaks 20 percent (31% Biss / 17% Abughazaleh / 10% Fine / 6% Simmons / 4% Huynh / 3% Amiwala / 3% Andrew / 3% other undecided.)

* Moving to the Comptroller race, Rep. Margaret Croke has announced a new round of endorsements…

Today, State Rep. Margaret Croke’s campaign announced new endorsements from prominent Will County leaders in her race to become Illinois’s next State Comptroller. These endorsements include:

    ● Will County Chief Executive Officer Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant
    ● Will County Democratic Central Committee Chair Burke Schuster
    ● Will County Democratic Central Committee Vice Chair Billy Morgan
    ● State Representative Natalie Manley
    ● State Representative Larry Walsh

* Another Democratic candidate for Comptroller, Lake County Treasurer Holly Kim also announced an endorsement…

Congressman Brad Schneider (IL-10) today announced his endorsement of Holly Kim for Illinois State Comptroller, citing her record of fiscal responsibility, accessibility and dedication to hardworking families across the state.

“Holly Kim delivers for Lake County, the third-largest county in Illinois and a core part of the district I represent,” said Congressman Schneider, who represents the North Shore and northern suburbs, including Highland Park, Winnetka, Waukegan and Antioch. “I’ve seen firsthand how respected she is and how consistently she shows up in every corner of the county. Holly brings real experience managing county finances, protecting taxpayer dollars, and ensuring transparency. Her lived experience as a young mom who put herself through college keeps her grounded in the challenges families face. Holly’s record and integrity make her exactly the Comptroller Illinois needs.”

Schneider serves as Chair of the New Democrat Coalition, a group of moderate, centrist Democrats in the U.S. House of Representatives focused on finding common ground and pragmatic solutions to policy issues. He praised Kim’s ability to deliver results that transcend partisanship.

* Republican candidate for Comptroller, Bryan Drew…

When Democrats hear “no more tax hikes” from voters, they don’t stop. The four frontrunner Democrat candidates for Comptroller present at a candidate forum on Tuesday announced their support for reviving efforts to institute a progressive tax in Illinois through a state constitution amendment—the same progressive tax Illinois voters overwhelmingly opposed in 2020 even after Governor Pritzker spent nearly $60 million to sell it.

This on top of claiming the record-high $55.1 billion budget they recently passed didn’t spend enough and didn’t include enough tax hikes.

Independent small businessman and attorney Bryan Drew, the Republican candidate for Comptroller, says this should be disqualifying.

“People are being crushed by taxes and expenses. Working families can’t afford to live in Illinois. Yet the Democrats running for Comptroller want to raise their taxes even more,” said Drew. “I’m sick and tired of Springfield politicians using struggling working families, single parents, and seniors as their ATM. It’s time Illinois government learned to live within its means.

“Clearly, none of these politicians would be an independent check-and-balance on the tax-and-spend agenda in Springfield. The taxpayers of Illinois deserve a leader who will stop government waste and hold politicians accountable for how they spend our tax dollars. As Comptroller, I will protect the public’s tax dollars.”

* Sen. Lakesia Collins endorses José “Che-Che” Wilson for 12th District Cook County Commissioner. Press release…

State Senator Lakesia Collins today announced her endorsement of José “Che-Che” Wilson for Cook County Commissioner in the 12th District, joining a diverse coalition of key community leaders who are now backing his candidacy. Collins will appear with Wilson as the featured guest at a major campaign gathering—underscoring the momentum behind his run.

“I’m proud to endorse José Che-Che Wilson for Cook County Commissioner for the 12th District because he does the work,” said Senator Collins. “Rooted in community and driven by the voices of the people, Che-Che understands the struggles our families face and I trust him to continue fighting for our communities to make their lives better.”

* The Daily Southtown

Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison, a Republican, announced Thursday he will not run for reelection next year, leaving former Commissioner Elizabeth Doody Gorman as the only Republican candidate for his seat.

Morrison has represented the 17th District, which includes a wide swath of the southwest suburbs including Orland Park, Palos Heights and Lemont, since 2015. He was appointed to replace Gorman, who held the position from 2002 to 2015 before resigning to accept a job at an accounting firm in the private sector. Gorman supported Morrison as her successor.

In a statement announcing his decision, Morrison said the choice was driven partly by his belief in the importance of term limits. […]

Morrison was reelected in 2018 and 2022. Gorman ran to unseat Morrison once before in 2022, but lost in the primary. With Morrison dropping out and the filing deadline past, she will run uncontested in the primary.

Interesting.

…Adding… The Burg

Former Jackson County State’s Attorney Joseph Cervantez endorsed former Independent Alderman Bob Fioretti for Illinois Attorney General today, citing a need for party unity.

Cervantez, who served as Jackson County State’s Attorney from 2020 to 2024, said after campaigning around the state for several months, he decided “we need to spend time and resources debating the incumbent and not each other. Bob Fioretti has the political and legal experience to not only win the Attorney General’s office in November, but also to be an outstanding Attorney General.”

A former US Marine combat veteran, Cervantez pledged to actively campaign for Fioretti, including helping with fundraising and organizing southern and central Illinois. Fioretti said Cervantez’ show of party unity is an example for others. “Joe is a veteran and former prosecutor whose legal ability is admired on both sides of the aisle,” Fioretti said. “Together, we’ll make a great team, and with his endorsement, we have an opportunity to do something rarely achieved in recent history: a united Illinois Republican Party focused on targeting the extremists of the Democratic Party, and not each other.”

  11 Comments      


Independent poll shows Biss, Abughazaleh tied; Pritzker hugely popular in the district

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Evanston Now

A new poll released Thursday by Data for Progress, a progressive policy think tank and pollster, shows Evanston Mayor Daniel Biss and Kat Abughazaleh tied atop the crowded field in the Illinois 9th Congressional District Democratic primary.

The poll was commissioned for the Justice Coalition Action, an Illinois-based Palestinian-rights advocacy group, and circulated in the field between Oct. 29 and Nov. 3, according to a polling memo released Thursday afternoon.

The Justice Coalition has yet to formally endorse a candidate, but recently endorsed Junaid Ahmed in the 8th Congressional District, and held a meeting with its volunteers Thursday evening to discuss the results of the poll and future potential endorsement, encouraging members to consider the viability of the races’ competitors.

The poll is the first publicly released poll not sponsored by either campaign and shows the race at its closest point thus far, with the previous three polls showing Biss leading the field on his own.

* Head to heads

* Major issues

Candidates better get on the Democratic voter bandwagon.

* Pritzker, of course, is very popular in the district

The problem is, Pritzker still holds a grudge against Biss for his 2018 gubernatorial campaign. I’m not kidding. The governor still petulantly reminds even very powerful Democrats about their support for Biss back in the day (the dude has a severe case of what we in the biz call “Irish Alzheimer’s” - when you only remember the slights). I doubt he’ll say anything about this race, even though he lived in Evanston for a very long time.

Whatever, the numbers clearly show that the folks in that campaign ought to tie themselves to the governor as closely as they can.

…Adding… When I wrote this last night, I meant for it to come off as a bit cheeky. I read it again this morning, and it’s not cheeky. Oops. Pritzker does give people guff about their support for Biss, but he did endorse Biss for mayor earlier this year.

  50 Comments      


RETAIL: The Largest Employer In Illinois

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Advertising Department

[The following is a paid advertisement.]

JT’s CarmelKorn Station in Galesburg is a passion project for owner Jackie Turner. As a small retailer, she says lawmakers need to know that policies can’t be a one-size-fits-all approach because “some of the rules that they need for these large companies, they don’t fit for a small business, and they have to keep that in mind.”

Retail generates $7.3 billion in income and sales tax revenue each year in Illinois. These funds support public safety, infrastructure, education, and other important programs we all rely on every day. In fact, retail is the second largest revenue generator for the State of Illinois and the largest revenue generator for local governments.

Policies that support small businesses help communities thrive as retailers like Jackie are better equipped to meet local needs. We Are Retail and IRMA are showcasing the retailers who make Illinois work.

  Comments Off      


Isabel’s morning briefing

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: ‘Unusual and possibly unprecedented’: Judge calls out Chicago feds as Midway Blitz cases fall apart. Sun-Times

    - U.S. Magistrate Judge Gabriel Fuentes closed the book on the last of five now-dismissed prosecutions tied to September protests outside a federal immigration holding facility in the western suburbs.
    -Fuentes used a nine-page opinion not only to dismiss, with prejudice, a misdemeanor charge against Dana Briggs, but to highlight how each of those five cases, all tied to Operation Midway Blitz, “were highly unusual in this district for several reasons.”
    - “The court cannot help but note just how unusual and possibly unprecedented it is for the U.S. attorney’s office in this district to charge so hastily that it either could not obtain the indictment in the grand jury or was forced to dismiss upon a conclusion that the case is not provable, in repeated cases of a similar nature,” Fuentes wrote.

* Related stories…

***************** Advertisement *****************


Sponsored by PhRMA

340B hospitals mark up medicines and pocket the profit

Did you know 340B hospitals can charge thousands of dollars for medicines they might have bought for a penny? And they pocket the profit – passing the bill to Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers who are hit with higher medicine costs. The fact is this government program was created in 1992 to help patients access more affordable medicines. Today, the 340B program has become less about patients and more about boosting the bottom lines of hospitals and for-profit pharmacies. Tell Congress it’s time to fix 340B. Read more.

*************************************************

* Pritzker will be in Skokie at 1 pm to make an announcement about small businesses in Illinois. Click here to watch.

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Chalkbeat Chicago | School transportation funding a top request for Illinois State Board of Education’s 2027 budget: What do Illinois teachers, families, and educators want the state’s Board of Education to prioritize? Reliable transportation funding and a $350 million increase toward K-12 education are the top concerns, according to budget requests submitted throughout the fall. The Illinois State Board of Education held budget hearings in September and October to get input from the public regarding the budget for the next fiscal year. During a board meeting Thursday, officials said they received a total of 938 budget requests this year, up from 826 last year.

* Daily Herald | Tollway leaders assert rate hikes tucked into transit legislation are their call: Toll hikes passed by the General Assembly in October will need to go through the Illinois tollway board, agency officials said Thursday. The controversial legislation intended to avert a transit funding collapse also would raise tolls by 45 cents on cars and 30% on trucks starting in 2027, and generate about $1 billion a year for the tollway’s latest capital program. In addition, the bill would impose toll increases tied to the Consumer Price Index every two years, effective in 2029.

* Subscribers know more. WAND | Illinois Department of Human Services working to minimize SNAP error rate amid threat of federal funding cuts: The Illinois Department of Human Services told the Joint Committee on Administrative Rules this week that they are working to ensure the state can minimize errors and follow the new federal rules. DHS leaders said they are looking at multiple options to prevent taxpayers from being on the hook for roughly $800 million of funding.

*** Statewide ***

* WBEZ | Illinois public university enrollment rises, driven by gains for Black, Latino students: Chicago State University enrolled its largest freshman class in a decade this fall — an encouraging trend at the state’s only predominantly Black university, which has struggled with declining enrollment and funding cuts in recent years. Undergraduate enrollment was up by 3.7% at public universities across the state, according to state data released this week. Statewide, students of color drove much of that growth.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Subscribers know more. Daily Herald | ‘I am not perfect’: District 220 school board finds member violated board policies in her statehouse campaign: The Barrington Area Unit District 220 school board voted 6-1 this week to accept an outside investigator’s findings that board member Erin Chan Ding violated district policies by using school resources, property and social media for prohibited political campaign activities. Investigators described the violations as merely technical, but board members agreed that Chan Ding’s campaigning as a Democratic candidate for District 52 state representative were flagrant violations instead. Chan Ding was the lone dissenting vote but agreed to undergo remedial board policy training as a result of the board decision.

*** Catching Up with the Federal Candidates ***

* Sun-Times | Stratton vows to not take corporate PAC money in Senate bid, but has history of getting corporate backing: But Stratton has a history of taking in corporate PAC and direct corporate contributions into her state campaign funds since 2016 — and this year returned a $5,000 check from The Marquis Energy Corporate PAC for her Senate campaign while taking in $21,000 from the same family controlling the company. This year, she also received $5,000 in corporate PAC money and $46,000 from corporations in her super PAC, the Level Up PAC, a hybrid PAC she created in January in anticipation of a Senate run.

* ABC Chicago | Black pastors from Illinois endorse Raja Krishnamoorthi in US Senate race: “So we need to trust Raja, trust him with our vote, trust him with our feet on the ground,” said Warren Dorris with Prayer Tower Ministries in Joliet. Dozens of Black pastors from around the state gathered to deliver an ecumenical endorsement Thursday in the U.S. Senate race, rallying behind Raja Krishnamoorthi. “We don’t need another politician,” Bishop Shirley Coleman said. “We need a public servant.”

* WTTW | Amid Controversy Sparked by Chuy García’s Resignation, Patty Garcia Vows to Stand on Her Own: During an appearance on WTTW News’ “Chicago Tonight,” Patty Garcia acknowledged that the congressman’s decision not to announce his retirement until after the deadline to qualify for the March primary election had triggered a political firestorm. “This isn’t a done deal,” Patty Garcia said, noting that members of the Republican and a third party filed to run to represent the district drawn to include a significant majority of Democratic voters. “I’m taking this seriously, and I’m going out to every voter, to every municipality, to every neighborhood and ward.”

*** Chicago ***

* Tribune | Mayor Brandon Johnson’s plan to borrow money to pay police settlements raises questions: The borrowing proposal revives a practice past mayors discontinued and derided as financially reckless. While members of the City Council raise concerns and questions, Johnson’s team is defending the move as a way to finally clear a backlog of looming police misconduct lawsuits and save money. “The Department of Law has been very focused on settling cases and lowering our costs by getting them settled quicker,” Johnson’s chief financial officer, Jill Jaworski, told aldermen Monday. “Instead of increasing those costs all in the budget this year and spiking up our expenses, we’re spreading that out over a five year repayment period.”

* Fox Chicago | Former CPS student speaks out on alleged abuse by gym teacher: While CPS settled for $1.1 million with the former student over the summer, that man, who wishes to remain anonymous and who we are referring to as John Doe, wants his story heard. FOX 32 Chicago reached out to the accused gym teacher — who was terminated from CPS in 2022 — and his attorney but did not receive a response as of filing this report. “It’s just something that never leaves you. It’s just always there,” Doe said.

* Tribune | Plan Commission approves DePaul’s controversial plan for Lincoln Park athletic facility: The Chicago Plan Commission approved a proposal Thursday by DePaul University to build a $42 million basketball practice facility in the heart of its Lincoln Park campus, a controversial plan that will require demolishing a row of century-old residential buildings. University officials told commission members DePaul’s lack of modern practice courts makes it hard to compete for athletic talent with schools in the Big East Conference, decreasing DePaul’s national visibility and potential to attract other students.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Sun-Times | Cook County Board votes to approve Toni Preckwinkle’s $10 billion 2026 budget: The Cook County Board voted unanimously Thursday to approve Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s $10.1 billion budget for next year, a spending plan without a deficit or layoffs, new taxes, fees or fines. The budget was also widely popular among commissioners for funneling cash toward health care, public safety and legal representation. Passing the budget was also a counter to President Donald Trump and his policies, including cuts to health care and the deportation campaign that has left the Chicago area reeling, Preckwinkle said.

* The Triibe | Cook County becomes the first county in the US to establish permanent funding for guaranteed income : oday, Cook County became the first county to establish permanent funding for guaranteed income at the county level. The Cook County Board of Commissioners approved $7.5 million for the program through its FY 2026 budget, which totals $10.12 billion. With permanent funding for guaranteed income, the county is providing relief for low-income families “who have been severely impacted by inflation and federal budget cuts,” the Economic Security Illinois (ESIL) wrote in a press release. ESIL works in partnership with Cook County on the guaranteed income program.

* WTTW | Cook County Assessor Pushes to Ease Property Tax Burden on Homeowners: Cook County Assessor Fritz Kaegi, who is running for reelection, argues the property tax system favors corporations. He has said he’s working to change it. Kaegi’s office assesses the value of nearly 2 million parcels in Cook County. When property owners think their bill is too high, they can file appeals with the Board of Review, which reviews valuations.

* Sun-Times | Cook County Commissioner Sean Morrison says he won’t seek reelection: Morrison stepped down as the chair of the Cook County GOP in April, saying it was “time for new energy” in the party. This time, he said he believed public office should be “a season of contribution, not a lifetime occupation, and it is important that I lead by example.”

* The New Republic | ICE Suddenly Loses Key Evidence One Day After Being Sued: 404 Media reports that after ICE’s Broadview Detention Center outside Chicago was sued October 30 for allegedly abusing detainees, the agency said that two weeks of video footage that could have shown how immigration detainees are treated in the facility was lost in a “system crash” on October 31.* “The government has said that the data for that period was lost in a system crash apparently on the day after the lawsuit was filed,” one of the lawyers representing detainees, Alec Solotorovsky, said in a Thursday hearing about the footage, according to 404 Media. “That period we think is going to be critical … because that’s the period right before the lawsuit was filed.”

*** Downstate ***

* Illinois Times | A family’s quest for justice: Second-degree charge controversial, but Grayson is one of only a few on-duty cops convicted of murder: Of the 211 nonfederal sworn law enforcement officers charged nationwide in fatal shootings since the beginning of 2005, Stinson and other experts at Bowling Green State’s Police Integrity Research Group wrote that 171 cases have been concluded, and 73 of those cases, or 43%, ended in conviction. Of those convicted, only 11 officers, or 15%, have been convicted of murder, including second-degree murder and the various other ways states have created to classify murder. The 11 cases include Grayson’s conviction.

* BND | Carlyle suspends police chief amid FBI investigation: The statement noted no charges have been filed and that the city was informed of the FBI investigation on Wednesday. Pingsterhaus announced earlier this year that he was running for the Republican nomination in the Clinton County sheriff’s primary scheduled for March 17.

* WAND | New Urbana solar farm will give customers discounted energy: Urbana City Council approved a special use permit Monday night for Total Energies, which will build a solar farm on a closed landfill currently owned by the City. The closed landfill already houses solar panels that create 5.3 MW of Community Solar Power. This second solar farm will be a market-rate community solar array, meaning that residents in Ameren’s territory can subscribe to be part of the program. The panels are targeted to be 4.3 MW of solar power.

* BND | St. Clair County veterans assistance warns of service delays without added funds: Leaders of the Veterans Assistance Commission of St. Clair County warned county officials Monday that veterans could face waitlists and service delays if the agency does not receive additional funding for increased staffing. The commission provides financial aid to veterans for rent, mortgage, utilities or food, and helps veterans and their families claim disability and pension benefits. […] The county initially rejected the commission’s request for a $282,000 budget increase, which included about $100,000 for a new office and furniture, according to Kern. The request also included a $67,000 increase for payroll.

* WREX | Rockford local organizations brace for impact: New HUD rules pose potential threat to funding: hanges to the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funding criteria have local organizations concerned about the future of homeless services in the area. The new criteria could significantly reduce funding for permanent housing, which has been the focus of local efforts to support the homeless community.

* WREX | Freeport to consider adding public transit route strictly within city: The City of Freeport and Pretzel City Area Transit (PCAT) announced they will start to look into the development of a fixed or deviated fixed-route public transit system within the City of Freeport. The initiative comes after there was increased ridership demands within city limits, according to the City. Currently, PCAT operates a countywide service, providing more than 50,000 trips a year across Stephenson County. But over the past 200 days, more than 90% of all PCAT trips started and ended within Freeport, which the City said highlighted the need for reliable in-city transportation.

* WICS | https://www.chalkbeat.org/chicago/2025/11/20/illinois-fy-2027-budget-requests-for-transportation-evidence-based-funding/: The City of Decatur has announced a shift from mandatory to voluntary Stage 1 Water Rationing, citing several chances for rain in the current forecast. Officials are urging all water customers to continue their conservation efforts despite the easing of restrictions. The city anticipates that, with the slowing drop in lake levels, the voluntary status will remain in place for the next two months.

* PJ Star | Super Bowl champ named head football coach at Illinois high school: Former Super Bowl champion James White has been hired as the new head football coach at Lisle Benet Academy, the school announced on Thursday afternoon. White, 33, replaces Patrick New, who retired early this month following 15 years with 89 wins and 10 playoff appearances. The Redwings are coming off a 3-6 season as a member of the East Suburban Catholic Conference.

*** National ***

* WGEM | Missouri attorney general challenges abortion medication: Missouri’s attorney general is attempting to limit abortion access by challenging the FDA-approval of a medication used in chemical abortions. Missouri is joining Kansas and Idaho in challenging the recent approval of a generic version of mifepristone. Mifepristone is one of the drugs used to induce abortion, it’s also used to treat miscarriages. Medical abortions make up two-thirds of all abortions performed in the United States, according to the Guttmacher Institute.

* Financial Times | Lawrence Summers’ extraordinary fall from grace: Others said it was typical of his hubris. “Nobody writes things like that in an email unless they think they’re untouchable,” said one economist who knows him. “Which he has been — for a long time.”

* Media ITE | Nick Fuentes’s 6 Most Hateful, Disturbing Moments: Fuentes, who is only 27, has a long history of explicitly anti-Semitic rhetoric, Holocaust denial, and praising Hitler. He has regularly called for limiting the rights of women, minorities, and the LGBTQ community, while often using alarmingly violent rhetoric. “All I want is revenge against my enemies and a total Aryan victory,” Fuentes said, for example, in 2022.

  12 Comments      


Good morning!

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* “I wanted to tell you, before I played any further, that I might, over the course of the night, share a couple of my opinions with you. But I’m not going to share them with you because I think that they’re smart. I’m going to share them with you because they rhyme. And I mean I’m sincere when I say that. I ain’t traveling around trying to change nobody’s mind. I’m traveling around trying to ease my own”

It’s the feel good hit of this endless summer
It gets these kids out of control
Singin’ along to that star spangled bummer
Hail, hail, rock and roll

* Thanksgiving plans?

  9 Comments      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Protected: SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today’s edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

This post is password protected. To view it please enter your password below:

  Comments Off      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

(required)
(required)
 

  Comment      


Live coverage

Friday, Nov 21, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

  Comment      


Evening reading: ‘Difficult, if not impossible, to believe almost anything that Defendants represent’

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* We told you about this earlier today…


* The judge spent quite a bit of time talking about “credibility” of the federal defendants. She devotes an entire section to the topic. Here’s some of it

With respect to this footage, Defendants specifically directed the Court to certain videos and timestamps “to aid the Court in its review of those videos.” Presumably, these portions of the videos would be Defendants’ best evidence to demonstrate that agents acted in line with the Constitution, federal laws, and the agencies’ own policies on use of force when engaging with protesters, the press, and religious practitioners. But a review of them shows the opposite—supporting Plaintiffs’ claims and undermining all of Defendants’ claims that their actions toward protesters, the press, and religious practitioners have been, as Bovino has stated, “more than exemplary.” The Court is mindful of the fact that, as Supervisory Border Patrol Agent Kristopher Hewson testified at the preliminary injunction hearing, BWC footage does not always reveal all the circumstances that agents face in the field. But given the extent of the footage in this case, submitted by both sides, the Court finds that, in many cases, video footage “evaporate[s] any factual disputes that would otherwise exist.”

For example, Defendants directed the Court to two videos of agents outside the Broadview facility the evening of September 19, 2025. In those videos, agents stand behind a fence preparing to leave the facility’s gates and disperse what Defendants described as an unruly mob. The scene appears quiet as the gate opens, revealing a line of protesters standing in the street holding signs. Almost immediately and without warning, agents lob flashbang grenades, tear gas, and pepper balls at the protesters, stating, “f*ck yea!”, as they do so, and the crowd scatters. This video disproves Defendants’ contentions that protesters were the ones shooting off fireworks, refusing orders, and acting violently so as to justify the agents’ use of force. … see also… (agents admitting that explosions on September 27 were not “fireworks” shot off by protesters but rather “flashbangs”).

On September 26, 2025, video from an agent’s BWC shows a line of agents standing at least thirty feet away from protesters outside the Broadview facility on Harvard Street. … see also Doc. 172-11 at 8 (“[T]he crowd [ ] was approximately 30-40 feet away.”). Despite this distance, the agents start yelling “move back, move back” to the protesters and then shoot pepper balls and tear gas at them without any apparent justification. While the agent wrote in his use of force report that protesters were “becoming increasingly hostile,” Doc. 172-11 at 7, the BWC video shows that the protesters were simply standing there when agents first deployed any force.

Defendants also highlighted an October 3, 2025 video, presumably to show that agents driving the streets faced constant danger from cars ramming them on purpose. But instead of leaving this impression, the video, which almost entirely consists of a view of the back seat of the car and some dialogue about how the agent’s “body cam is on” and he is “still recording,” suggests that the agent drove erratically and brake-checked other motorists in an attempt to force accidents that agents could then use as justifications for deploying force. This also calls into question Hewson’s testimony that motorists have rammed into agents every day during the operation. On October 4, 2025, in Brighton Park, Defendants directed the Court to BWC footage of an agent pushing a protester to the ground, with tear gas and pepper balls released thereafter The footage shows the agents allowing the protester they had tackled to the ground to stand up and then tackling him again, kneeling on his head or neck. Only after agents threw tear gas and pepper balls and pushed the protester to the ground did other protesters throw some bottles of water at the agents, which cannot support the agents’ use of force.

These are not the only inconsistencies and incredible representations in the record. While Defendants may argue that the Court identifies only minor inconsistencies, every minor inconsistency adds up, and at some point, it becomes difficult, if not impossible, to believe almost anything that Defendants represent. The Court discusses these inconsistencies in greater detail below, highlighting only a few here. For example, Hewson testified that people held shields with nails in them, but video demonstrates that at least some of these shields were merely pieces of cardboard, none of the shields had nails in them, and nothing warranted the aggression that the agents showed toward the protesters holding these shields. In Albany Park, agents wrote in their reports and DHS publicized that a bicyclist threw a bike at agents, but video from that event makes clear that agents actually took a protester’s bike and threw it to the side after they had deployed tear gas.

I’ve removed most of the citations from these excerpts to make it easier to read, but they’re in the original if you want to see them.

Her extensive chronicle of the documentation of force used begins near the bottom of page 47.

* Page 92

At least some of the agents involved in pushing the protesters back and maintaining the perimeter found the experience to be “fun.” (Agent 1: “This is f*cking fun. This is fun.” Agent 2: “Dude, these are some f*cking great experiences for you guys, eh?”); (“Dude, that’s a hell of a drug, let me tell ya. Seeing f*cking hippies getting [unintelligible].”)

I’ve also partially redacted profanity.

* Footnote at the bottom of page 121

Despite the relative calm, multiple agents made derogatory comments about the protesters. (“Yeah, these people got big mouths, don’t they? F*ck, man.”); (“You can’t reason with these people, they’re nuts.”); (“Of course the spots where all the females going crazy, that’s where the crowds are the f*cking most riled up. Like these dudes are just talking sh*t, but if the females came over here, they’d get ’em all worked up.”).

* Likelihood of Success

The first factor for injunctive relief is likelihood of success. To meet this requirement, the “plaintiff must demonstrate that ‘its claim has some likelihood of success on the merits.’” […]

Protected Speech and Newsgathering

Speech

Second, even if some individuals have engaged in violent and unlawful acts, Plaintiffs here do not contend that the First Amendment protects these individuals. Perhaps recognizing that the First Amendment provides no protection for speech that constitutes true threats of violence or incitement of imminent lawless action, see Counterman v. Colorado, 600 U.S. 66, 74 (2023); Brandenburg v. Ohio, 395 U.S. 444, 447–48 (1969), Plaintiffs do not include individuals engaged in this behavior in the relief they seek. […]

The Court does not find any evidence that any of Plaintiffs engaged in unlawful or violent conduct, and the certified class expressly excludes individuals who did. […]

Newsgathering

(T)he First Amendment protects non-violent newsgathering. The record indicates that Plaintiffs Block Club Chicago (Doc. 22-20), Raven Geary (Doc. 22-17), Stephen Held (Doc. 22- 18), and Charles Thrush (Doc. 22-16) all wear clear press identification when reporting, do not engage in protests, and do not talk with (or to) federal officers unless to ask them journalistic questions. See also Doc. 22-19 ¶¶ 7, 16 (Colin Boyle); Doc. 22-22 ¶¶ 7, 10 (Shawn Mulcahy). The Court rejects Defendants’ implication that Plaintiffs are suggesting that members of the press should receive special treatment. Instead, “the Supreme Court has long recognized a qualified right of access for the press and public to observe government activities.” […]

Content-Based Discrimination Under Strict Scrutiny

The Court finds that Plaintiffs are likely to show that Defendants have restricted Plaintiffs’ speech, assembly, and press based on their content. Plaintiffs have been open and vocal about their dislike for Defendants’ actions, and, in return, Defendants have publicly announced their intention to target such protesters. Plaintiffs’ declarations and testimony at the preliminary injunction hearing clearly establish that protesters have gathered at the Broadview facility and around the Chicagoland area to non-violently express their views opposing Operation Midway Blitz. Plaintiffs’ declarations describe the specific language that protesters have used to voice their views opposing the government’s immigration enforcement efforts and tactics in Chicago. […]

Defendants contend that their actions are content-neutral because they have only expelled those engaged in violent and obstructive conduct, or those intermingled with such people. This assertion, however, ignores many examples in the record where Defendants restricted the speech or behavior of those who were not acting violently or obstructively. Tellingly, Defendants admit that they would treat pro-ICE and CBP demonstrators more favorably. Accordingly, the Court finds that Plaintiffs are likely to show that Defendants have placed content-based restrictions on Plaintiffs.

The Court agrees that Defendants have a compelling interest in the protection of federal property and personnel and enforcement of federal laws. (The Court questions, however, whether Defendants have the right to issue dispersal orders on non- federal property given that “the United States Constitution reserves the general police power to the states.”) Defendants argue that “the use of lawful, less-lethal crowd control devices” is narrowly tailored to achieve these goals, Doc. 173 at 57, and point to a declaration describing these devices as “the most effective method” that law enforcement has to push an “entire crowd back” from destroying property and blocking traffic, while claiming that such less lethal devices do not cause permanent harm, Doc. 35-4. Yet the Court does not find that Defendants will likely succeed in showing that their use of tear gas, pepper balls, and other less lethal force is sufficiently narrowly tailored to achieve these interests. […]

First Amendment Retaliation

To prevail on a First Amendment retaliation claim, Plaintiffs must ultimately show that they “(1) [ ] engaged in activity protected by the First Amendment; (2) [ ] suffered a deprivation that would likely deter First Amendment activity in the future; and (3) the First Amendment activity was ‘at least a motivating factor’ in the Defendants’ decision to take the retaliatory action.” […]

Despite Defendants’ attempts to paint all protesters as violent or disobedient, as discussed above, Plaintiffs have provided evidence that they engaged in newsgathering, religious exercise, and/or protesting, all activities protected by the First Amendment. Further, the evidence before the Court indicates that individuals have been hit with less lethal munitions, gassed, pepper sprayed, threatened with arrest for recording and observing, tackled, and had guns pointed at them… such actions “would likely deter a person of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in protected activity,” (“Neither can Defendants meaningfully dispute that being subjected to rubber bullets, tear gas, pepper balls, and other crowd control weapons would deter individuals of ordinary firmness from continuing to engage in the protected activity.”) […]

Finally, Plaintiffs have sufficiently suggested at this stage that they can meet the third element of this claim, that their First Amendment activities were motivating factors in Defendants’ conduct. Plaintiffs can establish proof of motive through either direct or circumstantial evidence, including “suspicious timing, ambiguous oral or written statements, or behavior towards or comments directed at other [people] in the protected group.” […]

Further, as detailed in the Court’s factual findings, agents have used excessive force in response to protesters’ and journalists’ exercise of their First Amendment rights, without justification, often without warning, and even at those who had begun to comply with agents’ orders…. The Court also does not find persuasive Defendants’ argument that the fact that agents refrained from using less lethal munitions in some situations where agents encountered protesters indicates a lack of retaliatory motive. Agents’ “use of indiscriminate weapons against all protesters—not just the violent ones—supports the inference that federal agents were substantially motivated by Plaintiffs’ protected First Amendment activity.” The record before the Court, therefore, suggests that Plaintiffs are likely to succeed on the merits of their First Amendment retaliation claim. […]

Free Exercise and RFRA

The First Amendment provides that “Congress shall make no law . . . prohibiting the free exercise” of religion. U.S. Const. amend. I. “The Free Exercise Clause prohibits the government from ‘plac[ing] a substantial burden on the observation of a central religious belief or practice’ without first demonstrating that a ‘compelling governmental interest justifies the burden.’” […]

Under the RFRA’s burden-shifting framework, “[o]nce a RFRA claimant makes a prima facie case that the application of a law or regulation substantially burdens his religious practice, the burden shifts to the government to justify the burden under strict scrutiny.” […]

Further, Plaintiffs argue that Defendants’ actions force the religious exercise sub-class to choose between their health and safety on the one hand or authentically practicing their faith on the other. […]

As discussed above, the Court recognizes that Defendants have a compelling interest in protecting federal property, personnel, and governmental functions. But even assuming this, the Court does not find it likely that the government can carry its burden to demonstrate that its unprovoked use of force against Rev. Black, Rev. Holcombe, Rev. Johnson, and others engaged in religious exercise is the least restrictive means of furthering this governmental interest. The record is replete with evidence of Defendants using less lethal force against religious personnel. As discussed, Defendants have targeted Rev. Black, visibly attired in clerical garb, with multiple pepper ball shots, including in the head, and have fired tear gas, pepper balls, and rubber bullets against religious groups praying and singing hymns. Certainly, less restrictive means exist to protect federal property, personnel, and governmental functions, particularly given the peaceful nature of Rev. Black’s, Rev. Holcombe’s, Rev. Johnson’s, Fr. Curran’s, and others’ exercise of their religion.

Accordingly, the Court finds that Rev. Black, Rev. Holcombe, Rev. Johnson, Fr. Curran, and the religious exercise sub-class have shown that they are likely to succeed on their RFRA claim.

Fourth Amendment

… Plaintiffs have shown a likelihood of success on their Fourth Amendment excessive force claim. Initially, Defendants argue that the proper standard is the Fourteenth Amendment shocks the conscience standard for substantive due process, not the Fourth Amendment, because agents have not seized any individuals. But the Court disagrees. A seizure occurs under the Fourth Amendment when an officer “by means of physical force or show of authority has in some way restrained the liberty of a citizen.” … “The appropriate inquiry is whether the challenged conduct objectively manifests an intent to restrain, for we rarely probe the subjective motivations of police officers in the Fourth Amendment context.” […]

In light of this evidence, the Court finds that Plaintiffs have made a strong showing that agents’ uses of force objectively manifested an intent to restrain or confine protesters. Defendants took direct aim at protesters, including at areas of the body that their own agency policies indicate should only be targeted if deadly force is authorized, suggesting an intent to incapacitate. […]

Under the Fourth Amendment, based on the record before it, the Court sees little justification for the extent of the use of force that federal agents have used against Plaintiffs and other peaceful protesters, journalists, and religious practitioners. Pointing guns, pulling out pepper spray, throwing tear gas, shooting pepper balls, and using other less lethal munitions do not appear to be appropriate uses of force in light of the totality of the circumstances.

There’s lots more.

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s afternoon roundup

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Capitol News Illinois

The Illinois Accountability Commission is continuing to ramp up even as the Trump administration’s immigration enforcement campaign in the Chicago region winds down, at least for now.

Gov. JB Pritzker on Thursday announced the appointment of two new commissioners and additional staff to the independent commission he created via executive order last month. It is tasked with producing a public record of alleged abuses perpetrated by federal agents during “Operation Midway Blitz.” It will also examine the impact of such conduct on Illinois residents and communities and offer recommendations for accountability and reform.

Pritzker appointed attorney Jimmy Arce, a former federal prosecutor who was involved in the Justice Department’s civil rights investigation of the Chicago Police Department; and Ric Estrada, the CEO of Metropolitan Family Services, which is one the state’s largest human services organizations. Eight commissioners have now been appointed. […]

Commissioners and staff have started outreach efforts, explored community partnerships and are conducting a “landscape analysis” of information already in the public domain to examine the impact of related and ongoing litigation, according to the governor’s office.

But it’s still a work in progress. Pritzker notably encouraged people to document interactions with federal agents by taking videos with their phones. But on the commission’s website, there was still no method to submit such evidence directly to the commission as of Thursday afternoon. Instead, people are encouraged to contact a hotline operated by the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights, an outside group. […]

The commission has been tasked with providing an initial report on its findings and recommendations to Pritzker no later than Jan. 31. A final report will be issued no later than April 30, 2026.

* Background is here if you need it. Jon Seidel


* More from Judge Ellis’ ruling


*** Statehouse News ***

* Gov. JB Pritzker

* Press Release | Gov. Pritzker Announces More than $400 Million in Medical Debt Erased Since Launch of Medical Debt Relief Program: Every dollar the state invests in the Medical Debt Relief Program erases over $100 in medical debt. To date, Illinois has allocated approximately $2.8 million in the program to eliminate $430 million in debt – an extraordinary return on investment. The FY26 state budget includes a $15 million reappropriation to continue acquiring and forgiving outstanding, un-payable medical debt.

* Former House Speaker Madigan has been officially disbarred. The Tribune’s Jason Meisner

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | CHA, developers mark end of Henry Horner Homes redevelopment on Near West Side: The CHA, city officials, developers Brinshore Development and The Michaels Organization, among others, held a ribbon cutting Wednesday for the apartment building Westhaven Park Station. It’s the seventh and final phase of the Henry Horner Homes redevelopment, down the street from the United Center. The 12-story building, which is already fully leased, was designed as a gateway to the city, according to the developers. It’s also the end of work that was agreed to under a consent decree in 1995, when residents of the Henry Horner complex sued the CHA over building conditions. The decree stipulated that the housing authority would build new public housing units in place of the torn-down Henry Horner high-rises.

* Art Net | School of the Art Institute of Chicago Guts Video Data Bank Staff, Sparking Outcry: The future of one of the world’s leading archives of video art has been thrown into uncertainty after the School of the Art Institute of Chicago abruptly laid off three of the five staff members of its Video Data Bank (VDB), among them its director. The sweeping cuts have sparked outcry across the new-media art community and renewed concerns about the financial pressures buffeting U.S. art schools. Founded in 1976, VDB has long served as one of the most indispensable resources for video and media art, distributing more than 6,000 works to museums, universities, and libraries worldwide.

* Tribune | Chicago architect Bruno Ast, who designed memorial for Kent State shooting victims, dies at 88: “Bruno somehow managed to navigate the dysfunctional and political world of academia, run a small practice and gain the respect of the contractors that built for him,” said Joel Putnam, a former graduate assistant of Ast’s at UIC who now works for Capri Investment Group, the firm that is redeveloping the former James R. Thompson Center in the Loop. “He was truly an architect’s architect.”

* Crain’s | O’Hare clears a big hurdle as traffic tops pre-COVID levels — and heads to a record: Passenger volume during the first nine months of 2025 rose 6% from a year earlier to 63.9 million, topping the 63.6 million who traveled through O’Hare during the same period in 2019, according to Chicago Department of Aviation data. It’s an important milestone for the airport. O’Hare began its recovery from the pandemic slowly but gathered strength the past two years, fueled by the sharp growth of the airport’s two largest carriers, United and American airlines. United has 9% more seats in its schedule than a year ago, and American’s is up 23%.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* Daily Southtown | Riverdale appoints trustee acting mayor, following former Mayor Lawrence Jackson’s perjury conviction: A week and a day after former Riverdale Mayor Lawrence Jackson’s Nov. 12 conviction on federal perjury and obstruction of justice charges, the Riverdale Village Board voted Thursday morning to appoint Trustee Cassandra Riley-Pinkney as acting mayor. Under Illinois law, anyone who has been convicted of a felony becomes immediately ineligible to serve in public office, with their position automatically vacated.

* Daily Herald | Naperville panel endorses data center plans after ‘intense scrunity’: Karis Critical is under contract to acquire roughly 40 acres near Naperville and Warrenville roads. The developer originally proposed two data center buildings on the site, but instead seeks approval of only one — a 36-megawatt facility. Environmental advocates and neighbors have raised myriad concerns about noise, the use of backup diesel generators and power consumption. Still, the data center development has received the commission’s endorsement with an 8-1 vote. The final decision rests with the city council. The project has faced “intense scrutiny,” said Whitney Robbins, chair of the advisory panel.

* Daily Herald | Naperville could create new police unit to respond to mental health calls: Naperville City Council members this week said they want to include $1.26 million in the 2026 budget to establish a mobile crisis intervention team within the police department. The new unit would include six officers and a canine and would respond to calls involving mental health concerns. According to city officials, police responded to about 900 such calls in the past year.

* Aurora Beacon-News | Aurora looks to up parking prices at Metra stations in the city: The proposal, set to go before the Aurora City Council on Tuesday, would increase parking prices from $2 per day or $42 for a monthly pass to $3 per day or $60 for a monthly pass. City officials say the change would bring the prices in line with other parking along the BNSF-Metra rail line, in particular matching the daily rates of Naperville’s parking lots at Metra stations.

* Daily Herald | ‘Perfect location’: Lake Zurich authorizes $2.1 million land buy for potential fire station site: Comprised of three parcels known as the Breslow property, the vacant site was identified in a November 2024 analysis as a desirable location for a new fire station. According to information provided by the village, a recent appraisal determined the market value at $3.75 million. However, the property, which has been for sale intermittently since 2017, had a history of diverse uses that required environmental remediation by the current owners.

* Sun-Times | White Eagle banquets in Niles to close at end of year: Ted Przybylo opened the business in 1947 in Chicago and moved it to Milwaukee Avenue in the northwest suburbs in 1967. His six children, including former Niles Mayor Andrew Przybylo, took over the business after he died in 1992 and then sold it in 2015 to Mario Ferraro, whose family founded Victoria Banquets in 1937. […] The 1,500-person capacity venue has played host over the years to well-known figures including President Jimmy Carter, Pope John Paul II, Muhammad Ali, Larry Hagman. It was also a popular setting for political fundraisers. Former Poland President Lech Wałęsa also visited.

*** Downstate ***

* WCIA | Sean Grayson’s pretrial release appeal ‘moot’: Illinois Supreme Court: While this appeal was pending, Grayson’s trial began, and just more than a week later, he was found guilty of second-degree murder in Massey’s death. Because of the conviction, the Illinois Supreme Court said they find the detention question in the appeal “moot,” which is cited in a separate case as meaning “no actual controversy exists or if events have occurred that make it impossible for the reviewing court to grant the complaining party effectual relief.” “When an appeal is rendered moot and we do not reach the merits of the appeal, we cannot speak to the correctness of the judgments rendered by the circuit and appellate courts,” the Illinois Supreme Court said in its opinion filed on Thursday.

* BND | Metro-east law firm used ‘fraud playbook’ to get asbestos settlements, suit claims: A federal lawsuit is accusing Alton-based law firm Simmons Hanly Conroy of filing sham asbestos claims in handpicked jurisdictions such as Madison County to profit from large settlements. J-M Manufacturing Company alleges the “fraudulent scheme” was carried out for years by the firm and several of its attorneys and staff, including senior partner Perry Browder, who is also president-elect of the Illinois State Bar Association. In November, J-MM added new allegations to its complaint against another law firm with ties to Alton, Sokolove Law. J-MM also indicated in a motion that it would like to accuse the Gori Law Firm in Edwardsville of conspiring with them.

* WICS | Sangamon County Sheriff’s Office launches new mobile app for residents: Available for download in the Apple App Store and Google Play Store, the app offers features such as inmate search, sex offender information, jail details, records requests, news updates, and non-emergency tip submissions. It also includes program information, court security guidance, and job application capabilities. Sheriff Paula Crouch emphasized the app’s role in keeping residents informed, stating, “Our goal is to give residents a simple and reliable way to stay connected with our office.”

* WGLT | McLean’s old water tower gets new look ahead of Route 66 centennial: The nonprofit CORE of McLean [Community Organization for Revitalization and Expansion] negotiated an agreement to buy the decommissioned water tower from the village last year for $1 and is working to paint and refurbish the tower in time for the Route 66 centennial celebration next June. […] CORE of McLean Vice President Jeff Hake said the tower was built “like a battleship” and has a much longer life expectancy now that it no longer holds water.

*** National ***

* AP | Trump says Democrats’ message to military is ‘seditious behavior’ punishable by death: President Donald Trump on Thursday accused half a dozen Democratic lawmakers of sedition “punishable by DEATH” after the lawmakers — all veterans of the armed services and intelligence community — called on U.S. military members to uphold the Constitution and defy “illegal orders.” The 90-second video was first posted early Tuesday from Sen. Elissa Slotkin’s X account. In it, the six lawmakers — Slotkin, Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, and Reps. Jason Crow, Chris Deluzio, Maggie Goodlander and Chrissy Houlahan — speak directly to U.S. service members, whom Slotkin acknowledges are “under enormous stress and pressure right now.”

* CBS | Federal immigration crackdown in Charlotte, North Carolina, has ended, sheriff’s office says: The sheriff’s office in Mecklenburg County, which includes Charlotte, said federal officials have confirmed with Sheriff Garry McFadden that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection operation known as ” Charlotte’s Web,” has officially concluded. No border agent operations will occur on Thursday, a news release from the sheriff’s office said.

* Huff Post | Chief Border Patrol Agent Accuses Anti-ICE Protesters Of ‘Cult Behavior’: One U.S. citizen in Charlotte told The Associated Press that border patrol agents threw him to the ground and briefly detained him. However, Bovino, who appeared on Thursday’s episode of Fox News’ “Jesse Watters Primetime,” told Watters that it was a “tall order” for him to understand the backlash, later adding, “it’s beyond understanding in some ways.”

  2 Comments      


Bailey pledges to fire IDOC directors who allow drugs to “infiltrate” a prison

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Bailey campaign press release

A drug-related incident over the weekend at the Pinckneyville Correction Center is yet another example of the total breakdown happening under Governor JB Pritzker’s watch, according to the Darren Bailey/Aaron Del Mar campaign.

Six inmates reportedly overdosed after being exposed to illegal drugs inside the prison on Saturday. How the drugs got inside — and why basic security continues to fail — remains unanswered by the Pritzker Administration.

The Bailey/Del Mar campaign for Governor issued the following statement Monday from Aaron Del Mar:

“Let’s be clear: this is what happens when a governor is more focused on political games than public safety. Under JB Pritzker, the Department of Corrections has become a leadership vacuum. Drugs making their way into a state prison is not an accident – it’s a symptom of an administration that has lost control.

For years, Pritzker has pushed policies that weaken discipline, embolden offenders, and demoralize the men and women who actually keep our prisons running. When you treat corrections like a social experiment instead of a serious responsibility, this is the result. Officers are put at risk, inmates are put at risk, and taxpayers are left wondering who is actually in charge.

When Darren Bailey and I take office, that changes on day one. We will restore order, support correctional officers, and make sure prisons operate like prisons – not playgrounds. And let me be perfectly clear: if a director under a Bailey Administration allowed drugs to infiltrate a facility, they’d be removed immediately. That’s accountability. That’s leadership. And it’s something Illinois hasn’t seen from JB Pritzker.”

* I asked IDOC for a response…

On Saturday, November 15, 2025, a staff member observed an individual in custody exhibiting seizure-like symptoms near the shower in A-Wing. A correctional officer initiated a medical emergency code, and additional staff responded to the location. A sergeant then observed five other individuals in custody on the bottom deck of the housing unit on the ground, also experiencing seizure-like symptoms and vomiting.

Staff secured the housing unit and escorted all six individuals to Pinckneyville’s Health Care Unit for evaluation. They were subsequently transferred to restrictive housing while the incident remains under investigation. Staff conducted a search of all property belonging to the affected individuals and found no hazardous or suspicious materials. No staff reported symptoms. The investigation is ongoing.

* Meanwhile

Criminal justice advocates are encouraging Illinois residents to join their campaign and “say no” to mail scanning in state prisons. Mail scanning is a practice implemented at prisons across the U.S. in recent years, allowing prison officials to use programs to scan original physical mail intended for incarcerated people, convert it into digital copies, and transfer them to individual tablets, shared kiosks or print them on paper.

The Illinois Department of Corrections (IDOC) started using mail scanning at all prisons in September. However, this doesn’t include legal mail, such as correspondence from an attorney. The original copy under IDOC’s policy is retained for at least six months. […]

The law requires IDOC to collect and publish data on contraband annually. This move to mail scanning was made despite relevant data showing that it would not address issues with contraband, according to criminal justice advocates. The law, they say, restricts a form of connection between incarcerated people and their loved ones, doesn’t make prisons safer and undermines rehabilitation. […]

“In recent years, smuggling drugs into prison through the mail has become frighteningly common among individuals in custody, and as a result, drug exposures and hospitalizations of prison staff have gone through the roof,” according to AFSCME Council 31, the union that represents most correctional workers in Illinois, said in a news release on Nov. 17.

So, if those Pinckneyville prisoners didn’t obtain whatever caused that reaction through the mail, now what?

  20 Comments      


Coverage roundup: Feds drop charges against women shot by Border Patrol agent, also drop charges against 70-year-old accused of assaulting officers, and clergy sue DHS over access to Broadview facility

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* The Department of Homeland Security on October 4th

This morning, Border Patrol agents were conducting a routine patrol, near the intersection of 39th Place and S. Kedzie Avenue, when they were attacked and rammed by vehicles and boxed in by 10 cars. The officers exited their trapped vehicle, when a suspect tried to run them over, forcing the officers to fire defensively. This is an evolving situation. FBI is on the scene.

Statement from Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin:

“While conducting routine patrolling in the greater Broadview area, near the same area of Chicago that law enforcement was assaulted yesterday, our brave law enforcement officers were rammed by vehicles and boxed in by 10 cars this morning. Agents were unable to move their vehicle and exited the car. One of the drivers who rammed the law enforcement vehicle was armed with a semi-automatic weapon. Law enforcement was forced to deploy their weapons and fired defensive shots at an armed US citizen who drove herself to the hospital to get care for wounds.

“The armed woman was named in a CBP intelligence bulletin last week for doxing agents online.

“Thankfully, no law enforcement officers were seriously injured in this attack.

“Unfortunately, JB Pritzker’s Chicago Police Department is leaving the shooting scene and refuses to assist us in securing the area. There is a crowd growing and we are deploying special operations to control a growing crowd.

* The Sun-Times two days later

Body-camera video of a Border Patrol agent involved in the shooting of a woman who was allegedly chasing agents in Brighton Park over the weekend shows an officer saying, “Do something, b—-,” before pulling over and shooting the woman five times, the woman’s attorney said in federal court Monday.

The video appears to contradict the government’s allegation that Marimar Martinez, 30, drove toward officers before one of them opened fire on her late Saturday morning on Kedzie Avenue near 39th Street, her attorney, Christopher Parente, said at a detention hearing at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse.

U.S. District Judge Heather McShain denied a request by the federal government to detain Martinez and Anthony Ian Santos Ruiz, 21, pending trial. Martinez and Ruiz, who wore orange jumpsuits for the detention hearing, were charged Sunday with felony assault of a federal officer.

The judge said it “is a miracle to me that no one was more seriously injured” in the incident in which Martinez and Ruiz allegedly followed agents for more than 20 minutes as they drove after conducting an operation in Oak Lawn. But she said the defendants’ lack of criminal history and extensive family and community ties compelled her to release them pending trial.

* Today in the Sun-Times

The feds moved Thursday morning to dismiss the indictment that had been brought against Marimar Martinez and Anthony Ruiz, hours ahead of a status hearing in the case. Defense attorneys for the pair have been aggressively challenging evidence and sought a speedy trial.

The motion from assistant U.S. attorneys Ronald DeWald and Aaron Bond did not explain the decision. A U.S. attorney’s office spokesman did not immediately respond to a request for comment. […]

Prosecutors alleged that Martinez drove a Nissan Rogue that side-swiped Exum’s Tahoe. Ruiz allegedly drove a GMC Envoy that struck its rear right end.

Exum opened fire on Martinez, who suffered seven gunshot wounds. Exum allegedly bragged about it in text messages later, writing to friends in a “support group” that, “I fired 5 rounds and she had 7 holes. Put that in your book boys.”

Redacted versions of those messages were made public during a Nov. 5 hearing in Alexakis’ courtroom. But Monday, she wrote on the court docket that she’d since reviewed unredacted copies. She wound up having a meeting with government counsel afterward.

The judge told the feds to “promptly” deliver additional text messages to the defendants, according to the docket.

More from the Tribune

The U.S. attorneys office made the surprise move just hours before a hearing before U.S. District Judge Georgia Alexakis where defense attorneys were expected to describe new texts from the Border Patrol agent who shot Martinez and discuss witnesses for an upcoming hearing over what the agent did with his vehicle after the Oct. 4 incident. […]

Martinez’s attorneys, meanwhile, argue it was Exum who sideswiped Martinez and that his extreme use of force was completely unjustified. They’ve also alleged evidence tampering, saying Exum was inexplicably allowed to drive the Tahoe more than 1,000 miles back to his home base in Maine, where a Border Patrol mechanic attempted to “wipe off” some of the scuff marks from the crash.

An upcoming evidentiary hearing was expected to feature several witnesses who would testify about the decision to release the vehicle, including Exum’s direct supervisor, the FBI agent who helped process it, and a federal prosecutor working early stages of the case.

That followed a bombshell hearing earlier this month where it was revealed that after the shooting, as news of the incident was making national headlines, Exum texted a group of other agents that he was “up for another round of “f––– around and find out.”

* In a related story, here’s WGN

Federal charges have been dropped against a U.S. Air Force veteran who was accused in late September of forcibly assaulting or resisting federal agents during a demonstration outside an ICE processing facility in west suburban Broadview. […]

[Dana Briggs, 70.] was released from custody following an initial hearing. He was initially charged with a felony, but the case was later reduced to a misdemeanor with a trial date scheduled for December, according to Jason Meisner of the Chicago Tribune.

In the September incident, Meisner reports, video showed Briggs being pushed to the ground and bumping an agent’s arm as he attempted to hand his phone off.

Meisner also reports that Briggs intended to call Border Patrol Commander Greg Bovino as a witness during his trial. Bovino, who became the face of the immigration enforcement crackdown in the Chicago area known as “Operation Midway Blitz,” and his team of federal agents are now conducting operations in and around Charlotte.

* Bloomberg

An appellate court has temporarily paused a lower court order that could have soon released hundreds of people in Immigration and Customs and Enforcement custody.

The US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit on Thursday granted the Trump administration’s motion to pause the order as the appeal proceeds. The brief order gave no explanation for the decision but scheduled oral arguments on the matter for Dec. 2.

The decision comes after the district court judge declined the government’s request that he stay his own rulings.

The Tribune

U.S. District Judge Jeffrey Cummings had allowed their release on a $1,500 bond and some form of monitoring, including electronic ankle monitors, pending the outcome of immigration proceedings. Most of those arrested were originally processed at the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement facility in west suburban Broadview, but have since been moved to jails around the country.

But the Trump administration has asked an appeals court to block the release Friday of some 450 Chicago-area immigration arrestees, arguing the judge made a “bevy of legal errors” that put public safety at risk and “cripple” immigration enforcement.

“The district court’s orders subject the government to burdensome, costly and intrusive mandates — including training, documentation and reporting requirements — and cripple the government’s renewed implementation of the nation’s immigration laws after years of non-enforcement,” the administration argued. […]

The order comes nearly a week after the Trump administration released the names of 614 people whose Chicago-area immigration arrests may have violated the consent decree, showing that only 16 of them have criminal histories that present a “high public safety risk.”

Oral arguments are scheduled for December 2nd.

* Sun-Times

The Coalition for Spiritual and Public Leadership said the U.S. Department of Homeland Security used “shifting, contradictory, and often opaque communication” to deny clergy the ability to pray with detainees at the ICE facility in Broadview, including late immigrant activists Sister Pat Murphy and Sister JoAnn Persch.

The group attempted to provide communion for detainees at the facility in October as well as earlier this month, but were denied both times, with officials citing “safety and security concerns,” according to the lawsuit filed Wednesday in federal court. The group accused the government of violating federal law as well as the First Amendment rights of religious officials and detainees.

“A non-specific reference to safety and security is not sufficient to deny the rights of Catholic clergy and laypersons, or persons of any other denomination or religion, to practice their faith, especially as others have been allowed to do so at the ICE facility in Broadview since it became an immigration-related facility in 2006,” the lawsuit states. “The United States has a long history of accommodating such religious freedom and practice inside of prisons and jails, and there is no reason to deny them altogether at Broadview, where the vast majority of detainees have no criminal records.” […]

Clergy were previously allowed to pray with detainees before they were bused to deportation flights as well as during the 4 a.m. to 6 a.m. family visitation hours the facility used to have, according to the lawsuit. Murphy and Persch would pray with detainees in the early hour mornings every Friday from 2010 to 2020, only stopping due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The visits then continued virtually.

* More…

    * Fox Chicago | Chicago Police address misinformation after ICE shooting, confirms federal agents leading probe: In a statement, Chicago police clarified that officers did respond to the shooting scene involving federal agents on Saturday near the intersection of West 39th Street and South Kedzie Avenue around 10:30 a.m. Police said their purpose was to “maintain public safety and traffic control.” No injuries to any law enforcement officers were reported. CPD said they are not investigating the shooting, but federal authorities are. Chicago police also stated they responded to a separate call for service from federal officers involved in two hit-and-run crashes. The crashes were unrelated to the incident earlier in the day.

    * TIME | Trump Administration Accused of ‘Propaganda’ for Shifting Story in Shooting Amid ICE Protests: Murphy noted, however, that the criminal complaint filed against Martinez the next day tells a different story. The complaint, written by FBI Special Agent Caitlin Malone, said that only two cars rammed federal agent vehicles, rather than the overwhelming 10. There is no mention of her brandishing a weapon, as the original DHS statement implied, nor any firearms at all on Martinez. Police audio later confirmed that Martinez had a concealed carry permit for a weapon that stayed inside her purse throughout the incident, according to Fox Chicago.

    * AP | Border Patrol is monitoring US drivers and detaining those with ‘suspicious’ travel patterns: The predictive intelligence program has resulted in people being stopped, searched and in some cases arrested. A network of cameras scans and records vehicle license plate information, and an algorithm flags vehicles deemed suspicious based on where they came from, where they were going and which route they took. Federal agents in turn may then flag local law enforcement. Suddenly, drivers find themselves pulled over — often for reasons cited such as speeding, failure to signal, the wrong window tint or even a dangling air freshener blocking the view. They are then aggressively questioned and searched, with no inkling that the roads they drove put them on law enforcement’s radar.

    * NYT | ICE Frees Blind Migrant Who Was Detained for Days in Isolation: For at least five days, a blind Ecuadorean man who was arrested this month in New York City by U.S. immigration authorities was held in isolation at a county jail, locked in his cell for 24 hours a day and deprived of his cane. “I feel so terrible I cannot see and that I cannot walk, read or do things on my own,” Carlos Anibal Chalco Chango, 40, said last week in a declaration prepared by his lawyers based on their conversations with him.

    * AP | Federal immigration crackdown ends in Charlotte, North Carolina, sheriff says: A news release from the sheriff’s office in Mecklenburg County, which includes Charlotte, said that federal officials have confirmed with Sheriff Garry McFadden that the U.S. Customs and Border Protection operation known as “ Charlotte’s Web,” has officially concluded. No border agent operations will occur on Thursday, the news release said. The operation that began over the weekend is the latest phase of Republican President Donald Trump ’s aggressive mass deportation efforts that have sent the military and immigration agents into Democratic-run cities — from Chicago to Los Angeles.

    * NYT | As Border Patrol Floods North Carolina, Charlotte Asks, ‘Why Us?’: Now, his operation — named Charlotte’s Web in a reference to the children’s book — has drawn criticism for its aggressive tactics. Attendance has dropped at public schools. Adults have skipped work, prompting small businesses to close. And many have accused agents of profiling Latinos. Some residents have been fighting back, honking horns at the agents in parking lots, raising their middle fingers and shouting expletives at them. Two men were charged in separate incidents and accused of using their vehicles to assault, resist or impede federal agents conducting immigration enforcement operations in Charlotte.

    * The Atlantic | Every State Is a Border Patrol State: When President Donald Trump ran for office in 2024, his campaign wanted voters to tie the problems in their communities and personal lives to the chaos at the U.S.-Mexico border. Trump’s surrogates adopted a talking point long used by Homeland Security officials when they wanted more attention and funding from Congress. “Every state is a border state,” they’d say, meaning that problems generated at the border—illegal migration and drug trafficking—don’t stay there.

    * South Side Weekly | Feds Used Chemical Agents Dozens of Times in Chicago—Even After Judge Said To Stop: The events of October 4 also helped establish a pattern of force by federal agents. Our investigation found that federal agents used chemical weapons on protesters at least 49 times across 18 incidents across Chicago and the suburbs since October 1. Federal agents have used chemical irritants at least thirty times since a judge placed restrictions on their use of tear gas and pepper spray. Contrary to federal claims about attacks on agents, most of these incidents appear to involve nonviolent protesters or bystanders.

  13 Comments      


Question of the day

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* WAND

More than 60% of Illinois voters supported a statewide advisory referendum last year calling for a property tax constitutional amendment. Former governor Pat Quinn is using that momentum to push lawmakers to pass a property tax relief bill [and put a constitutional amendment question before voters]. […]

Quinn told reporters in Springfield Wednesday that millionaires should pay a 3% surcharge on their income taxes to help lower property taxes for families and businesses. The Illinois Department of Revenue estimates the millionaire surcharge could generate $4.5 billion. […]

Lawmakers would need to pass the legislation by May 3 for the question to appear on the 2026 general election ballot.

Quinn also told reporters he had breakfast with Senate President Don Harmon Wednesday to talk about the plan. He hopes to speak with House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch and Gov. JB Pritzker soon.

* Meanwhile, Capitol News Illinois

Four Democrats seeking the office of state comptroller put their pitches to the test on Tuesday at a candidate forum on Chicago’s South Side. […]

Each candidate proclaimed their support for a graduated income tax, which would require an amendment to the state constitution. Voters rejected such a proposal in 2020 despite its backing from Gov. JB Pritzker, but the candidates all said they support giving it another try.

[Sen. Karina Villa] argued the state needs more revenue to pay for progressive priorities and a graduated income tax, which has also been called the “progressive tax” or “fair tax,” would help.

“The fact that it has failed does not mean that we shouldn’t go at it again,” Villa said.

She added “the name sucked,” while criticizing how the amendment was pitched to voters. Villa said another try at passing it should tie the amendment to public school funding and property tax relief.

[Rep. Margaret Croke], a Pritzker ally, said a better name would have helped, but she defended Pritzker’s ability to sell it to voters.

“I thought the governor did an incredible job trying to push that initiative and I guarantee that if we were able to get it back on the ballot, which is something that I would support in the legislature … that same fervor and that same coalition-building would be utilized again,” Croke said.

* The Question: Do you support Quinn’s property tax relief amendment idea, prefer another run at the graduated income tax, think lawmakers should do something else, or nothing at all? Take the poll and then explain your answer in comments, please.


  46 Comments      


Catching up with the federal candidates

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* US Senate candidate Raja Krishnamoorthi…

Tomorrow, Thursday, November 20th at 2:00 PM, Raja Krishnamoorthi will be joined by a coalition of 100 faith leaders from across Illinois for a press conference on the West Side of Chicago, announcing their unified support for his campaign for U.S. Senate.

Faith leaders are traveling from all throughout Illinois to stand in solidarity with Raja. Their support marks another major show of momentum among Illinois leaders uniting behind his campaign. Last week, Teamsters Local 705 – the state’s largest Teamsters local – added its name to a growing labor coalition that includes UFCW Local 881, multiple Illinois Letter Carriers Association locals, and more. Support has also swelled among local officials, with more than two dozen mayors and hundreds of local leaders backing his campaign. From city halls to labor halls to houses of worship, leaders across the state are uniting behind Raja, a proven champion for working families.

* Block Club Chicago

A mother and her young son were attacked by a group of students on their walk home from school Monday — sparking outrage as neighbors say Chicago Public Schools and other agencies have done little to stop bullying and other issues impacting the school community. […]

State Sen. Willie Preston has been in contact with [Corshawnda Hatter] and said she had brought bullying complaints to [Orville Bright Elementary School’s] administration for at least two years.

“Her son is very afraid,” Preston said. “He’s been going through a lot. When I sat down with him, I looked into his eyes, and saw that he’s extremely sad. He’s been bullied for some time by the same group of kids. His mom has been complaining about bullying for two years to the administration.”

Preston alleged that the same group of students had jumped other students and even adults in the past. He called for a piece of anti-bullying legislation to be brought up to the federal level.

Sen. Preston is running for congress in the 2nd Congressional District.

* Politico

Cook County Commissioner and IL-08 congressional candidate Kevin Morrison plans to introduce a sweeping resolution today condemning federal lawmakers — especially Sen. Dick Durbin — who voted for the Republican-led FY2026 funding bill without securing an extension of the Affordable Care Act’s enhanced premium tax credits.

Morrison’s measure outlines what he says are severe financial consequences Illinois families will face if the tax credits expire at the end of 2025, noting that roughly 500,000 Illinoisans rely on them to keep coverage affordable, according to the proposed resolution obtained by Playbook.

In criticizing Durbin, the resolution says the senator’s vote came even after he publicly acknowledged insurers warned him that the loss of tax credits would be “a disaster.”

Morrison’s political plug. The resolution concludes by declaring that “Illinoisans require representatives…who will actually stand up for them and their interests.”

* Daily Herald

A would-be congressional candidate from the North suburbs who has an extensive history of antisemitic social media posts was removed from ballot consideration Tuesday.

Zion resident John Minarcik won’t appear on spring 2026 Democratic primary ballots for Illinois’ 10th District seat because he didn’t gather enough petition signatures to qualify, the Illinois State Board of Elections ruled.

Only three people signed Minarcik’s petition, an elections board spokesperson said. Nearly 1,000 signatures were required to qualify in that primary race. […]

His exit from the race leaves [Mundelein’s Morgan Coghill] and longtime U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider of Highland Park as the Democratic candidates.

* More…

    * Daily Herald | Why do so many Democratic U.S. House members in the suburbs have primary challengers?: Primary congressional contests can be expensive, with competitive campaigns spending hundreds of thousands of dollars on TV ads, staff salaries, polling, flyers and more. So far, none of the challengers in the 3rd, 5th, 6th or 10th districts has exhibited that kind of fundraising.

    * WAND | Forum gives Springfield residents a voice in upcoming House of Representatives election: Voters got the chance to hear directly from candidates running for Illinois’ 15th congressional district. The forum gave voters the opportunity to ask tough questions and eventually decide who they want representing them in Washington. Republican candidates and Incumbent Representative Mary Miller were invited to the forum. Organizer Karen Broquet said the community should hear from all candidates regardless of the political party.

    * Patch | Richard Boykin Engages Oak Park Seniors At Oak Park Arms Lunch And Learn: Oak Park Arms Senior Living will host a lunch and learn with Richard Boykin, Democratic candidate for Congress in Illinois’ 7th District at 11 a.m. on Friday, November 21, 2025. The event will provide a direct forum for the community to engage with the former Cook County commissioner on issues critical to the district. The lunch and learn is free and open to the public. The event will focus on Boykin’s commitment to addressing public safety, ensuring quality healthcare and social services for seniors, and leveraging his federal experience to secure necessary appropriations and programs for the 7th District.

    * US Term Limits | Overwhelming support in IL CD-07 race for congressional term limits: U.S. Term Limits (USTL), the leader in the non-partisan national movement to limit terms for elected officials, praises 2026 U.S. House candidate for Illinois, Reed Showalter (District 7), for signing the pledge for an amendment to term limit Congress. Previously, candidates Jerico Brown, Kina Collins, and Chad Koppie also signed the pledge.

  4 Comments      


Isabel’s morning briefing (Updated)

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* ICYMI: 7th Circuit stays judge’s order restricting immigration agents’ use of riot control weapons. Capitol News Illinois

    - The 7th Circuit Court of Appeals on Wednesday sided with the Trump administration and granted a stay on a federal judge’s order restricting immigration agents’ use of riot control weapons against protesters, clergy and journalists.
    - Wednesday’s ruling marks the second time the Chicago-based appellate court rebuked Ellis; last month the 7th Circuit blocked the judge’s demand that U.S. Customs and Border Patrol Commander Gregory Bovino report to court every day for a week.
    - The appeals court’s decision comes as U.S. Department of Homeland Security has wound down its Chicago-area “Operation Midway Blitz” immigration enforcement campaign.

* Related stories…

…Added by Rich… Important point…


[image or embed]

— Julie DiCaro (@juliedicaro.bsky.social) November 19, 2025 at 2:59 PM

***************** Advertisement *****************


Sponsored by PhRMA

340B hospitals mark up medicines and pocket the profit

Did you know 340B hospitals can charge thousands of dollars for medicines they might have bought for a penny? And they pocket the profit – passing the bill to Illinois patients, employers and taxpayers who are hit with higher medicine costs. The fact is this government program was created in 1992 to help patients access more affordable medicines. Today, the 340B program has become less about patients and more about boosting the bottom lines of hospitals and for-profit pharmacies. Tell Congress it’s time to fix 340B. Read more.

*************************************************

*** Isabel’s Top Picks ***

* Capitol City Now | Petition-passing Pat Quinn is back: His latest idea is one which he says would save $4.5 billion for most Illinois property owners, and he would raise that money on the backs of those who make more than $1 million. This would be an extra three percent tax after you’ve earned your first million, via a Constitutional amendment which the legislature must approve for November 2026. “We need three-fifths of each house to vote it onto the ballot by May 3, and then we’ll have a referendum (campaign) for six months,” Quinn told a statehouse news conference Wednesday.

* Alton Telegraph | Illinois Secretary of State workers charged with bribery: According to court documents, on July 2, the Edwardsville woman allegedly accepted a $25 bribe, and the East St. Louis woman accepted a $50 bribe to expedite the processing of identification. Court documents did not say what office the two worked out of.

* WREX | Illinois high school seniors offered admission to state universities with new initiative: High school seniors from Illinois have been offered admission to several state colleges if they meet certain requirements. The Illinois State Board of Education announced on X the One Click College Admit program. The initiative is said to give all eligible high school seniors (the class of 2026) offers of general admission to Illinois public universities and their local community college, based on their GPA.

*** Statehouse News ***

* Capitol News Illinois | Comptroller candidates spar over taxes, experience in candidate forum: Each candidate proclaimed their support for a graduated income tax, which would require an amendment to the state constitution. Voters rejected such a proposal in 2020 despite its backing from Gov. JB Pritzker, but the candidates all said they support giving it another try. Villa argued the state needs more revenue to pay for progressive priorities and a graduated income tax, which has also been called the “progressive tax” or “fair tax,” would help.

* Republican gubernatorial candidate Darren Bailey

*** Chicago ***

* Sun-Times | Budget chair claims Mayor Johnson’s corporate head tax isn’t dead yet: Ald. Jason Ervin (28th) told the City Club of Chicago Wednesday that Johnson could use his veto to thwart any budget proposal that eliminates his proposed head tax and replaces the $100 million in lost revenue with a property tax increase, higher garbage collection fees, and other alternate revenue sources.

* Sun-Times | Johnson pledges to use head tax for youth programs, then wants to cut funding for proven mentoring efforts: Mayor Brandon Johnson has tried — and so far failed — to sell his corporate head tax by rebranding it as a “community safety surcharge” with $100 million in annual revenue for crime fighting and prevention programs that include summer jobs and mentoring for Black and Hispanic youth. And yet, in his proposed 2026 budget, the mayor wants to cut funding for one of Chicago’s most successful youth mentoring programs, and change city guidelines to disqualify school-based group counseling programs known as “Becoming a Man” (BAM) and “Working on Womanhood” (WOW). “It’s devastating. We have 1,400 young people benefiting from programs they get so much out of. Most of them are in the program because they’ve already been exposed to trauma. And we’re risking traumatizing them again by ripping these supports out in the middle of the school year,” said Michelle Adler-Morrison, CEO of Youth Guidance, which oversees BAM and WOW.

* Crain’s | Alderman urges union concessions as budget tensions spike: O’Shea said the broader conversations haven’t happened because Johnson has been unwilling to take on unions that represent roughly 90% of city workers. “It’s an uncomfortable conversation, and it’s potentially a political problem, but that’s what leaders do in difficult times,” he said. “If you don’t ask them, they’re not going to volunteer. If I was running a union, I wouldn’t be volunteering unless they asked.”

Chicago Federation of Labor President Bob Reiter


* WTTW | CPD’s Increasing Use of Force Threatens Consent Decree Push: Illinois Attorney General: The significant increase in the number of times Chicago police officers have used force against Chicagoans since 2022 threatens the effort to reform the Chicago Police Department, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul’s office told a federal judge on Tuesday. The coalition of police reform groups, which forced the city to agree to federal court oversight, told U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer in September that the number of times officers have shot, tased, struck and choked a member of the public violates the consent decree, the federal court order requiring officers to stop routinely violating Black and Latino residents’ constitutional rights.

* NBC Chicago | ‘Spreading fast’: New, mutated flu strain has Chicago-area doctors ‘on guard’: The new variant, known as “Subclade K,” is part of the H3N2 parent group, or a type of Flu A. “This mutation has been associated with an increased rate of flu infections in countries that are already witnessing it and also in parts of the United States,” said Illinois Department of Public Health Chief Medical Officer Dr. Arti Barnes.

*** Cook County and Suburbs ***

* WTTW | Ex-Aurora Mayor Backed $450K Line of Credit Without Council Approval; Nonprofit Leader Racked Up Charges at ATMs and Strip Clubs: OnLight Aurora, a city-supported nonprofit, aims to provide high speed internet to the west suburban community’s institutions, businesses and residents. The nonprofit, according to an analysis by local officials and documents reviewed by WTTW News, is nearly $1 million in the red, operating at a $27,000 monthly deficit with some $20,000 in monthly debt service payments. Those charges include tens of thousands of dollars in ATM cash withdrawals, additional thousands spent at strip clubs across the country and travel to places as far-flung as Madrid and Dublin, to name just a few.

* Daily Herald | Aurora firefighters protest proposed budget cuts: The union representing Aurora’s firefighters is speaking out against Mayor John Laesch’s proposed 2026 budget, saying he and the fire chief are not being truthful when they say having fewer workers won’t hurt public safety. “It is misleading and factually inaccurate to suggest that eliminating 18 firefighters, three battalion chiefs, one training officer and two fire trucks, regardless of the method, will not affect emergency response, readiness or service delivery,” wrote union President Ron Deubel, in a statement Local 99 of the International Association of Firefighters posted on its website and Facebook page Wednesday morning.

* Daily Herald | Elk Grove Village mayor announces prostate cancer diagnosis: “I’ve got four kids and 10 grandkids, with more grandkids coming. I want to see them grow up,” Johnson said at a village board meeting Tuesday night. “It’s not a death warrant. You can fight it. You can beat it. I plan on beating it.” It’s the third major health scare for the longtime mayor, who had double-bypass heart surgery in 2014 and was severely injured in a biking accident in 2010.

*** Downstate ***

* Fox 2 Now | Ameren Illinois rate hike cut by $55.8 million: On Wednesday, The Illinois Commerce Commission (ICC) slashed Ameren Illinois’ natural gas rate request by nearly half, cutting $55.8 million from the proposed $128.8 million increase. Commissioners said the decision was made to help balance utility needs with affordability. “The ICC’s responsibility is to balance the interests of Illinois’ utilities and their consumers,” ICC Chairman Doug Scott said in a statement. “The commission opted to strike excess charges and approve necessary and justified projects.”

* 25 News Now | Concussion, broken bones: Women pay more than fines after East Peoria traffic stops: Two unrelated women are alleging excessive use of force by the same East Peoria police officer after traffic stops quickly turned violent and left them with lasting injuries. The stories share similarities. In both cases, the women are stopped for a traffic violation and forcefully arrested within a minute of Officer DeVonte Tincher’s approach. In both cases, the women complained to the East Peoria Police Department, and the department found no issues with the officer’s use of force. On July 30, 2025, Klein was arrested for resisting arrest about two minutes after she ran a red light. Klein was pulled to the ground from the driver’s seat of her car, breaking her humerus and scapula bones.

* BND | Republicans at odds over error on Madison County clerk’s election paperwork: The objector, Harold Wathan Jr., president of the Madison County Conservative Caucus, pointed out that all of Andreas’ nominating petitions listed the wrong handwritten election date of March 17, 2025. “(The county clerk’s office) is charged with running elections,” he said after the hearing. “She’s supposed to make sure paperwork is correct. She counsels other people on what to do.” Ultimately, the board — comprised of State’s Attorney Tom Haine, Circuit Clerk Patrick McRae and Sheriff Jeff Connor, all Republicans — voted to allow Andreas’ name to remain on the ballot.

* WICS | Ex-Champaign County deputy pleads guilty in $10K+ theft from Back the Blue fundraiser: A former Champaign County Sheriff’s Deputy has pled guilty to theft exceeding $10,000 in a fundraising scandal for the 10-78 Foundation (Back the Blue Champaign County). Matthew Stuckey, 40, was sentenced on Monday, November 17 to 36 months of supervised probation, 30 hours of community service, and financial penalties. Because the judge chose Withhold Judgment, Stuckey may avoid a felony conviction if he fully complies with all sentencing terms.

* WSIL | SIU Launches Free Dual-Enrollment Program for 26 Southern Illinois High Schools: Beginning next semester, students at 26 Southern Illinois high schools will be able to take online, tuition-free college courses through Southern Illinois University Carbondale’s new Saluki Start Dual Enrollment Program. […] Students will take one SIU course per term, taught by university faculty, with credits applying toward a degree at SIU or transferable to other public institutions in Illinois.

* WIFR | Parents worry Harlem School District’s plan to close schools could ‘dismantle’ families: On Monday, Harlem superintendent Terrell Yarbrough and administrators revealed a proposal to consolidate its elementary education. The plan would close Maple and Olson Park elementary schools, reduce the early childhood program, cut staff and more. […] He maintains the proposal doesn’t reflect on students, staff or leadership. Rather, the plan addresses declining enrollment due to a fall in birth rates in Winnebago County, under-utilization of buildings and a $3.1 million deficit.

* WGLT | City of Bloomington Township provided $67,000 in food assistance during SNAP suspension: The township approved setting aside up to $150,000 for emergency assistance earlier this month after the Trump administration paused benefits. From Nov. 4-13, 521 residents completed the intake process, and a total of 496 family members received emergency food benefits. “Our small but dedicated team worked early mornings, through lunch hours and late into the evening to meet the needs of our community,” township supervisor Deb Skillrud said. “Their commitment meant that every eligible household with complete documentation received assistance without delay.”

* PJ Star | Why Peoria’s police chief is in favor of new system for self-reporting some crimes: During the monthly meeting of the Peoria Advisory Committee on Police-Community Relations Monday night, Echevarria showed off the new system – the Citizen’s Online Reporting System – which allows citizens to report crimes such as assault, battery, criminal damage to property, vandalism and theft. He said that the system will reduce the workload of officers who would otherwise be distracted from more important tasks to complete reports for these crimes.

*** National ***

* Defector | John Fetterman’s Memoir Is As Low-Effort As His Senate Tenure: There is no audience for Unfettered, and I do not think Crown will get its money’s worth on this memoir. The day after Fetterman’s book dropped, I called a handful of Barnes and Nobles and independent bookstores in Pennsylvania. The Barnes and Noble in York—where Fetterman was born and raised—had sold zero copies. The Barnes and Noble in Philadelphia had sold two copies. An independent store in Pittsburgh and an independent store in Philadelphia each told me they weren’t stocking Unfettered, at least not at the moment. Another independent store in Philadelphia described interest in Unfettered as lukewarm.

* WBEZ | Newly released cache of Epstein emails reveal deeper ties with Thomas Pritzker, governor’s cousin: Pritzker, Gov. JB Pritzker’s cousin, exchanged at least 20 back-and-forth emails with Epstein that show the two remarking on current events and making plans to see each other, according to a review of some of the 20,000 pages of documents released by the U.S. House Oversight and Government Reform committee last week. […] Thomas Pritzker has not been accused of any wrongdoing, nor has he been named in any investigation into Epstein’s crimes. Thomas Pritzker declined to comment on the newly released documents through a spokesperson for Hyatt Hotels Corporation, where he currently serves as executive chairman.

* The Harvard Crimson | Summers Will Not Finish Semester of Teaching as Harvard Investigates Epstein Ties: On Monday, Summers — who served as United States Treasury Secretary under the Clinton administration — said he would step back from all public commitments, while continuing to teach undergraduate and graduate students and leading the Mossavar-Rahmani center, according to a spokesperson. But by Wednesday night — just one day after Harvard announced that it would probe his ties to Epstein — he had changed his mind amid mounting pressure. University spokesperson Jason A. Newton confirmed in a Wednesday statement that Summers had communicated his decision to Harvard.

  25 Comments      


Good morning!

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Rich Miller

* More from Todd

I just want to live until I’ve got to die

What’s going on in your neighborhood?

  1 Comment      


Selected press releases (Live updates)

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

  Comment      


Live coverage

Thursday, Nov 20, 2025 - Posted by Isabel Miller

* Click here and/or here to follow breaking news on the website formally known as Twitter. Our Bluesky feed…

  Comment      


« NEWER POSTS PREVIOUS POSTS »
* C'mon
* Yeah, no
* Unprecedented independent expenditures in state races
* Showcasing The Retailers Who Make Illinois Work
* Isabel’s morning briefing
* Good morning!
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Supplement to today’s edition
* SUBSCRIBERS ONLY - Today's edition of Capitol Fax (use all CAPS in password)
* Selected press releases (Live updates)
* Live coverage
* Some weekend congressional campaign updates
* Yesterday's stories

Support CapitolFax.com
Visit our advertisers...

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............

...............


Loading


Main Menu
Home
Illinois
YouTube
Pundit rankings
Obama
Subscriber Content
Durbin
Burris
Blagojevich Trial
Advertising
Updated Posts
Polls

Archives
March 2026
February 2026
January 2026
December 2025
November 2025
October 2025
September 2025
August 2025
July 2025
June 2025
May 2025
April 2025
March 2025
February 2025
January 2025
December 2024
November 2024
October 2024
September 2024
August 2024
July 2024
June 2024
May 2024
April 2024
March 2024
February 2024
January 2024
December 2023
November 2023
October 2023
September 2023
August 2023
July 2023
June 2023
May 2023
April 2023
March 2023
February 2023
January 2023
December 2022
November 2022
October 2022
September 2022
August 2022
July 2022
June 2022
May 2022
April 2022
March 2022
February 2022
January 2022
December 2021
November 2021
October 2021
September 2021
August 2021
July 2021
June 2021
May 2021
April 2021
March 2021
February 2021
January 2021
December 2020
November 2020
October 2020
September 2020
August 2020
July 2020
June 2020
May 2020
April 2020
March 2020
February 2020
January 2020
December 2019
November 2019
October 2019
September 2019
August 2019
July 2019
June 2019
May 2019
April 2019
March 2019
February 2019
January 2019
December 2018
November 2018
October 2018
September 2018
August 2018
July 2018
June 2018
May 2018
April 2018
March 2018
February 2018
January 2018
December 2017
November 2017
October 2017
September 2017
August 2017
July 2017
June 2017
May 2017
April 2017
March 2017
February 2017
January 2017
December 2016
November 2016
October 2016
September 2016
August 2016
July 2016
June 2016
May 2016
April 2016
March 2016
February 2016
January 2016
December 2015
November 2015
October 2015
September 2015
August 2015
July 2015
June 2015
May 2015
April 2015
March 2015
February 2015
January 2015
December 2014
November 2014
October 2014
September 2014
August 2014
July 2014
June 2014
May 2014
April 2014
March 2014
February 2014
January 2014
December 2013
November 2013
October 2013
September 2013
August 2013
July 2013
June 2013
May 2013
April 2013
March 2013
February 2013
January 2013
December 2012
November 2012
October 2012
September 2012
August 2012
July 2012
June 2012
May 2012
April 2012
March 2012
February 2012
January 2012
December 2011
November 2011
October 2011
September 2011
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
May 2011
April 2011
March 2011
February 2011
January 2011
December 2010
November 2010
October 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
March 2010
February 2010
January 2010
December 2009
November 2009
October 2009
September 2009
August 2009
July 2009
June 2009
May 2009
April 2009
March 2009
February 2009
January 2009
December 2008
November 2008
October 2008
September 2008
August 2008
July 2008
June 2008
May 2008
April 2008
March 2008
February 2008
January 2008
December 2007
November 2007
October 2007
September 2007
August 2007
July 2007
June 2007
May 2007
April 2007
March 2007
February 2007
January 2007
December 2006
November 2006
October 2006
September 2006
August 2006
July 2006
June 2006
May 2006
April 2006
March 2006
February 2006
January 2006
December 2005
April 2005
March 2005
February 2005
January 2005
December 2004
November 2004
October 2004

Blog*Spot Archives
November 2005
October 2005
September 2005
August 2005
July 2005
June 2005
May 2005

Syndication

RSS Feed 2.0
Comments RSS 2.0




Hosted by MCS | SUBSCRIBE to Capitol Fax | Advertise Here | Mobile Version | Contact Rich Miller