Pages

Search This Blog

Monday, May 23, 2016

G4S police control room staff suspended over claims of bogus 999 calls

Old-fashioned black sixties telephone
Five G4S Lincolnshire police control room staff have already been suspended after allegations them to be making many 999 calls at quiet times to further improve their perceived performance.

The five call handling staff, who will be believed to add the Lincolnshire force control room manager, are understood to possess made greater than 600 bogus “test calls” to meet their target of answering 92% of calls within ten seconds or less.

The suspended officers were all former Lincolnshire police employees who moved to G4S four years ago if your private security company took spanning a £200m contract – the greatest ever – running the force’s back-office services. G4S has claimed the agreement saves the force £6m 12 months and hailed becoming a potential model through-out British policing.
The stories you should read, in a single handy email
Read more

A Lincolnshire police spokesman said an investigation was entered January after its anti-corruption unit received an interior allegation that staff from the control room were calling 999 at quiet times to make certain calls were acquired quickly to boost perceived performance.

Data with the control room seen because of the Guardian demonstrate that between January and September this past year the number of 999 calls built to test the tools were running with an average of 30-40 monthly and as few as eight in September.

But in October the volume of test calls jumped to 139, then 236 in November and peaked at 349 in December. The figures reveal that without the extra test calls the control room could have missed its target of answering 92% of calls within around 10 secs in November and December.

The figures show the control room received 8,153 calls in December ones 349 were test calls. Only 89% from the genuine calls were answered inside the target of ten seconds but the inclusion in the test calls pushed answering performance 1% above target. It is understood the individual personnel were not with a financial bonus scheme linked with performance.

A Lincolnshire police spokesman said: “We immediately informed the Independent Police Complaints Commission from the allegations and they happen to be kept fully informed in our investigation which was under their supervision.

“The senior treating G4S have been kept informed with the inquiry and possess provided valuable tech support team to our inquiries. Today five force control room staff happen to be suspended from duty and are already informed they're under their investigation.”

The five can be interviewed jointly with the police and G4S. The Crown Prosecution Service has advised that no criminal conduct has up to now been revealed because of the investigation and also the matter will be handled through staff disciplinary proceedings.

Lincolnshire police said at no stage had there been any risk to your safety of members from the public.

John Shaw, managing director for G4S public services, said: “We have suspended five employees today and possess taken swift action to begin with our investigation process.

“While I can reassure the general public that at no stage did those things of these people put everyone or police colleagues in danger, I am nevertheless dismayed that group of staff sought to influence important performance measurements. We still work closely using the force and share any data as well as other information required.”

Labour’s policing spokesman, Jack Dromey, said: “The public and also the police are actually seriously misled by G4S into believing that 999 calls were being answered quicker compared to they were. Emergency response times can indicate the difference between life and death.”

He added: “Time and time again G4S have let down the population. This case raises serious doubts about the ability of G4S to experiment with a role in vital and sensitive regions of policing. At a time when police forces are under growing pressure, this can be a reminder from the importance of crucial emergency services in public hands.”

Louis van Gaal to leave Manchester United as José Mourinho stands by – live!

Jose Mourinho

Two things I’ve just learned:

    The BBC has an Uzbek twitter feed
    In Uzbek Manchester United is Manchester Yunayted. Bosh!

    — BBCUzbek (@bbcuzbek)
    May 23, 2016

    Luis van Gaal "Manchester Yunayted" bosh murabbiyligidan bo‘shatilgan https://t.co/xn5DjRtmaj

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

15m ago 16:17

    — #ThisFlag (@FungaiChiposi)
    May 23, 2016

    @Simon_Burnton I do not wish to alarm anyone but someone should call the police. What is LVG still doing in there?

At what point do we report him missing? Any signs of United installing a new patio?
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

17m ago 16:15

    — Paul Hirst (@hirstclass)
    May 23, 2016

    Sounds like Woodward actually told LVG in person last night that he was sacked.

That is kind of him. Perhaps Woodward is now travelling the nation breaking the news in person to the entire UK population, one by one. Slowly.

Please let it be my turn soon.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

22m ago 16:10

Thanks to @LukkaSamir on Twitter for tipping me off about yesterday’s big events near Strasbourg, where Arsène Wenger opened the Stade Arsène Wenger. Will they ever have to update those palmarès, though?

    — Floreal Hernandez (@floreal_hdez)
    May 22, 2016

    Bain de foule, selfies pr l'inauguration du stade Arsène #Wenger à #Duppigheim #Alsace. @20minutesstras @20Minutes pic.twitter.com/c6YtXYTrOt

    — 20minutesstras (@20minutesstras)
    May 22, 2016

    stade Arsène #Wenger à #Duppigheim "Il mériterait d'avoir un stade à son nom ds chaque village #alsace & de #France" pic.twitter.com/AFBHy7hb0R

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

28m ago 16:04

Hello again! A couple of key updates for you:

    Jose Mourinho has gone back home.
    Paul Gilroy QC, the employment lawyer working on the whole severance thing, has left Carrington. He’s probably also on the way home.
    There is, however, no news on when Louis van Gaal is going home.

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

30m ago 16:02

Right that’s all from me. Much to my relief, Simon is back to talk you through the rest of this momentous day.

Cheerio!
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

34m ago 15:57

Just when the well had run dry, when there was no more of the barrel to scrape …
Reduced to the status of buffoonish imbecile for sending helpful video clips
Read more
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

40m ago 15:51

Another one that got away …

    — FC Bayern English (@FCBayernEN)
    May 23, 2016

    Done deal! @matshummels has put pen to paper on his contract at #FCBayern. pic.twitter.com/iBuse1R0AM

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

42m ago 15:50

A bit of ‘news’ from Aryadita Balakrishnan someone who would prefer to remain nameless now:

    Just heard from Hoek, a close family friend, Louis is keen on picking up the vacant position in Amsterdam for a last hurrah with Ajax.

    Remains to be seen whether he’d be sacked though.

Updated at 3.54pm BST
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

51m ago 15:41

    Remember that Van der Sar called LvG ‘the best trainer I ever had’. Which implies he was better than SAF, according to Van der Sar.

I think a lot of people have been regretting jumping aboard the LVG bandwagon for a while now Jurjen, but a vaild point nonetheless.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:36

Steven’s been in touch to ruin my fun …

    — Steven Schoppert (@SchoppertRTL)
    May 23, 2016

    @carllalala @gerard_meagher maybe lost in translation, but that was actually a joke. LVG was acting there, as was the host...

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:35

Of course, while we all have our lenses – camera or optic – training at Carrington, it’s worth remembering that the wheels keep turning on the managerial merry-go-round. Brendan Rogers is about to be unveiled as the new Celtic manager and while there’s silence from Manchester United, there’s unlikely to be at Parkhead.
Football quiz: Brendan Rodgers or David Brent?

Was it the real-life manager of Liverpool who supposedly said it or the fictional manager of a Slough paper company?
Read more
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:30

Coffee Mug has a suggestion as to the delay of any confirmation of LVG’s departure.

    — Coffee Mug (@captainsmug)
    May 23, 2016

    @gerard_meagher theory#53 Woodward is held hostage & being subjected to lengthy video analysis of why LVG should stay by Max Reckers #MUFC

Carl has a more likely one.

    — carl (@carllalala)
    May 23, 2016

    @gerard_meagher Imagine having to give LvG his P45https://t.co/mpIj9bvMc3

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:26

Here’s confirmation of something Manchester United related that we already knew … although not confirmation of what we were hoping for.

    — Jan Hagen (@PortuBall)
    May 23, 2016

    Renato Sanches has confirmed he rejected Man United: "Everyone know they made an offer, but I had others as well." pic.twitter.com/ApPlzFu1nf

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:22

And Stephen has this to say …

    Do you guys really just sit there refreshing Twitter and reposting youtube videos?

    I’d ask for a job, but I just sit here watching you refreshing Twitter and reposting youtube videos.

    I think we are both winning

No one is winning at this point Stephen
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:20

Ian has been in touch, wondering if LVG has been spending all this time at Carrington today, moving upstairs. I’ve never been to Carrington Ian, but judging by the time he arrived this morning that must be quite a few flights of stairs.

    Any chance that LVG could be getting a role as Director of Football at Utd? A theory I put forward to my mate Dunner several months ago.

    Cheers,Ian

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:12

Hello! Gerard here, filling in for Simon temporarily. As the waiting game continues, conspiracy theories are beginning to emerge …

    — Pratyaksh Agarwal (@pratyaksh_a)
    May 23, 2016

    @gerard_meagher Have a feeling #VanGaal will come out & say, "The team still believes in my philosophy! I am not going,you fat man!" #Scared

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:08

Right, I’m going to take a short sanity break. Gerard Meagher will be on top of things for the next half-hour or so - email him here or tweet here. Bye for now!
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:05

Shares in Manchester United are up nearly 4% since trading opened half an hour ago, report the FT.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

1h ago 15:02

Excellent point.

    — thabo mokaleng (@mokaleng)
    May 23, 2016

    @Simon_Burnton Fitting, in a way. LvG's sacking is as tedious as his football was.

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 15:00

It appears the removal men have turned up at Jose Mourinho’s house.

    — PA Dugout (@PAdugout)
    May 23, 2016

    The Moving One? Pictures from Jose's London house show something's afoot; it's 208 miles to Manchester #MUFC pic.twitter.com/PUD6sVwYDH

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:59

“Back to the Giggs stay/go debate from earlier, one of the things that has impressed me about Mourinho is the seeming conveyor belt (maybe slight exaggeration there) of his coaching staff who have gone into management, including Brendan Rodgers, Steve Clarke and AVB,” writes Karl Gibbons. “If I were Giggs, I would have a look at those names and be happy to stay and learn from an undoubted great of the game, and Mourinho would then be the third such titan he will have learned from … and Moyes.” That is all true. I can why Giggs might want to stay, but whether Mourinho would want him to is less straightforward.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:52

Not everyone is celebrating Van Gaal’s imminent departure - Robbie Mustoe is upset.

    — Robbie Mustoe (@robbiemustoe)
    May 23, 2016

    I'll miss him.

    BBC Sport - Louis van Gaal sacked: Man Utd boss's funniest quotes https://t.co/fgwdMUD1wn

If you don’t remember Robbie Mustoe, or do remember him but are a bit bored, this compilation is for you:

Dutch football writer Elko Born on the Zlatan rumours:

    — Elko Born (@Elko_B)
    May 23, 2016

    De Telegraaf have connections with Zlatan's agent Mino Raiola, who is Dutch. He could be the source of this information.

    — Elko Born (@Elko_B)
    May 23, 2016

    To be clear: Zlatan will join as a player. He won't become a coach until after his retirement, probably in a few years.

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:46

    — ☆ (@Grenadiier)
    May 23, 2016

    @Simon_Burnton At this point I am starting to think Van Gaal is the one taking hostages at Carrington?

There better be a good excuse, that’s all I’m saying.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:37

This has nothing to do with Manchester United, but it made me laugh.

    — You Had One Job (@_youhadonejob1)
    May 23, 2016

    The irony. pic.twitter.com/1FlO8ROI3G

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:35

OK, it’s now 2.32pm, the New York stock exchange is open for business, and we still have no announcement from Manchester United. I’m starting to think it’s all a hoax, and that Louis van Gaal and Ed Woodward are in a Carrington office right now reading this blog, laughing maniacally and repeatedly hugging each other.

If you’re out there, guys, it’s not funny any more. The joke’s over. You can come out now.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:31

One thing’s for sure: I wouldn’t want to be a Mancunian doctor right now.
Bayern Munich doctor Hans-Wilhelm Müller-Wohlfahrt quits after argument
Three other members of the medical team quit the club on Thursday, saying they had been blamed for the Champions League defeat against Porto the previous night
Read more
Eva Carneiro: medics rally to demoted Chelsea doctor after Mourinho row
Sport physicians support Eva Carneiro after coach criticises her for rushing on to pitch to treat injured Eden Hazard in stoppage time
Read more
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:26

Ibrahimovic, they say, has been offered the chance to be an “assistant coach” at Old Trafford, and hopes that his next move will be into management.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:24

De Telegraaf, the respected Dutch newspaper, are reporting that Zlatan Ibrahimovic has agreed to join Manchester United on a free transfer.

    — De Telegraaf (@telegraaf)
    May 23, 2016

    Manchester United haalt Zlatan Ibrahimovic binnen https://t.co/UZrepiNhzU

Updated at 2.28pm BST
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:21

Here’s photographic evidence that Jose Mourinho is, um, no longer at home. I know it’s not much, but it’s all I’ve got.
Jose Mourinho
Former Chelsea manager Jose Mourinho leaves his house in London. Photograph: Stefan Wermuth/Reuters
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:14

Here’s a four-year-old report on a Bobby Charlton interview, notable for the pronouncement that “Mourinho is a really good coach but that’s as far as I would go really” and that “he pontificates too much for my liking”.
Sir Bobby Charlton says José Mourinho would not suit Manchester United
Read more
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

2h ago 14:07

“With under-21 coach Warren Joyce said to be wanted by Blackburn, surely the U21 job would would be the ideal gig for Giggs (sorry!),” writes Alistair Langford-Wilson. “It always seemed weird to suggest putting him straight into the hot seat having never had to take full responsibility for managing his own team through a season. And going to another club to gain experience seems pointless - there is no other club like United, and as we’ve seen with Moyes and Van Gaal, success elsewhere does not guarantee success at OT. Pep and Zidane both managed their clubs’ reserve teams before taking on the senior job. Why not Giggs?”

I agree. It would allow United’s new manager to bring in his own assistant, while simultaneously keeping Giggs close and ensuring some distance. Giggs, meanwhile, has seen any number of United players leave amid talk of them proving their managerial credentials before returning to take over at Old Trafford - Bryan Robson’s the big one - and it hasn’t worked out for any of them yet (though I guess he’s also seen the likes of Mike Phelan and Brian McClair stay around and not get the promotions they presumably desired).

Meanwhile, some news regarding Giggs’s exit:

    — Samuel Luckhurst (@samuelluckhurst)
    May 23, 2016

    Told Giggs exited Carrington via different exit than one players and staff usually go through. Van Gaal still there. #mufc

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

3h ago 13:59

If you need a soundtrack to this unexpectedly long countdown to a potential accouncement, Manchester band the Courteneers have provided one!

The best thing about the Courteneers remains the fact that their biggest hit, 2008’s Not Nineteen Forever, reached a peak chart position of 19. And, it’s true, it didn’t stay there forever - it dropped to No30 the following week.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

3h ago 13:52

Breaking: Jose Mourinho has gone shopping.

    — Fred Nathan (@FreddieNathan)
    May 23, 2016

    Jose Mourinho just came out of his house and sped off pic.twitter.com/QnVFbJKriY

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

3h ago 13:51

    — Lion J. Mutongah (@jmutongah)
    May 23, 2016

    @Simon_Burnton Frm From Kenya I don't think Giggs can cope with Mourinho's high-handed management style

Even if his style were low-handed, or middle-handed, put yourself in Mourinho’s shoes for a moment. You’d surely prefer your own appointment as assistant, someone you know well and are comfortable with, someone with whom you know with absolute certainty you will work effectively, rather than a club legend with his own pre-existing relationships both with the players and around the club to protect.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

3h ago 13:48

The Manchester Evening News’ Ryan Giggs story is now live, here. There is not a lot of extra detail, but they say he has been given the chance to remain “in some capacity”.
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

3h ago 13:45

    — Craig (@jorgalbertz)
    May 23, 2016

    @Simon_Burnton serious Q. It's obvious that Man Utd would want Giggs to stay. When a journo writes that, how much is assumption vs evidence?

I think it implies some actual knowledge of the process being undertaken. It comes from the man Manchester United reporter at the main Manchester newspaper - I would expect them to have good contacts. They’re promising more soon, so we’ll see what details are forthcoming.

Updated at 1.45pm BST
Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

3h ago 13:41

Here’s something for the Game of Thrones fans among you:

    — The Culture (@_MidKnightGaz)
    May 23, 2016

    Winter had come for LVGhttps://t.co/zr0xz6K04A

Facebook
Twitter
Google plus

3h ago 13:37

Memphis Depay has arrived in Portugal for a training camp with the Dutch national side, and has posted a little video online in which he shows us his room and the swimming pool, and briefly mentions the FA Cup final:

    Of course I was not involved in the squad but I’m still happy that we won the title. It’s still a title.

    — Memphis (@Memphis)
    May 23, 2016

    Bom Dia! Arrived in Portugal with the national squad. Let me show you guys around https://t.co/3cpeqIx6zQ

University league table: Loughborough races into top five


Cambridge University studentsLoughborough University, famous because of its athletic prowess, has leapfrogged to the top five within the new Guardian University Guide.

While the most notable three places were retained by Cambridge, Oxford and St Andrews, Loughborough jumped seven places to participate Surrey in fourth. The university – that was Team GB’s preparation HQ inside the run-up to your London Olympics – was particularly boosted through the success of the engineering department. It ranked highly because of its fashion and textiles, and also design and crafts courses.

Cambridge, which held on to the most notable spot from the Guardian’s main league table for that sixth year repeatedly, increased its dominance along the specialist tables, coming top in 12 subject areas.

Other universities rising from the rankings include Leeds (moved from 23 to 16), Falmouth (31 to 21) and City – which jumped from 37 to 18, turning it into the fastest climber on this year’s top 20.

The Guardian’s league tables rank universities in accordance with: spending per student; the student/staff ratio; graduate career prospects; what grades applicants should get a place; a value-added score that compares students’ entry qualifications using their final degree results; and the way satisfied final-year students are using their courses, according to results from the annual National Student Survey (NSS). Specialist tables also rank universities by subject area.

It was obviously a rise in satisfaction ratings – especially among journalism and accounting and finance students – that helped drive City University’s climb with the tables.

Professor Sir Paul Curran, vice-chancellor, says the university has centered on investing in staff and much better facilities.

“It’s about hearing just what the students say, ensuring that we support our staff to offer high quality education, and also ensuring that the routine everything is done – like students obtain work back punctually,” he states.

Bob Allison, vice-chancellor of Loughborough University, puts Loughborough’s success to having a clear focus.

“Many university strategies are unbelievably long and incredibly complex. My view is there’s little part of doing that. Most people won’t make out the print and they cannot then know what we are wanting to achieve. You can put our university strategy somewhere of paper. I said, make it really quite simple. Focus on no greater than three or four items that will make an important difference.”

Those the situation is supporting staff, improving the university’s international reach, raising standards – and “recognising that most students who come listed below are making an important commitment so we have to invest in them”.

Had Loughborough been a commonwealth country, its athletes would've put it 11th inside the medals table in the 2014 Commonwealth Games. Its alumni include sports stars Sebastian Coe, Paula Radcliffe and Tanni Grey-Thompson. Now it is emphasizing stepping up the pace academically too.

The university moved to the top area for fashion and textiles within the Guardian league tables, is second for design and crafts, third in chemistry and fifth in journalism. Increased entry tariffs in nearly all subject be noticeable as one reason behind this impressive performance.

Allison says it's not because the university includes a burning need to compete with the elite Russell Group of top research universities. “I want Loughborough to get known for Loughborough,” according to him. “Not because were part of some group.” But countless students want to now go there how the university can afford to become choosy.

Particularly striking would be the strong showing of the engineering schools, which offer nearly 40% from the university’s student body and together recruit more undergraduate engineers than another UK institution. Loughborough’s mechanical engineering is third inside the Guardian’s tables. Its materials engineering is second. Allison says the volume of engineers “sets a bit of an ethos for that place. There’s a work ethic that rubs off on all from the students”.

Rachel Thomson, professor of materials engineering and dean on the school of aeronautical, automotive, chemical and materials engineering, says engineering has took advantage of strong partnerships between students, staff, professional bodies and employers. “We are building on the long established good name for engineering education,” she says. “I think perform a lot of things to provide opportunities for students.”

More than 1,220 Loughborough students used work placements this past year – around 400 of which engineering students. The placements help boost student employability: 94% of Loughborough’s graduates enter into employment or further study, in addition to those in full-time employment, 90% undertake professional or managerial roles.

Allison also sees the placements so that you can achieve a diverse student body: the promise of a paid placement really helps to encourage applications from students from disadvantaged backgrounds.

The main challenge now, says Allison, is usually to maintain Loughborough’s position on the list of pace setters.

“Everyone discusses it on the surface and sees sport,” says Bryn Wilkes, vice-president, media, at Loughborough’s students’ union. “But in my opinion, why are the place great could be the other things sport brings – friendly competition underpins it. Everyone wants being as good as they could be.”

Monday, April 25, 2016

Man shot in Englewood

A 28-year-old man was shot Sunday night in the Englewood neighborhood on the South Side.

He was shot in the right ankle about 10:30 p.m. in the 7300 block of South Sangamon, according to Chicago Police.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

He was taken to Stroger Hospital, where his condition was stabilized, police said.

A police source said the man was a documented gang member and wasn’t cooperating with investigators.

2 dead, 3 wounded in West Englewood shooting

Two men were killed and three other people wounded in a shooting Sunday night in the West Englewood neighborhood on the South Side.

The group was sitting on a front porch in the 2000 block of West 68th Place about 11:10 p.m. when someone got out of a vehicle in a nearby vacant lot and opened fire, according to Chicago Police.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

A 38-year-old man was shot in the neck and taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said.

A 27-year-old man suffered a gunshot wound to the chest and was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where he was also pronounced dead, police said. The Cook County medical examiner’s office confirmed the fatalities, but did not release additional information early Monday.

A 27-year-old man shot in the back was taken Christ Medical Center and 17-year-old boy shot in the left leg was taken to St. Bernard Hospital. Their conditions were both stabilized, police said.

A 23-year-old woman was shot in the left leg and taken to Stroger Hospital, where her condition was also stabilized, police said.

Two men grazed in Avalon Park shooting

wo men were grazed by bullets in the Avalon Park neighborhood early Monday on the South Side.

The shooting happened about 1:45 a.m. in the 8200 block of South Kimbark, according to Chicago Police.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

A 28-year-old man suffered a graze wound to the back and was taken to Stroger Hospital, and a 31-year-old man with a similar injury later showed up at South Shore Hospital, police said.

Their conditions were stabilized and they were not cooperating with investigators, police said.

Vehicle struck by bullet on Dan Ryan

A person’s vehicle was struck by a bullet early Monday while driving on the Dan Ryan Expressway.

Shots were fired about 1:45 a.m. and the vehicle was struck while traveling in the outbound lanes near Garfield Boulevard, according to Illinois State Police.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

No one was injured in the shooting, but all outbound lanes were closed to traffic from 47th Street to Garfield while police searched for shell casings.

All lanes were reopened shortly after 3 a.m.

16-year-old boy shot in Rogers Park

A 16-year-old boy was shot in the leg early Monday in the Rogers Park neighborhood on the North Side.

He was on a sidewalk in the 2300 block of West Granville about 1:15 a.m. when someone shot at him from the other side of the street, according to Chicago Police.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter

The boy suffered a gunshot wound to the right leg and was taken to Presence Saint Francis Hospital in Evanston, where his condition was stabilized, police said.

Obama guidance, press schedule April 29, 2016. Germany

Below, from the White House….

THE WHITE HOUSE
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

Office of the Press Secretary

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 24, 2016



DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

MONDAY, APRIL 25, 2016



In the morning, the President will open and tour the Hannover Messe Trade Fair with Chancellor Angela Merkel.  The opening remarks and tour at the Hannover Messe Fairgrounds are pooled press.

In the afternoon, the President will deliver remarks. The remarks will be open press.

Later in the afternoon, the President will meet with President Francois Hollande of France, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi of Italy, and Prime Minister David Cameron of the United Kingdom in a meeting hosted by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.  There will be a travel pool spray at the top of this meeting.

Afterwards, the President will depart Hannover, Germany and return to Washington, DC.  The departure from Hannover Airport will be open to pre-credentialed media, and the in-town travel pool will accompany the President to the White House.



Out-of-Town Travel Pool

Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

TV Corr & Crew: ABC

Print: New York Times



CET



9:00AM          THE PRESIDENT and Chancellor Merkel open and tour the Hannover Messe Trade Fair

Hannover Messe Fairgrounds, Hannover, Germany

Pooled Press



11:25AM        THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks

Hannover Messe Fairgrounds, Hannover, Germany

Open Press



2:30PM           THE PRESIDENT meets with President Hollande of France, Prime Minister Renzi of Italy, Prime Minister Cameron of the United Kingdom, and Chancellor Merkel of Germany

Schloss Herrenhausen, Hannover, Germany

Travel Pool Spray at the Top

4:40PM           THE PRESIDENT departs Hannover, Germany

Hannover Airport, Hannover, Germany

Open to Pre-Credentialed Media



EDT



5:00PM           In-Town Pool Call Time



7:10PM           THE PRESIDENT arrives Joint Base Andrews

In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Final Gather 5:10PM – Stakeout Location)



Briefing Schedule



CET



9:30AM          Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes, President and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Tom Donohue, and Chairman and CEO of The Dow Chemical Company Andrew N. Liveris

CHA tenants shivered until city sued landlords over heat


61°

News
Trending

    Prince CHA Blackhawks Bernie Sanders Sheryl Swoopes Crime

        News Home
        Sports Home
        Politics Home
        Entertainment Home
        Columnists Home
        Opinion Home
        Lifestyles Home
        Education
        Crime
        Business
        Chicago
        Transportation

Follow Us

    Advertise | Privacy Policy | Terms | About Us | About Our Ads | About Sponsored Content

Copyright © 2016. Sun-Times Media, LLC All Rights Reserved.

Powered by WordPress.com VIP
News
Business 04/25/2016, 07:04am
Gannett launches bid to acquire Tribune Publishing
Michael Ferro, largest shareholder of Tribune Publishing | Getty Images   

Michael Ferro, largest shareholder of Tribune Publishing | Getty Images
Sun-Times Staff
email

Gannett Co Inc. said Monday it was launching a bid to acquire Tribune Publishing Company for $12.25 a share in a deal valued at about $815 million.

The all-cash bid represents a premium of 63 percent to the closing share price of Tribune Publishing on April 22.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

A Gannett release indicates that Tribune Publishing has so far rejected the offer and refused to “begin constructive discussions.”

The deal includes Gannett, which publishes USA Today, assuming about $390 million in Tribune Publishing debt.

Robert J. Dickey, president and chief executive officer of Gannett, said in a statement: “We believe Tribune shares the new Gannett’s unwavering commitment to journalistic excellence and delivering superior content on all platforms. In this respect, the proposed combination of Gannett and Tribune would bring together two highly complementary organizations with a shared goal of providing trusted, premium content for the readers and communities we serve.”

More details to come.


Chicago News 04/25/2016, 06:53am
Fire officials: Body pulled from Lake Michigan near Grant Park
Sun-Times file photo   

Sun-Times file photo
Sun-Times Wire
email

A body was pulled from Lake Michigan Monday morning near Grant Park, fire officials said.

The Chicago Police Marine Unit removed the body from the water about 6:30 a.m. in the 500 block of South Lake Shore Drive, according to Fire Media Affairs Director Larry Langford.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

Fire officials said the person was dead at the scene, but did not immediately provide additional details. The Cook County medical examiner’s office could not immediately confirm the fatality.
Grant Park
Chicago News 04/25/2016, 06:50am
Man shot in Fernwood
Sun-Times stock photo   

Sun-Times stock photo
Sun-Times Wire
email

A man was shot Sunday evening in the Fernwood neighborhood on the Far South Side.

The 37-year-old suffered a graze wound to the head about 6:30 p.m. in the 10000 block of South Princeton, according to Chicago Police.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

He later walked into MetroSouth Medical Center in Blue Island, where he was treated and released, police said.
# Crime fernwood
Chicago 04/25/2016, 06:00am
CHA tenants shivered until city sued landlords over heat
Shortly after Christmas, the heat went out in the Englewood six-flat where Mileissa Weddle, above, lives. “The landlord put a sign on the door that the heat was going to be off for a couple of days, but it was longer than that,” Weddle says. | Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times   

Shortly after Christmas, the heat went out in the Englewood six-flat where Mileissa Weddle, above, lives. “The landlord put a sign on the door that the heat was going to be off for a couple of days, but it was longer than that,” Weddle says. | Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times
Tim Novak and Chris Fusco

Eighty-seven-year-old Ernestine Davis says she spent most of January wrapped in a quilted robe and huddled near her gas oven because the heat was out at the South Side apartment she leases with the help of a Chicago Housing Authority voucher.

It was 29 degrees outside on Jan. 13 when city building inspectors showed up and found the temperature inside her South Shore apartment was just 54 degrees.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

Davis, who lives alone, had been relying on her stove, an electric space heater and extra clothing to try to stay warm.

“I had a long quilted robe, jogging pants, socks and pajamas,” she says. “I was running my little heater and my stove. I never came up in the front part of the house.”

chaprojectCity Hall sued her landlord for violating Chicago’s heat ordinance, which requires landlords to keep apartments at a minimum of 68 degrees during the day and 66 degrees at night between Sept. 15 and June 1.

The lawsuit was one of 209 that city lawyers have filed against landlords this year over a lack of heat.

Thirty-four of those heat cases involved buildings where the CHA subsidizes rents through “housing choice vouchers,” commonly known as Section 8, a Chicago Sun-Times and Better Government Association investigation found. Those suits involved 94 voucher households with a total of 207 tenants, CHA records show.

“We take these complaints seriously, and our inspection process is designed to ensure properties are in compliance with program guidelines,” says Molly Sullivan, a spokeswoman for the CHA.

Sullivan says the agency “inspects every occupied . . . unit on an annual basis and conducts special complaint inspections when a complaint is received. If a unit repeatedly fails a series of inspections, CHA will suspend payment to the owner and give the tenant the opportunity to move to a new unit.”

EARLIER STORIES

Sunday: Cashing in on the CHA

Chicago’s public housing divide — March 13, 2016

How housing choice aid program works — March 13, 2016

You paid to build them, now you pay to lease them — March 14, 2016

Read More
# Beyond the Rubble Ernestine Davis North Lawndale
Chicago News 04/25/2016, 05:11am
Obama guidance, press schedule April 29, 2016. Germany
President Barack Obama is among the Illinois Democratic Party's "superdelegates." AP file photo   

President Barack Obama is among the Illinois Democratic Party's "superdelegates." AP file photo
Lynn Sweet
@lynnsweet | email

Below, from the White House….

THE WHITE HOUSE

Office of the Press Secretary

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

April 24, 2016



DAILY GUIDANCE AND PRESS SCHEDULE FOR

MONDAY, APRIL 25, 2016



In the morning, the President will open and tour the Hannover Messe Trade Fair with Chancellor Angela Merkel.  The opening remarks and tour at the Hannover Messe Fairgrounds are pooled press.

In the afternoon, the President will deliver remarks. The remarks will be open press.

Later in the afternoon, the President will meet with President Francois Hollande of France, Prime Minister Matteo Renzi of Italy, and Prime Minister David Cameron of the United Kingdom in a meeting hosted by German Chancellor Angela Merkel.  There will be a travel pool spray at the top of this meeting.

Afterwards, the President will depart Hannover, Germany and return to Washington, DC.  The departure from Hannover Airport will be open to pre-credentialed media, and the in-town travel pool will accompany the President to the White House.



Out-of-Town Travel Pool

Wires: AP, Reuters, Bloomberg

Wire Photos: AP, Reuters, AFP

TV Corr & Crew: ABC

Print: New York Times



CET



9:00AM          THE PRESIDENT and Chancellor Merkel open and tour the Hannover Messe Trade Fair

Hannover Messe Fairgrounds, Hannover, Germany

Pooled Press



11:25AM        THE PRESIDENT delivers remarks

Hannover Messe Fairgrounds, Hannover, Germany

Open Press



2:30PM           THE PRESIDENT meets with President Hollande of France, Prime Minister Renzi of Italy, Prime Minister Cameron of the United Kingdom, and Chancellor Merkel of Germany

Schloss Herrenhausen, Hannover, Germany

Travel Pool Spray at the Top

4:40PM           THE PRESIDENT departs Hannover, Germany

Hannover Airport, Hannover, Germany

Open to Pre-Credentialed Media



EDT



5:00PM           In-Town Pool Call Time



7:10PM           THE PRESIDENT arrives Joint Base Andrews

In-Town Travel Pool Coverage (Final Gather 5:10PM – Stakeout Location)



Briefing Schedule



CET



9:30AM          Press Briefing by Press Secretary Josh Earnest, Deputy National Security Advisor for Strategic Communications Ben Rhodes, President and CEO of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce Tom Donohue, and Chairman and CEO of The Dow Chemical Company Andrew N. Liveris

Read More
# germany Angela Merkel Germany

    Trump Projected In NY Primary

    CBS New York

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park

    CBS Minnesota

    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury

    Reuters

    Trump Projected In NY Primary

    CBS New York

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park

    CBS Minnesota

More videos:

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary
    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary
    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary

Currently Trending

    entertainment
    African music star Papa Wemba collapses on stage, dies at 66 | Chicago Sun-Times
    entertainment
    Oprah Winfrey hopes to 'lift consciousness' with TV's 'Greenleaf' | Chicago Sun-Times
    chicago
    Michael Sacks, John Rogers join Obama Foundation board | Chicago Sun-Times
    entertainment
    To honor Prince, Minnesota pol wants to make purple state color | Chicago Sun-Times
    entertainment
    Kelly Ripa to return to 'Live! With Kelly and Michael' on Tuesday | Chicago Sun-Times

Follow
Follow “Chicago Sun-Times”

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 170 other followers

Build a website with WordPress.com

Man shot in Fernwood

A man was shot Sunday evening in the Fernwood neighborhood on the Far South Side.

The 37-year-old suffered a graze wound to the head about 6:30 p.m. in the 10000 block of South Princeton, according to Chicago Police.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

He later walked into MetroSouth Medical Center in Blue Island, where he was treated and released, police said.

Fire officials: Body pulled from Lake Michigan near Grant Park

A body was pulled from Lake Michigan Monday morning near Grant Park, fire officials said.

The Chicago Police Marine Unit removed the body from the water about 6:30 a.m. in the 500 block of South Lake Shore Drive, according to Fire Media Affairs Director Larry Langford.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

Fire officials said the person was dead at the scene, but did not immediately provide additional details. The Cook County medical examiner’s office could not immediately confirm the fatality.

Gannett launches bid to acquire Tribune Publishing

Gannett Co Inc. said Monday it was launching a bid to acquire Tribune Publishing Company for $12.25 a share in a deal valued at about $815 million.

The all-cash bid represents a premium of 63 percent to the closing share price of Tribune Publishing on April 22.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

A Gannett release indicates that Tribune Publishing has so far rejected the offer and refused to “begin constructive discussions.”

The deal includes Gannett, which publishes USA Today, assuming about $390 million in Tribune Publishing debt.

Robert J. Dickey, president and chief executive officer of Gannett, said in a statement: “We believe Tribune shares the new Gannett’s unwavering commitment to journalistic excellence and delivering superior content on all platforms. In this respect, the proposed combination of Gannett and Tribune would bring together two highly complementary organizations with a shared goal of providing trusted, premium content for the readers and communities we serve.”

More details to come.

Saturday, April 23, 2016

Senate committee OKs $125 million to tackle DNA evidence backlog

The U.S. Senate Appropriations Committee on Thursday approved $125 million to help reduce a backlog of DNA evidence awaiting testing across the country, including Illinois, according to U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk.

Kirk (R-Ill.) said the money will “help victims of violence throughout Illinois.”
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

The president’s budget had cut $20 million for such testing, but the committee restored and added to the funding, according to Kirk’s office. It was part of a larger funding bill that passed 30-0 and awaits full approval by Congress.

Kirk’s announcement follows a national forum held in Chicago over backlogs in the testing of sexual assault evidence kits in crime labs across the nation.

The Illinois State Police crime lab’s backlog of forensic biology and DNA testing involves nearly 2,200 criminal sexual assault cases, the director of the lab said. Despite recent hires and scientists in training, the lab also is undermanned.
U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk R-Ill. said the additional federal funds will help states tackle the backlog in evidence testing. | AP file photo

U.S. Sen. Mark Kirk R-Ill. said the additional federal funds will help states tackle the backlog in evidence testing. | AP file photo

Police and prosecutors in Chicago say they typically wait a year for DNA test results.

According to Kirk’s office, the U.S. Senate funding would include $117 million for DNA backlog reduction, $4 million for post-conviction DNA testing and $4 million for sexual assault nurse examiners.

The Department of Justice would have to use 5 percent of the funding for grants to local law enforcement agencies to conduct audits on their backlogs and prioritize testing rape kits in cases facing an expiring statute of limitations.
# DNA evidence Mark Kirk Chicago

Plan Commission approves restaurant at Maggie Daley Park

The wildly successful park named after former First Lady Maggie Daley will have its own restaurant with terms dramatically different than the sweetheart deal that benefited clout-heavy investors of Park Grill in Millennium Park.

The Chicago Plan Commission sealed the deal Thursday by approving the 8,000-square-foot restaurant at 352 East Monroe after 11th-hour design concessions tailor-made to appease Friends of the Parks.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

“After many months of negotiations, Friends of the Parks has provided a letter of support for the project,” Executive Director Juanita Irizarry wrote in a text message to the Chicago Sun-Times.

Chicago Park District Supt. Mike Kelly said “painstaking” negotiations with Friends of the Parks and downtown Ald. Brendan Reilly (42nd) cut the restaurant floor space in half.

The height has also been reduced. It’ll rise to 27 feet — counting a protective guard rail and green roof that will essentially become a continuation of the park.

“We knew there would be pushback. . . . If there was a problem with the height, both of them would have been against us on this,” he said.

The restaurant will be built and operated by the Four Corners Tavern Group, owner of 10 other bars and restaurants.
Chicago Parks Supt. Mike Kelly said the new restaurant in Maggie Daley Park will be a better deal for taxpayers than Park Grill. | Fran Spielman/Sun-Times

Chicago Parks Supt. Mike Kelly said the new restaurant in Maggie Daley Park will be a better deal for taxpayers than the Park Grill. | Fran Spielman/Sun-Times

The deal calls for the Park District to get $75,000 in annual rent, along with a sliding scale of gross sales ranging from 5 to 10 percent. Four Corners will also pay utility costs.

“It’s not the Park Grill. In fact, we were painstaking in our efforts to make sure that this wasn’t the Park Grill. It’s a good deal for the taxpayers. It’s a fair deal. . . . It’s going to be very popular and generate a lot of revenue for the taxpayer,” Kelly said.

“We desperately need the concession. We desperately need the revenue,” he said. “It’s been my goal since we built Maggie Daley Park to operate the park budget neutral, if not in the black. . . . You can’t keep building 20-acre parks with no source of revenue.”

Labor board votes to stop CTU from future ‘illegal’ strikes

The state’s Education Labor Relations Board on Thursday ruled in favor of the Chicago Board of Education in its complaint about the Chicago Teachers Union’s April 1 walkout, which the school district deemed “illegal.”

The ruling, however, won’t make a dent in the union’s threat to strike as soon as May 16 should the two sides not come to a contract agreement. The labor board’s decision references actions or strikes completed before a fact-finding report. That has now happened in the contract dispute between CTU and CPS. After it was released Saturday, CTU shot it down almost immediately.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

The 4-1 ruling on Thursday by the labor board means the union is barred from future strikes before ompleting the fact-finding process. CPS CEO Forrest Claypool filed the complaint after teachers staged a massive walk-out on April 1, which also involved a downtown rally.

Claypool had always called the April 1 action “illegal.”

The labor board will now request that the Illinois Attorney General take the matter to court.

Claypool called the ruling “important” and said it should stop the union from “striking illegally whenever they want.”

“The labor board’s important ruling gives Chicago families more certainty that the CTU leadership cannot strike illegally whenever they want, and we are gratified that the board has taken a major step toward injunctive relief against future strikes,” Claypool said in a statement.

Claypool also urged the union to return to the bargaining table “to prevent a strike and the disruption that it would create for Chicago’s students.”

Claypool pushed for the union to reconsider the fact-finder’s recommendations.

The union shot back on Thursday, calling the board “the governor’s labor board” — although three of the five members were appointed by Democratic governors.

“The governor’s labor board is prosecuting its war on workers,” the CTU said in a statement.

The union noted board member Lynne Sered dissented and reminded the board that in seeking an injunction against the CTU, the board was “ignoring decades of its own legal precedents.”

On Saturday, CTU President Karen Lewis said “the clock has started” counting down to a possible teachers strike after the union rejected the recommendations by the fact-finder whose job was to help resolve the ongoing contract dispute.

Bears putting finishing touches on Soldier Field ad plan

The Bears are putting the finishing touches on a plan to “tastefully” increase advertising at Soldier Field to generate millions of dollars for stadium improvements, a top mayoral aide said Thursday.

Chicago Park District Supt. Mike Kelly said he expects to know within two weeks precisely how many signs the Bears intend to add at Soldier Field, along with the locations of that advertising.
Promoted Stories from sportsChatter
MLB pitcher sparked heated Twitter debate with Curt Schilling
Three years ago, Jake Arrieta promised a Twitter heckler he’d become a dominant pitcher
Olivia Munn and Aaron Rodgers hang with Anna Faris and Chris Pratt

“The Bears have agreed to go out and market the stadium and put all of that money back into the stadium. That was the critical term. It’s an old stadium. It needs money,” Kelly said during a break at Thursday’s Plan Commission meeting.

“The first step is just getting us to buy into the marketing concepts and putting ’em out to bid,” he said.

Pressed on where the new signs would be located, Kelly said, “Ask me that question in about two weeks. I’ll show you. Hopefully, we’ll have an agreement with them on what we’re going to do.”

Park District general counsel Tim King said purist fans need not worry about advertising creep at Soldier Field.

“There’s a concept. It’s very subtle, very tasteful designs. The Bears are going to put it out to market. The market is going to respond to . . . certain signs mixed with Wi-Fi access, website [advertising] and player appearances. There’s different packages,” King said.

“As long as it’s tastefully done and it’s respectful of the history of the stadium, it’s the only way we can continue to keep the stadium competitive with other NFL markets,” he said. “There’s no other way to pay for it.”

The door to what’s expected to be a dramatic influx in stadium advertising was opened by Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s now-scrapped plan to give movie mogul George Lucas 17 acres of land near Soldier Field to build his interactive museum.

In exchange for the inconvenience of losing the South Parking Lot to Lucas, the Bears bargained hard for a host of marketing and advertising opportunities that could go a long way toward financing stadium upgrades.

Sanders: Rahm’s revenge ‘obsession’ behind principal reassignment

Mayor Rahm Emanuel is feeling the Bern — and not in a good way.

Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders blasted the mayor Thursday for “politically motivated retaliation” against controversial Blaine Elementary School Principal Troy LaRaviere, blaming the principal’s reassignment on “Emanuel’s unhealthy obsession with taking revenge.”
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

“It is absolutely unacceptable that a school principal is facing politically motivated retaliation because he dared to stand up to the mayor of Chicago,” the Vermont senator said in written statement.

“If we are going to build an economy that works for all, we cannot sit back and watch as workers face retaliation from bosses. I condemn Principal LaRaviere’s reassignment and call on Democrats around the country to stand up against Mayor Emanuel’s pettiness.”

Chicago Public Schools issued a statement late Thursday afternoon disputing the idea that the mayor’s office ordered the move.

“CPS made this decision based on the advice of our attorneys because of alleged acts of misconduct, including violations of a previously board-issued warning resolution. We did not consult the mayor in making this decision,” Chief Education Officer Janice Jackson said.

CPS officials weren’t saying specifically why LaRaviere got the boot, but they say it has nothing to do with a meeting he’d scheduled with other CPS principals.

An outspoken critic of Emanuel, LaRaviere appeared in TV ads promoting Sanders — and trashing the mayor — before the March primary.

LaRaviere was uncharacteristically quiet Thursday, a day after CPS reassigned him.

LaRaviere said that CPS told him in a letter Wednesday he’d been removed from his job at Blaine, after district officials tried to shut down a meeting he was supposed to attend, along with other principals, at a South Side elementary school.

But CPS spokeswoman Emily Bittner said Thursday that LaRaviere’s removal is “unrelated to the meeting at the elementary school.”

“Principal LaRaviere was asked to come to a meeting at CPS on Wednesday to discuss his removal and employment status,” Bittner said. “He did not show up to the meeting.”

During his time at Blaine, LaRaviere drew praise from those who say he speaks boldly on issues that need to be aired. Others criticized him for being too political for a school principal. That divided opinion was evident Thursday.

Trump team tells GOP he has been ‘projecting an image’


Steve Peoples and Thomas Beaumont | Associated Press

HOLLYWOOD, Fla. — Donald Trump’s chief lieutenants told skeptical Republican leaders Thursday that the GOP front-runner has been “projecting an image” so far in the 2016 primary season and “the part that he’s been playing is now evolving” in a way that will improve his standing among general election voters.

The message, delivered behind closed doors in a private briefing, is part of the campaign’s intensifying effort to convince party leaders Trump will moderate his tone in the coming months to help deliver big electoral gains this fall, despite his contentious ways.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

Even as his team pressed Trump’s case, he raised fresh concern among some conservatives by speaking against North Carolina’s “bathroom law,” which directs transgender people to use the bathroom that matches the sex on their birth certificates. Trump also came out against the federal government’s plan to replace President Andrew Jackson with the civil-rights figure Harriet Tubman on the $20 bill.

The developments came as the GOP’s messy fight for the White House spilled into a seaside resort in south Florida. While candidates in both parties fanned out across the country before important primary contests in the Northeast, Hollywood’s Diplomat Resort & Spa was transformed into a palm-treed political battleground.

Trump’s newly hired senior aide, Paul Manafort, made the case to Republican National Committee members that Trump has two personalities: one in private and one onstage.

“When he’s out on the stage, when he’s talking about the kinds of things he’s talking about on the stump, he’s projecting an image that’s for that purpose,” Manafort said in a private briefing.

“You’ll start to see more depth of the person, the real person. You’ll see a real different guy,” he said.

The Associated Press obtained a recording of the closed-door exchange.

“He gets it,” Manafort said of Trump’s need to moderate his personality. “The part that he’s been playing is evolving into the part that now you’ve been expecting, but he wasn’t ready for, because he had first to complete the first phase. The negatives will come down. The image is going to change.”

Bipartisan vote on $600M higher ed bill called spark of hope

In this Feb. 17, 2016 photo, Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, left, speaks to Illinois Senate President John Cullerton, D-Chicago, center, while Illinois Gov. Bruce Rauner, right, delivers the State of the Budget Address to a joint session of the General Assembly in the House chambers at the Illinois State Capitol in Springfield. (AP File Photo/Seth Perlman)
Tina Sfondeles
@TinaSfon | email

Illinois lawmakers on Friday approved a big short-time fix to fund the state’s public universities and community colleges in what the governor’s administration is calling a bipartisan glimmer of hope needed to solve the state’s budget impasse.

Illinois State Comptroller Leslie Munger on Friday said payments to universities, community colleges and to students with Monetary Award Program grants will start immediately.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

While state universities are grateful, the funding will only keep the doors open for the rest of the semester, and layoffs are still on the way without a full state budget in a stalemate that’s reached 10 months.

Statehouse sources say a deal for higher education funding was nearly made on Wednesday. Then on Thursday, the bill was pulled from the House with no explanation.

It sailed through on Friday, after some closed-door meetings between lawmakers.

A longtime statehouse source said there was some uncharacteristic “chaos” in the House Democratic caucus. There was some dissension about the vote with Senate Republicans as well, as some questioned why Chicago State would get more funding than other universities.

But assurances by the Rauner administration that there would be a way to fund the bill helped to seal the deal, according to sources. And the Legislative Black Caucus knew CSU needed money or it could be closing its doors for good. The group of legislators was instrumental in getting the bill passed and also stressed the need for a bill to fund social services, just before the House bill was approved.

The House on Friday voted 106-2, while the Senate unanimously passed the bill, which will send $600 million to help stem the financial crises at the state’s public universities and community colleges. It also includes $160 million in tuition grants for low-income students.

The Senate also unanimously advanced a bill that will bridge funding for higher education and critical human services.

The House should take up that bill when legislators return after a one-week break.

Democrats and Republicans had previously split the vote on several higher education bills, with some Republicans stressing there was no source of revenue to pay for the emergency funding.

Did police give Fire Department’s No. 3 man favorable treatment?

The Chicago Police Department struggled Friday to explain why the third-highest ranking member of the Chicago Fire Department was neither tested for alcohol in his system nor charged with drunken driving after crashing his city-owned SUV this week near Lake Shore Drive in Lincoln Park.

The Chicago Fire Department has concluded that John McNicholas, who ran the Fire Department’s Bureau of Operations, was under the influence of alcohol at the time of the accident.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

But the Breathalyzer test was administered hours after the crash happened, at Fire Department headquarters at 35th and State, by the Fire Department’s Internal Affairs Bureau.

Chicago Police officers were on the scene of the accident on LaSalle Drive just off Lake Shore Drive for up to two hours but never administered a field sobriety test or Breathalyzer test, sources said. Four squad cars were dispatched to the scene and were there from 30 minutes to two hours.

The failure to administer those tests raises questions about whether McNicholas was given preferential treatment by police and comes at a time when the Chicago Police Department is working to restore its battered image and trust with the public.

Unlike Illinois State Police, Chicago Police officers do not carry breathalyzers in their squad cars. If a Breathalyzer is administered, it has to be done at the district station. That was not done in McNicholas’ case.

Both tests were important, but there are two different standards.

The Fire Department has as close to a zero-tolerance policy as it can get. Any department member whose blood-alcohol level exceeds .02 — which is possible after just one or two cocktails — is considered “under the influence” of alcohol.

That’s why McNicholas, who resigned as deputy commissioner Wednesday, agreed to a “full separation” from the Chicago Fire Department after taking the Breathalyzer test that is mandatory after all accidents involving Fire Department vehicles.

The state standard for charging a motorist with DUI is .08. Since police officers on the scene never tested McNicholas for that standard, he is not expected to be charged with DUI.

Move to abolish lt. governor position stays alive in House

Abolishing the office of lieutenant governor moved a step forward Friday, a day after it took a step backward.

The Illinois House on Friday passed a constitutional amendment to eliminate the No. 2 position by a 95-10 vote.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

But the state Senate on Thursday rejected a similar bill, 21-36, in part over fears that it paved the way for a governor to be replaced by a member of the opposite party.

State Rep. David McSweeney’s constitutional amendment would eliminate the lieutenant governor’s position by 2019. The Barrington Hills Republican says getting rid of the office would save the state $1.6 million a year.

The House passage of McSweeney’s amendment means the Illinois Senate will get another chance to vote on the amendment on May 7 where it must pass with 3/5 of the vote.

If the House and Senate pass the amendment, voters would decide whether to get rid of the position on November’s ballot.

The measure would eliminate the office, beginning with the term that would begin in 2019. It would provide for a new gubernatorial succession with the attorney general and secretary of state next in line.

During the Senate debate on Thursday, Sen. Dale Righter, R-Mattoon, said he didn’t agree with the amendment because it would give succession to a member of a different party, which would go against a voter’s wishes if they had voted for a Republican governor.

“Once you remove the lieutenant governor, the succession now can go to someone of a different party of a wildly different governing philosophy,” Righter said. “That’s a betrayal of what the voters said they wanted when they voted for the governor. I don’t think that’s a line that we should cross.”

Gov. Bruce Rauner and Lt. Gov. Evelyn Sanguinetti are Republicans, but Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Secretary of State Jesse White are Democrats.

Sen. Kwame Raoul, D- Chicago, said he favored a proposal suggested by Illinois Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno, R-Lemont, who said she favors folding in the lieutenant governor’s office into the governor’s office, and giving the lieutenant governor more of a role of a deputy governor.

CPD video shows robbery suspect was shot, Tasered and cuffed

On Friday, Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson released a video of an arrest recorded by a dashboard-mounted camera. | Screenshot from CPD video
Frank Main
@FrankMainNews | email

When Chicago police officers stopped a Lincoln Town Car suspected of being used in a McDonald’s robbery in 2011, the female driver allegedly tried to run over one of them at a gas station on the West Side, police said at the time.

The officer fired twice, hitting the woman in the chest and side, but she kept driving and came to a stop on an adjacent street. When she got out of the car, she was thrown to the ground, Tasered and handcuffed.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

On Friday, police Supt. Eddie Johnson released a video of the incident recorded by a dashboard-mounted camera. Although the shooting was deemed justified, Johnson is launching a reinvestigation to determine whether officers used excessive force during their arrest, said a department spokesman.

In a statement, Johnson called the video “concerning.”

Two officers, who he did not name, have been placed on desk duty pending an investigation.

The video doesn’t show the encounter between the officer and the Lincoln Town Car in the gas station.
Tiffani Jacobs pleaded guilty to armed robbery and was sentenced to 12 years in prison, but video showing how she was arrested has the new Chicago police superintendent concerned. | Provided

Tiffani Jacobs pleaded guilty to armed robbery and was sentenced to 12 years in prison, but video showing how she was arrested has the new Chicago police superintendent concerned. | Provided

But police reports say the officer stepped out of his car after a wild chase and the driver, Tiffani Jacobs, accelerated toward him. The officer shot her in the chest and side.

The video shows Jacobs then pulling out of the station, driving onto the street adjacent to the gas station and stopping. She gets out of the car while an officer approaches with a gun pointed at her. He grabs her by the back of her jacket and throws her to the pavement.

Several other officers move in to help arrest Jacobs, blocking video of what happened next.

“After taking Jacobs to the ground, and believing Jacobs may have been armed, officers ordered her to show her hands,” a police report says. “Jacobs refused to comply with verbal direction from the arresting officers to show her hands. At that time officers stepped back and deployed Tasers to obtain control of Jacobs. Jacobs’ hands were subsequently secured and she was taken into custody. Officers determined she had been shot, placed [her] in an unmarked vehicle, and immediately called for an ambulance.”

Read More
# Chicago Police Department Eddie Johnson Chicago
Chicago 04/22/2016, 02:57pm
Move to abolish lt. governor position stays alive in House
David McSweeney in 2006. (File Photo by Richard A. Chapman/Sun-Times)   

David McSweeney in 2006. (File Photo by Richard A. Chapman/Sun-Times)
Tina Sfondeles
@TinaSfon | email

Abolishing the office of lieutenant governor moved a step forward Friday, a day after it took a step backward.

The Illinois House on Friday passed a constitutional amendment to eliminate the No. 2 position by a 95-10 vote.

But the state Senate on Thursday rejected a similar bill, 21-36, in part over fears that it paved the way for a governor to be replaced by a member of the opposite party.

State Rep. David McSweeney’s constitutional amendment would eliminate the lieutenant governor’s position by 2019. The Barrington Hills Republican says getting rid of the office would save the state $1.6 million a year.

The House passage of McSweeney’s amendment means the Illinois Senate will get another chance to vote on the amendment on May 7 where it must pass with 3/5 of the vote.

If the House and Senate pass the amendment, voters would decide whether to get rid of the position on November’s ballot.

The measure would eliminate the office, beginning with the term that would begin in 2019. It would provide for a new gubernatorial succession with the attorney general and secretary of state next in line.

During the Senate debate on Thursday, Sen. Dale Righter, R-Mattoon, said he didn’t agree with the amendment because it would give succession to a member of a different party, which would go against a voter’s wishes if they had voted for a Republican governor.

“Once you remove the lieutenant governor, the succession now can go to someone of a different party of a wildly different governing philosophy,” Righter said. “That’s a betrayal of what the voters said they wanted when they voted for the governor. I don’t think that’s a line that we should cross.”

Gov. Bruce Rauner and Lt. Gov. Evelyn Sanguinetti are Republicans, but Attorney General Lisa Madigan and Secretary of State Jesse White are Democrats.

Sen. Kwame Raoul, D- Chicago, said he favored a proposal suggested by Illinois Senate Republican Leader Christine Radogno, R-Lemont, who said she favors folding in the lieutenant governor’s office into the governor’s office, and giving the lieutenant governor more of a role of a deputy governor.

Read More
# constitutional amendment Bruce Rauner

    Trump Projected In NY Primary

    CBS New York

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park

    CBS Minnesota

    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury

    Reuters

    Trump Projected In NY Primary

    CBS New York

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park

    CBS Minnesota

More videos:

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary
    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary
    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary

Currently Trending

    entertainment
    Kelly Ripa to return to 'Live! With Kelly and Michael' on Monday | Chicago Sun-Times
    entertainment
    Probe of Prince’s sudden death to ‘leave no stone unturned’ | Chicago Sun-Times
    columnists
    Mitchell: Prince's death strikes an unexpected chord | Chicago Sun-Times
    columnists
    'Green Room': Punk band's gig turns truly hardcore in horror gem | Chicago Sun-Times
    entertainment
    High-velocity dancing right on target in 'Bullets

Tom DeLay, ex-CIA chief, pols write judge praising Dennis Hastert

House Speaker U.S. Rep. Dennis Hastert, (R-Ill) (L) speaks while House Majority Leader U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay (R-TX) listens at the U.S. Capitol May 25, 2005 in Washington, (File Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images)
Tina Sfondeles
@TinaSfon | email
Jon Seidel
@SeidelContent | email

Federal prosecutors portray former House Speaker Dennis Hastert as a serial child molester who agreed to pay millions to cover up his shameful secrets — but former Republican House Majority Leader Tom DeLay describes him as a man of “strong faith” and “great integrity.”

“We all have our flaws, but Dennis Hastert has very few,” DeLay wrote to Hastert’s sentencing judge. “He is a good man that loves the Lord. He gets his integrity and values from Him. He doesn’t deserve what he is going through.”
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

DeLay penned one of 41 letters released publicly on Friday in support of Hastert, just days before the Yorkville Republican’s sentencing. Included are letters written by Hastert’s wife, two of his sons, two of his brothers, former Congressman and head of the Central Intelligence Agency Porter Goss, former Illinois Attorney General Ty Fahner, several ex-congressmen and a few retired law enforcement officers, including retired Kendall County Sheriff Richard Randall and members of the U.S. Capitol Police force.

The letter writers call Hastert, now 74, a great friend, great public servant and great American.

Hastert’s wife of 43 years, Jean, wrote that she’s never known a “more honorable and devoted man.” She said he spent his life “in the service of others.”

“If one of his students or wrestlers ever needed anything of him, he would be there for them, and he was never happier than when he could watch someone he helped succeed,” Jean Hastert wrote.

Hastert’s son Joshua also wrote a letter, asking the judge to keep in mind that his father spent 35 years “serving the public good.”

“He now has [a] myriad [of] medical issues and he should be with his family and not in the medical division of a correctional institution,” Joshua Hastert wrote.

DeLay asked the judge for leniency while describing Hastert as a man of faith who created a lunchtime Bible study that DeLay and Hastert attended after Hastert was elected speaker.

“I have observed him in many different and difficult situations. He has never disappointed me in any way. He is a man of strong faith that guides him. He is a man of great integrity. He loves and respects his fellow man,” DeLay wrote. “I have never witnessed a time when he was unkind to anyone. He is always giving to others and helping anyone including me so many times.”

Comfortable apartment, but ‘neighborhood is trouble’

Taura Willhite says drug-dealing and other crimes make her want to move from the apartment on South Homan she leases with a CHA voucher. | Brian Jackson / Sun-Times
Mick Dumke
@mickeyd1971 | email
Tim Novak
@tnovaksuntimes | email
Chris Fusco
@FuscoChris | email
Brett Chase
email

After moving around the city for years, Taura Willhite is glad to now be in a comfortable apartment, with a landlord who’s prompt to respond when she calls with a maintenance request.

What she doesn’t like, though, is the area around the three-story greystone in the 1600 block of South Homan in North Lawndale where she lives. It’s bad enough that she wants to move out.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

“The neighborhood is trouble,” says Willhite, 40, a disabled mother who lives there with the help of a Section 8 voucher from the Chicago Housing Authority. “There’s a lot of drug sales and gun violence.”

Under its “Plan for Transformation,” the CHA demolished badly managed, high-rise housing projects in “the largest, most ambitious redevelopment effort of public housing in the United States.” The aim was to help people find better housing options and, with that, to improve their prospects for work, education and quality of life.

“We want to rebuild their souls,” former Mayor Richard M. Daley said of the city’s public housing residents.

More than a decade and a half later, Willhite lives on a trashed-out block that includes 76 CHA-subsidized residents — among them former tenants of the long-gone high-rises. Amid vacant lots and boarded-up homes, they live in 14 buildings, some of them with a history of code violations.

In 1966, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. lived just a short walk away from here while waging his Chicago campaign “to help eradicate a vicious system which seeks to further colonize thousands of Negroes within a slum environment.’’

Fifty years later, vacant lots dot the block where Willhite lives. The buildings there include a century-old single-family home and four three-flats built during the housing boom of the early 2000s.

In the past year, the police have logged 67 crimes on this block — including drug dealing, armed robbery and aggravated battery. Shootings, sexual assaults and other violent crimes have been reported on neighboring blocks.

Cashing in on the CHA — a Sun-Times/BGA special Watchdogs report

Diane L. Gottlieb's building (second from left) in the 1600 block of South Homan Avenue in North Lawndale has been the subject of a city lawsuit over code violations since July 2014. Gottlieb gets $1,925 a month in rent for two apartments there leased by CHA voucher-holders. The CHA covers 87 percent of that. | Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times
Chris Fusco, Tim Novak, Mick Dumke and Brett Chase

From her 49th-floor condo at Lake Point Tower, Diane L. Gottlieb oversees a public housing empire that brings her nearly $1 million a year in government-subsidized rent.

Gottlieb, 55, has a growing portfolio of apartments — from swanky digs in a Gold Coast high-rise to rundown buildings on the South Side and the West Side — that she leases to dozens of tenants whose rent is covered in full or in part by the Chicago Housing Authority.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

The buildings include a brick three-flat in the 1600 block of South Homan in North Lawndale, one of Chicago’s poorest neighborhoods, that Gottlieb bought three years ago for $30,000 after the property went into foreclosure.

Today, she gets back more than a tenth of her purchase price every month — $3,032 — in rent from that building, with two-thirds of that coming out of federal tax dollars managed by the CHA.
Diane Gottlieb leaves housing court at the Daley Center on April 13. | Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times

Diane Gottlieb leaves housing court at the Daley Center on April 13. | Ashlee Rezin / Sun-Times

Gottlieb owns seven of the 30 residential buildings on this block, which is littered with trash, vacant lots and boarded-up homes. Her tenants on South Homan include 21 people who live in 10 apartments with rent subsidies provided by the CHA’s Housing Choice Voucher Program, commonly known as Section 8.

Six of her buildings on South Homan have a history of building-code violations.

That’s not unusual for landlords renting to CHA voucher-holders, according to a Chicago Sun-Times and Better Government Association investigation that found that thousands of voucher tenants are living in buildings that have been cited by City Hall inspectors over the past five years for code violations.

The Sun-Times and BGA also found that, despite the CHA’s massive “Plan for Transformation” of public housing, most of the more than 44,000 voucher tenants continue to live in high-crime, poverty-riddled neighborhoods on the South Side and the West Side where the bulk of the housing agency’s tenants lived in the days of the old CHA high-rise projects.

CHA about the series boxThe CHA began demolishing Cabrini-Green, the Robert Taylor Homes and other projects 16 years ago, aiming to help people find better housing options. Since then, providing housing for poor people has become a growth industry for private landlords that lap up government funding by catering to the need for low-income housing.

Read More
# Beyond the Rubble Chicago
Business 04/23/2016, 08:59am
Comfortable apartment, but ‘neighborhood is trouble’
Taura Willhite says drug-dealing and other crimes make her want to move from the apartment on South Homan she leases with a CHA voucher. | Brian Jackson / Sun-Times   

Taura Willhite says drug-dealing and other crimes make her want to move from the apartment on South Homan she leases with a CHA voucher. | Brian Jackson / Sun-Times
Mick Dumke
@mickeyd1971 | email
Tim Novak
@tnovaksuntimes | email
Chris Fusco
@FuscoChris | email
Brett Chase
email

After moving around the city for years, Taura Willhite is glad to now be in a comfortable apartment, with a landlord who’s prompt to respond when she calls with a maintenance request.

What she doesn’t like, though, is the area around the three-story greystone in the 1600 block of South Homan in North Lawndale where she lives. It’s bad enough that she wants to move out.

“The neighborhood is trouble,” says Willhite, 40, a disabled mother who lives there with the help of a Section 8 voucher from the Chicago Housing Authority. “There’s a lot of drug sales and gun violence.”

Under its “Plan for Transformation,” the CHA demolished badly managed, high-rise housing projects in “the largest, most ambitious redevelopment effort of public housing in the United States.” The aim was to help people find better housing options and, with that, to improve their prospects for work, education and quality of life.

“We want to rebuild their souls,” former Mayor Richard M. Daley said of the city’s public housing residents.

More than a decade and a half later, Willhite lives on a trashed-out block that includes 76 CHA-subsidized residents — among them former tenants of the long-gone high-rises. Amid vacant lots and boarded-up homes, they live in 14 buildings, some of them with a history of code violations.

In 1966, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. lived just a short walk away from here while waging his Chicago campaign “to help eradicate a vicious system which seeks to further colonize thousands of Negroes within a slum environment.’’

Fifty years later, vacant lots dot the block where Willhite lives. The buildings there include a century-old single-family home and four three-flats built during the housing boom of the early 2000s.

In the past year, the police have logged 67 crimes on this block — including drug dealing, armed robbery and aggravated battery. Shootings, sexual assaults and other violent crimes have been reported on neighboring blocks.
The CHA provides Taura Willhite with a housing voucher to live in this six-flat, center, on South Homan Avenue. Her landlord plans to rehab the abandoned building next door. Brian Jackson / Sun-Times

The CHA provides Taura Willhite with a housing voucher to live in this six-flat, center, on South Homan Avenue. Her landlord plans to rehab the abandoned building next door. | Brian Jackson / Sun-Times

Read More
# Beyond the Rubble Taura Willhite North Lawndale

    Trump Projected In NY Primary

    CBS New York

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park

    CBS Minnesota

    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury

    Reuters

    Trump Projected In NY Primary

    CBS New York

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park

    CBS Minnesota

More videos:

    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary
    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary
    Report: Prince, 57, Found Dead At Paisley Park
    Harriet Tubman is $20 bill's new face: Treasury
    Trump Projected In NY Primary

Currently Trending

    entertainment
    Kelly Ripa to return to 'Live! With Kelly and Michael' on Monday | Chicago Sun-Times
    entertainment
    Probe of Prince’s sudden death to ‘leave no stone unturned’ | Chicago Sun-Times
    columnists
    Mitchell: Prince's death strikes an unexpected chord | Chicago Sun-Times
    columnists
    'Green Room': Punk band's gig turns truly hardcore in horror gem | Chicago Sun-Times
    entertainment
    High-velocity dancing right on target in 'Bullets

Trump’s second act in Illinois — can he play delegate game right?

WASHINGTON — Repoublican presidential frontrunner Donald Trump won the Illinois primary in March — but as Ted Cruz and John Kasich hunt for delegates to deny him the nomination, there still could be a fight over the 12 at-large delegates in Illinois that remain up for grabs.

Those dozen delegates will be selected at the Illinois Republican Party state convention May 19-21 in Peoria.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

In the March primary, Trump won 37 delegates elected at the congressional district level, Cruz got nine and Kasich six.

These elected delegates are expected to be loyalists if there’s a contested convention in Cleveland come July.

Under party rules, though, the 12 at-large delegates to be picked in Peoria would be bound to Trump only for the first ballot. If the convention is contested and goes beyond that, they’re free to vote as they please.

So it will be important to see how Trump and his allies in Illinois work the complicated Peoria convention at-large delegate-selection process. Will they be able to install loyalists — and not double agents — in those slots?

Bernard B. Wolfe, judge, state rep and SIDS activist, dead at 101


Maureen O'Donnell
@suntimesobits | email

The nation’s first statewide push to reduce Sudden Infant Death Syndrome started in Illinois under the leadership of Bernard Wolfe.

After a friend lost a baby to SIDS, Mr. Wolfe — at the time an Illinois lawmaker — helped organize a bipartisan commission in 1973 to investigate what was once called “crib death.” The group interviewed medical examiners, physicians and grieving families around the state.
Promoted Stories from politicsChatter
America’s political dynasties
Politicians who served time
19 things to know about FOX News anchor Megyn Kelly

He said he was seeking “to remove the stigma” for families.

“Coroners, fire rescue squads and police must be informed SIDS is a real killer,” he said at the time. “These unexplained deaths needn’t be linked with abuse.”

“One of the most important changes that came out of [his] study were the recommendations that SIDS be an acceptable diagnosis on the death certificate,” said Nancy Maruyama, a registered nurse and executive director of the organization SIDS of Illinois.

Mr. Wolfe’s “deep dedication to all bereaved parents and their beloved babies was clearly evident,” Maruyama said. “He brought SIDS to the forefront in Illinois, insisting that these families be treated with compassion and not suspicion.”

With SIDS, an otherwise healthy baby dies unexpectedly, usually in its sleep. Some scientists theorize it’s linked to an abnormality in the part of the brain that regulates heart rate, breathing and waking, and that environmental factors may also be involved, such as stomach-sleeping, soft bedding, high room temperatures and exposure to smoking.

It remains the top killer of infants between 1 and 12 months old, but after educational efforts like the 1994 national Back to Sleep campaign–which encouraged putting babies to bed on their backs–SIDS deaths dropped 50 percent nationwide. In Illinois, they have decreased by 76 percent, Maruyama said.

Before he died on April 9 at 101, Mr. Wolfe served five terms, from 1964 to 1974, as a state representative from Chicago. His statehouse friends included Abner Mikva, Anthony Scariano and Paul Simon — part of a group dubbed the “Kosher Nostra.”

After leaving the legislature, Mr. Wolfe spent a decade as a Cook County judge. He then worked as a court-appointed mediator in divorce cases. Earlier in his career, he worked in private practice and as a federal prosecutor.