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*** UPDATED x2 *** AG Kwame Raoul tests positive for COVID-19

Tuesday, Jun 16, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul issued the following statement today after testing positive for COVID-19.

“After experiencing minor symptoms over the weekend, I consulted with my health care provider using telehealth services. Upon the advice of my doctor, I was tested yesterday and informed today that I have tested positive for COVID-19.

“I have been self-isolating since the onset of my symptoms, and I will continue to do so in accordance with guidance from my doctor and public health authorities. Additionally, we are in the process of notifying individuals I may have come into contact with so that they can self-isolate and seek telehealth guidance.

“My symptoms continue to be mild, and I am in regular contact with my staff in order to continue to manage the operations of my office. As I join the countless Illinois residents working from home, the programs and services provided by the Attorney General’s office will continue uninterrupted.

“Although the number of confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Illinois is decreasing, I urge people to follow guidance from public health officials by staying at least six feet away from others, wearing a face mask when around others, and washing your hands often.

“I am fortunate to be otherwise healthy and am following recommendations to protect those around me. I encourage all Illinois residents to take precautions to protect themselves and vulnerable residents from contracting COVID-19.”

…Adding… Comments are now open on this post…


*** UPDATE 1 *** Sun-Times

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul announced Tuesday that he has tested positive for COVID-19, prompting Gov. J.B. Pritzker and other Democrats to vow to get retested after attending a south suburban event with the attorney general 10 days earlier.

Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx is planning to get tested for the coronavirus after attending the event.

But Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle has no plans to get retested, even though she also was at the Calumet City event on June 6 that Raoul attended.

“Their paths never crossed,” Preckwinkle’s spokesman said.

There’s more, so go read the whole thing.

*** UPDATE 2 *** Good news for the governor…


  1 Comment      


ACLU of Illinois wants end to all local curfews

Friday, Jun 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Press release from the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois…

This weekend, thousands of people across Illinois once again will gather together to protest anti-Black racism and the police killing of George Floyd and countless other Black people. These inspiring protests have taken place throughout Illinois, including small towns like Anna in Southern Illinois to the City of Chicago and its suburbs.

These protests – and the ability of people to be outdoors for other permissible activities – should not be limited by indefinite curfews. Curfews are a blunt tool that invite unnecessary police interactions and often result in arbitrary and selective enforcement aimed at Black people and people of color, the type of biased policing challenged by many protesters.

Many Illinois cities and towns imposed unnecessary curfews last weekend that have continued throughout this week. It is time for the curfews to be lifted everywhere in our state.

Thoughts?

…Adding… Press release…

ACLU of Illinois Responds to the End of Chicago’s Curfew

The below statement can be attributed to Colleen Connell, Executive Director, ACLU of Illinois:

“Finally! The curfew in the City of Chicago has been lifted. The limitation went on too long and caused disruption for too many of the City’s residents, including those protesting anti-Black racism and police violence, journalists, people experiencing homelessness, and essential workers.

As we said the night the curfew was put in place, the indefinite and vague nature of the curfew invited discriminatory enforcement against Black and Brown communities in the City.”

  16 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** AG Raoul opens up to employees: “I’m angry”

Friday, Jun 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* From a letter sent by Attorney General Kwame Raoul to members of his staff

June 4, 2020

Dear colleagues,

I want to apologize for my delay in addressing you about the recent protests and, more importantly, the underlying reason for them. Part of why I delayed was that I needed time to process my own anger and the thoughts that arose from it.

In my journey to become Attorney General, I was advised along the way to control my anger and not to let it inform my words and actions. Some of this advice was helpful, but at other times it failed to acknowledge the reality with which I live.

As an African American male who has had my own negative experiences with law enforcement, I’m angry.

As an African American male who has felt myself to be the subject of profiling for most of my life, I’m angry.

As the father of two black children whose wellbeing I worry about, I’m angry .

I’m angry because even to this day, at this stage in my career, I get nervous when I walk or drive by a police officer. I’m angry because when I walk into a store, I have to go out of my way to demonstrate that I’m there lawfully, to buy and not to steal. I’m angry because when I walk down a sidewalk or get in an elevator, I have to think about how to show I’m not a threat to someone’s purse.

As I reflected on my anger, I found it important to identify the person I’m angriest at - myself. I’m angry at myself because I’ve accepted the burden of making these adjustments in my daily life as an African American man, rather than confronting the reasons for my fear and discomfort.

So I’ve challenged myself and our senior staff to look at the work we do in the Office of the Attorney General with an eye to how we may have tolerated inequities and, as a result, contributed to the circumstances we have all witnessed.

We are having this discussion, born of our outrage over the death of George Floyd, only because a 17-year-old girl had the presence of mind to record the horrific act of a law enforcement officer purporting to be working in the line of duty. This is far from the first time we have risen up in resonse to police conduct caught on tape. I feel good about having led efforts, prior to assuming the role of Attorney General, to set protocols for the use of body-worn cameras and dash cams, and to have clarified that Illinois law allows members of the public to record officers in the performance of their duties. But I’m angry at myself for having accepted pats on the back for such reforms, knowing that most abusive policing is not recorded. Part of the reason I sought the position of Attorney General was to take on the challenge to do more.

We’ve been engaged in the implementation of a consent decree designed to change the patterns and practices of the Chicago Police Department. We have also recognized that the same communities that suffer disproportionately from law enforcement abuse also experience more heavily the trauma of normalized violence. This is why we’ve enhanced our crime victim services, taking a wider view of who is a victim. At the same time, we are actively reviewing legislation to further reform the way policing is done in this state.

Additionally, I know this time of public health crisis has been stressful for us all. I cannot express to you enough how deeply I appreciate your adjustment to working remotely while handling increased workloads. I also acknowledge that as I have struggled to process my thoughts and emotions concerning recent events and their relation to my lived experiences , so many o f you have felt the direct impact. I encourage you to take advantage of the Employee Assistance Program through which you can access free, confidential counseling services. You can reach them at (866) xxx-xxxx, 24/7, 365 days a year.

I also want you to know that I - and this office - stand in support of you.

The pandemic and both its health and economic effects have disproportionately harmed certain communities. Now, we witness livelihoods being destroyed - in many cases by outsiders - at a time when small businesses were already barely clinging to survival and people were just beginning to go back to work. While we have an eye toward assisting neighborhoods affected by this destruction, we will not allow our focus to be pulled away from our responsibility to look in the mirror and promote ethical, responsible and constitutional law enforcement in all areas that we touch .

*** UPDATE *** Press release…

Attorney General Kwame Raoul today issued a statement regarding implementation of a consent decree between the city of Chicago and the state of Illinois that requires the city to implement wide-ranging reforms of the Chicago Police Department (CPD). In a status hearing today regarding the consent decree and the CPD’s response to protests taking place throughout Chicago, attorneys from Raoul’s office argued that the city has failed to implement the consent decree in a timely manner.

“My commitment to enforcing the consent decree between the city of Chicago and state of Illinois has never wavered. If anything, the horrific murders of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, two in a long list of black lives lost at the hands of police, have strengthened my resolve to do my part to end pervasive police violence against our black and brown residents.

“We cannot let another day go by where the CPD hides behind a broken accountability system, inexcusably misses dozens of court-ordered deadlines with no plan in place to catch up, and fails to take the necessary steps to remedy the problems outlined in the U.S. Department of Justice’s 2017 report. The city owes the community it serves meaningful reform, not lip service, not Band-Aids, and not politics.

“I am calling on the city to recommit to implementing structural change within the Chicago Police Department, to publicly reject systemic racism, and to truly and transparently commit to gaining the trust of communities of color. I look forward to the independent monitor’s upcoming special report that will give us a more complete picture of how the CPD is responding to the protests that are continuing throughout Chicago. The protests are proof that the residents of Chicago are tired of waiting. I am calling on the city to do the hard work it assured people would be done to end systemic racism and restore accountability.

“I was pleased to hear Mayor Lightfoot’s recent comments acknowledging that implementation of the consent decree has been too slow. After several months of missed deadlines, one would be hard-pressed to disagree.

“The obstacle to implementation has never been the consent decree; rather, it has been the Chicago Police Department’s failure to prioritize the consent decree by committing sufficient resources to implement the court-ordered reforms. The city and the Chicago Police Department must finally take meaningful steps to implement the consent decree with the sense of urgency this moment in time demands. As tens of thousands of Chicagoans raise their voices to mourn and cry out for change, the city’s leadership owes them no less.”

Raoul is urging the city to deliver to the court, the monitor, and the Attorney General’s office a plan detailing when and how it will meet all of the consent decree deadlines missed.

To find more information, visit the Attorney General’s consent decree website.

* Related…

* Raoul, 17 other AGs ask Congress for power to investigate police misconduct

  6 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Friday, Jun 5, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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Here comes another lawsuit

Thursday, Jun 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Chicago has shelled out hundreds of millions of dollars over the years to settle lawsuits filed against its police department. Here we go again…


* Tribune

Tnika Tate, 39, said she was parking near a looted mall Sunday when Chicago police surrounded the vehicle, broke the windows and searched Tate and a group of four friends and relatives in the car with her.

Tate said an officer restrained her cousin Mia Wright, 25, by placing a knee on Wright’s neck while she was prone on the ground. Wright was charged with disorderly conduct and released Monday, according to police and the family.

A video of part of the incident was taken by family friend James Smith, 40, who was driving in a second car. A copy of the video was first published by the nonprofit digital news organization Block Club Chicago, and Smith provided the Tribune with a copy later Wednesday.

“She never resisted. It could have been something deadly,” Tate told the Tribune on Wednesday.

* WGN TV

Tate is a longtime funeral director in Chicago, and said she and her family were just hoping to shop at Target.

Police were responding to reports of looting at the mall, but the family says they didn’t know how officers on the scene could have suspected they were involved.

Wright works at that funeral home.

* Keep in mind that Wright was ultimately charged with “disorderly conduct,” which is a city ordinance violation. The Cook County State’s Attorney’s office says the Chicago police did not refer the case to the state’s attorney for felony review. And the state’s attorney won’t have any role in the prosecution

[Family attorney Nenye Uche] also called for the disorderly conduct charge against Wright to be immediately dropped.

The family still doesn’t understand why police targeted their car in the first place and is demanding answers.

Wright was in the front passenger seat of her cousin’s car Sunday when police, for no apparent reason, began to smash the windows of the vehicle with batons and order everyone out.

An officer grabbed Wright’s hair, which had been wound into a bun, and yanked her from the car, Wright said.

While Wright was on the ground, the officer knelt on her back and neck. Wright, who got a piece of glass in her eye during from the shattered window, was held overnight at a nearby police station, she said.

* CBS 2

But what bothers them more than anything is when Wright was yanked from the car. The family said one officer held her down by putting his knee on her back and neck.

“They approached my car so forcefully where they just started bamming and hitting at my car, then they bust out three windows of mine, and then they actually tore off my door handle – the passenger side door handle – and they literally drug my little cousin Mia out to the ground,” Tate said.

“I felt like an animal,” Wright said. “They pulled me by my hair, dragged me out the vehicle, had my face down on the concrete. The officer had his knee in my neck. I just felt like an animal. I felt like I wasn’t nothing, like I was not even a human being at that moment.”

Wright was arrested on charges of disorderly conduct.

* Block Club Chicago

As Wright was being pinned to the ground, she said what happened to Floyd flashed in her mind.

“It hit me at that moment. That’s all I thought about. I heard people screaming, ‘Why do you have your knee in her neck?’ That’s why people are protesting,” Wright said. “It was horrible. It was a moment I was scared for my life.” […]

At the station, Wright said she was verbally abused by a sergeant.

“The sergeant opened the door and he looked me in the face and called me a f—— savage,” she said.

While in lockup, she said she wasn’t given access to an attorney and couldn’t call her mother for more than six hours.

Wright was released 16 hours later with a charge of disorderly conduct. Officers said she was gathered with three or more people with intent to disturb the peace — but Wright said she and her four family members were sitting quietly in their car.

* New York Times

The Civilian Office of Police Accountability has launched an investigation into the encounter Sunday at Brickyard Mall on the city’s West Side in which police said in a statement that Mia Wright was charged with disorderly conduct. It has also started investigating another incident captured on video showing an officer chasing and punching a protester after a demonstration about the death of George Floyd last week. […]

At a Thursday news conference, Mayor Lightfoot and Police Superintendent David Brown said the police department was working with COPA — which is investigating both incidents captured on the two videos — to identify the officers involved. Lightfoot said as soon as they are identified, their names will be given to Brown, and she promised that any officers who acted improperly would be held accountable.

Still, Lightfoot cautioned that as disturbing as the video at the shopping center might be, the public should not jump to any conclusions. “You can’t just accept everything at face value that you see, and that includes video,” she said.

* From the state’s attorney…

The Cook County State’s Attorney’s Office is committed to public safety and pursuing the fair administration of justice for everyone in our communities. We are aware of the incident that occurred at Brickyard Mall and are currently conducting a thorough, independent review of the matter, including the conduct of the police officers involved. We take law enforcement accountability seriously and have reached out to the family involved through their attorney.

* Last word…


…Adding… Gov. Pritzker was asked about the incident today

What I saw was horrific. It was horrific. I mean what happened, thank God it didn’t end like George Floyd. But the police that did it are being investigated

  37 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Feds subpoena lobbying records of former Rep. Acevedo, sons

Thursday, Jun 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Jon Seidel, Tim Novak, and Mark Brown

Former state Rep. Edward “Eddie” Acevedo has been drawn into the ongoing federal public corruption investigation that has gone quiet but not dormant, amid the coronavirus pandemic.

Days after Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued his stay-at-home order, federal prosecutors subpoenaed the Illinois Secretary of State’s lobbyist division for all records related to Acevedo, as well as Michael and Alexander Acevedo and the Acevedo’s lobbying company, Apex Strategy LLC, records show.

The Chicago Sun-Times obtained a copy of the subpoena through a Freedom of Information Act request. The Acevedos have not been accused of wrongdoing. Edward Acevedo told the Sun-Times he had “no clue” what prompted the subpoena. Michael and Alexander could not immediately be reached for comment Thursday.

“I have no idea what that’s about,” Edward Acevedo said.

Secretary of State records list Michael Acevedo as Apex’s manager, and Edward and Alexander Acevedo as previously registered lobbyists. Alexander Acevedo ran in 2016 to replace his father in the legislature, but lost. He then ran in 2019 to replace Danny Solis as alderman of Chicago’s 25th Ward in yet another losing bid after Solis was revealed by the Sun-Times to be cooperating with federal investigators in their ongoing investigation of Chicago political corruption.

Read the rest. The grand jury number matches the one on the Ed Burke case.

The feds can’t normally just download the information from the SoS Index Division’s website and present it a grand jury. They usually need the official file. Hence, the subpoena. But what they’re after is really anybody’s guess.

*** UPDATE *** Eddie talked to the Tribune

Former Democratic state Rep. Eddie Acevedo said Thursday he was interviewed last fall by the FBI regarding lobbying activities and separate consultant fees paid to him by two ComEd lobbyists with ties to Democratic House Speaker Michael Madigan. […]

Acevedo, a former police officer, told the Tribune Thursday he worked as a consultant paid by John Bradley, a former House Democrat from Marion who was a contract lobbyist for ComEd until last November. Acevedo said he previously worked as a consultant in a similar role for lobbyist Shaw Decremer, a former Democratic House staffer and campaign operative ousted from the speaker’s political organization following complaints that he was abusive. […]

Acevedo said he could not remember the fee or the length of time he received the payments from Decremer, but that a consulting arrangement moved to Bradley once Decremer was booted from Madigan’s operation in 2018. […]

Acevedo said he did not lobby for ComEd, but he said he was a consultant for Bradley about ComEd issues.

  4 Comments      


*** UPDATED x1 *** Larry Walsh

Thursday, Jun 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Joliet Herald

Will County Executive Larry Walsh died Wednesday. He was 72.

Walsh, first sworn in as Will County executive in December 2004, was battling prostate cancer and was in home hospice, said his friend Jim Murphy.

Murphy said he and Walsh first connected through the ad agency Murphy started with his wife, Vicki Murphy, 25 years ago.

“Even when you know death is imminent, it’s still a shock,” Murphy said. “There will never be another one like him.”

Murphy said he and his wife recently visited Walsh at his Elwood home. They only planned to drop in for a short time but ended up staying an hour and a half. […]

While funeral arrangements have yet to be announced, Murphy said they won’t do Walsh the justice he deserves.

“Unfortunately, there won’t be a funeral to hold all the people who are ready and able to tell their Larry Walsh stories due to the COVID-19 virus,” he said.

* The Patch

“Will County has suffered a tremendous loss with the passing of County Executive Larry Walsh. Larry truly loved the people of Will County and worked tirelessly for their benefit,” Will County State’s Attorney Jim Glasgow said Thursday. “His four terms as County Executive were the final chapter in a lifetime of dedicated service to Will County and the State of Illinois. He touched countless people’s lives and will be greatly missed. My heartfelt sympathy goes out to Irene, Larry’s wife of many decades, and to his entire family. Rest in Peace, Larry Walsh.”

“Larry’s passing is a tremendous loss to his family, certainly, but also to the community,” said Denise Winfrey, speaker of the Will County Board. “He dedicated his life to service. I am grateful for the opportunity to serve with him and learn from him. He touched numerous lives, forged alliances and reached out to work with people from all walks of life. The work he has done speaks for him. Rest in peace Larry, job well done.” […]

“Larry leaves behind an incredible legacy of working to improve people’s lives,” stated Jennifer Bertino-Tarrant. “He was a passionate and dedicated public servant whose numerous contributions made our communities and state a better place. My heart goes out to the Walsh family.”

Bertino-Tarrant won the Democratic primary in March and she is running to become the next Will County Executive in the November general election, facing Republican challenger, Nick Ficarello.

“Larry Walsh believed in retail politics,” remarked Will County Republican Party Chairman George Pearson. “He greeted me each time we met with a firm handshake, a smile, and pat to the shoulder. You would not have known we were on opposite sides of the political aisle, and that is what made him popular with Will County residents.”

* Times Weekly

Respected for his bipartisan approach at every level of government he served, Walsh prided himself in working collaboratively to find solutions to the challenges that were faced. His longest tenure has been as County Executive where Will County built a strong financial foundation which improved the County’s bond rating. That success led to the largest capital improvements campaign in the county’s history and sustained investments in roads and bridge infrastructure. This campaign included a new Public Safety Complex and consolidated 911 dispatch center, a new County Health department facility, and a new Courthouse.

* Tribune

A longtime farmer, Walsh began his political career in 1970 when, at age 21, he was elected a member of the Elwood school board. In 1973, he was elected as Jackson Township supervisor, a position he held until December 2004. Walsh served on the Will County Board in 1974 and again in 1992 and served as Illinois state senator representing the 43rd District from April 1997 until January 2005, when he took office as Will County executive.

“I’ve been a very blessed man and a very lucky man,” Walsh said when he announced his retirement plans to the Will County Board in August 2019. […]

Walsh often shared stories of being Barack Obama’s seatmate in the Illinois Senate and about poker games with Obama. Later, he would share stories of visiting Obama in Washington.

During his tenure in the Senate, Walsh led efforts on a variety of issues including funding local agencies to improve the quality of life for residents with special needs.

Larry was one of the best retail politicians I have ever met.

He was a sweet human being and a regular guy who had a special light inside of him which put people at east. Larry took people as they came, which helped him work with just about everybody. You couldn’t help but love the guy. It seemed like he had a perimeter of joy around him everywhere he went.

…Adding… Senate President Don Harmon…

Whenever I think of Will County, I will forever think of Larry Walsh. Larry was a tireless advocate for his constituents and communities. Those who knew and worked with him are better for it. He never failed to make me smile or laugh or feel better about the world. We will miss him dearly. My thoughts and condolences are with his family.

*** UPDATE *** Been a while since I’ve received anything from this guy…

Today, President Barack Obama issued the following statement on the death of his former Illinois State Senate colleague, current Will County Executive Larry Walsh:

“Larry and I entered the state senate together and became fast friends. I’ll always be grateful for his camaraderie and support, but even more grateful that he was such a good public servant for the people of Illinois.”

  16 Comments      


*** LIVE COVERAGE ***

Thursday, Jun 4, 2020 - Posted by Rich Miller

* Follow along with ScribbleLive


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