One nonprofit entity created by Republican gubernatorial candidate Jesse Sullivan owes $3,200 to the state of California — plus additional interest and penalties — for failing to file its tax returns for nearly a year, and another of his organizations is currently listed as delinquent in the West Coast state.
In response to questions from a Chicago Sun-Times reporter, Sullivan’s campaign said Wednesday the downstate venture capitalist plans to settle that debt, which it attributed to a “paperwork error,” and work with California’s Department of Justice to “address these administrative filings to achieve good standing.”
“Jesse Sullivan set up a nonprofit that never began operations,” Sullivan’s campaign said in a statement Wednesday. “When notified today that this unused entity had accumulated fees due to a paperwork error, he immediately took steps to address the fee, and is now closing it.
“As governor, Jesse Sullivan will work to cut red tape and make it easier to start and grow organizations here in Illinois.”
That nonprofit, called Alter Investments, is one of two created by Sullivan. Alter Global, the other non-profit that was registered as a charity and public benefit entity, has had a delinquent status in California since February 2020, according to the website of that state’s attorney general.
Q: In your campaign announcement video, you make reference to having served your country in uniform. Are you in fact, a veteran?
A: So I am not a veteran. I worked actually on the intelligence side of the Army. So I was an intel Army civilian, which was a unique program where they basically wanted to bring people in. So I trained up, you know, Fort Leavenworth, Fort Polk, Louisiana. And then I was deployed, you know, in uniform with a weapon out on combat patrols every day in Helmand, Afghanistan. And my job was mainly getting to know the Afghan local militias that were turning their weapons back on us that we were helping to train up. So my job was to get to know them, try to figure out what the heck was going on on the intel side and then help with military decision-making, essentially advising a brigadier general on what to do in Helmand Province, Afghanistan. So really, really proud of that service for our country. And yeah, just really feel like a lot of the experience has shaped the way I would approach leading as governor of our state.
Q: I don’t want to belabor that. But your your campaign said in a statement to Capitol Fax that you had quote, led combat patrols. Is that accurate? Do civilians lead combat patrols in a war zone?
A: No. So I actually I led our team on combat patrols. And so, no way would I ever want to take anything, I have so much incredible respect for our veterans in my opportunity to serve overseas was one of the proudest things I’ve been able to do for my country. And so in doing that, I was out on, you know, two weeks at a time, I would get out there and I had another analyst, sometimes a social scientist, an interpreter, and my job was a collection efforts. I led our team called the human terrain team. And we would embed with the local units for a couple of weeks. They knew that area better than I did, the area of operation. And so they would lead the combat patrol, I would lead our team on the combat patrol.
Governor JB Pritzker today announced the 2021 recipients of the Order of Lincoln, the state’s highest honor for professional achievement and public service. Established in 1964, the Order of Lincoln honors Illinois residents whose work uplifts every community in the state. This year’s Lincoln Laureates will be honored at the upcoming 57th annual Convocation at the Chicago History Museum. The eight recipients join a cohort of over 350 distinguished Illinois residents who have joined the Order of Lincoln over the last five decades.
One of this year’s recipients, Dr. Joanne Smith of the Shirley Ryan AbilityLab will be awarded the honor posthumously.
“This year’s Order of Lincoln recipients represent the values that make Illinois great. Hard work, innovation, and determination have long been the foundation of our communities and the eight recipients of the Order of Lincoln have exhibited all of that and more,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “I’m so proud to award these talented men and women with our state’s highest honor and I commend them for their incredible contributions to Illinois – and the world.”
“The Lincoln Academy is honored to award the Order of Lincoln to these remarkable individuals,” said Frank Clark, chancellor of the Academy. “Abraham Lincoln exemplified what is great about our state, and the achievements and contributions of these honorees continues to illustrate the vibrancy and richness of Illinois.” […]
Mavis Staples, now in her eighth decade of singing truth, is an intrepid musical pioneer who has blurred the lines between gospel, soul, folk, pop, R&B, blues, rock, Americana, and hip hop. Since her first paying gig at Chicago’s Holy Trinity Baptist Church in 1948, the Chicago native has found success as both a solo artist and member of her family’s band, The Staple Singers. Close friends of Martin Luther King, Jr., The Staple Singers were the spiritual and musical voices of the Civil Rights movement before finding international pop radio stardom during the 1970’s with hits like “I’ll Take You There” and “Respect Yourself.” Staples was the subject of the Peabody-award-winning 2015 HBO documentary “Mavis!,” was named a 2016 Kennedy Center Honoree, and was inducted into the Blues Hall of Fame in 2017; The Staple Singers were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1999 and the Gospel Music Hall of Fame in 2018.
The Illinois Department of Public Health has filed emergency rules to make Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s recent executive order regarding schools less vulnerable to legal challenges.
Most of the language in the IDPH rules is identical to the executive order Pritzker filed late Friday. However, the department deleted any references to “modified quarantine” in previous guidance. That previously allowed students to continue in-person learning after coming in contact with someone who had COVID-19.
Attorney Tom DeVore won several cases stating schools couldn’t put any student under quarantine without a court order.
Attorney Brian Bare says by deleting “modified quarantine”, IDPH is sending a message to the courts that they did not agree with DeVore’s interpretation of their previous regulations.
The new rules clarify that school districts don’t need court action to require testing, masks, or excluding students and school personnel.
“By making it clear that these types of things can happen without a court order or without an order from the county health department, that makes it much easier for schools to continue to operate in accordance with the executive orders and the guidance form the State Board of Education,” Bare said.
* Tom DeVore blew his stack on Facebook the other night about the new rules…
Boy, I got a story for you guys. I don’t usually, I try to keep you guys calm as much as I can, but with what I’m getting ready to tell you right now, you need to be so p*ssed off. I don’t, I don’t even know how to tell you to respond to this. Because what I just printed off. What I just printed off, you guys need to see if you can get about a million people to watch what I’m going to tell you right now. What I just printed off right here is tyranny. By definition this is tyranny. Okay. The courts have been protecting you for the last month, saying that your due process rights cannot be violated under the law. That exclusion from school, makes sense right, exclusion from school, putting mass on your babies, sticking a needle in your damn arm or sticking a swab up your nose, you have a right to that integrity as people… and it can’t be taken away from you without due process of law.
Um, that upends a century of clear judicial rulings on stopping the spread of infectious diseases, but whatever.
Do you know what these useless b*stards have done, or they’re trying to do, you know what you’re trying to do? The Department of Public Health just created an emergency rule and you didn’t hear about it on TV. You didn’t hear the governor talk about it. They created an emergency rule. And you know what they tried to say that it says, because COVID is an emergency after 19 months. They are trying to by a rule take all of your constitutional due process rights away from you. That’s what these no good, sons of b*tches are trying to do. They have no shame. They ought to all be in prison in my opinion, they ought to be in a federal prison is what they all ought to be in. […]
These tyrants are coming after your kids, they’re coming after them with this bullsh*t. It’s all bullsh*t.
Keep in mind that this man is running for the appellate court.
* “I need you to leave your houses in droves,” DeVore continued…
Bring this state to its knees. You have the power to do it because otherwise these dirty son of a b*tches. I’m sorry. I’m cussing now because I’m that mad at this. These people are not going to relent, they are not going to relent unless you make them relent.
Hat tip to a commenter for discussing this rant earlier today.
…Adding… If you’d like a bit more insight into the bizarre nature of this small but vocal faction, watch this video from a Vandalia, Illinois school board meeting…
Similar to its last meeting, COVID matters largely took center stage at Monday’s Waterloo School Board meeting.
But this time, the police were called.
After addressing the board stating his discontent with Gov. JB Pritzker’s school mask mandate and Waterloo’s compliance, resident James Link refused to put his mask back on at the meeting.
He was subsequently escorted into a hallway by two Waterloo police officers and arrested for criminal trespass to state supported property, Waterloo Police Chief Jeff Prosise confirmed. […]
When school board member Gary Most told Link he needed to mask up, Link asked Most to present “an order of quarantine,” following up with “You show it to me and I’ll put the mask on.”