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Obama Called For Jury Duty

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CHICAGO (AP) — Former President Barack Obama has been called for jury duty in Chicago.

Cook County Chief Judge Tim Evans on Friday told county commissioners during a budget hearing that Obama, who owns homes in Washington, D.C., and Chicago’s Kenwood neighborhood, will serve in November. He is registered to vote in Chicago.

Evans says Obama’s safety will be “uppermost in our minds” when he serves.

Those called can be put either in the pool for criminal case or civil hearings.

They can be called to any of the county’s Chicago or suburban courthouses. All jurors watch a decades-old video about their duties narrated by a mustachioed Lester Holt, once a local news reader and now anchor of NBC Nightly News.

Jurors in Cook County are paid $17.20 for each day of service.

(© 2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

 


Slain Northlake Officers Honored With Memorial

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(CBS) – Fifty years ago, two police officers were gunned down during a bank robbery. On Friday, the Northlake Police Department honored their bravery and heroism.

CBS 2’s Mai Martinez reports.

In a solemn ceremony, Northlake police recognized Sgt. John Nagle and Officer Anthony Perri, both of whom were killed while responding to a bank robbery on Oct. 27, 1967.

The bank robbers — Henry Gargano, Ronald Del Raine and Clifton Daniels — were heavily armed with guns and ammunition stolen from a National Guard armory.

Former CBS 2 reporter John “Bulldog” Drummond covered the story.

“They were ready for a big score, and when they came here, they expected trouble, and they were going to give it back,” Drummond says of the robbers.

When Nagle and Perri arrived, they were met with a hail of gunfire. Drummond calls it a “bloody shootout.”

“It only lasted about maybe about 90 seconds, but at least 80 rounds of ammunition were fired,” he says.

When the shooting stopped, two suspects and four officers were wounded.

Unveiling the memorial, Chief Norman Nissen praised Nagle and Perri for their bravery and heroism.

“These two officers and their two partners went to the bank with the intention of saving those people inside that bank, and they died for it,” he says.

For the officers’ surviving family members, the anniversary is a heartbreaking day they’ll never forget, and the memorial is a touching tribute that ensures their story will live on for generations to come.

“It certainly bring back a lot of terrible memories for me, but I’m also honored that the city of Northlake is honoring my husband,” Marlene Nagle Rakowski says.

“This is a great honor,” Ted Perri, son of the other slain officer, says.

The chief hopes the memorial will serve as a reminder to everyone of the ultimate sacrifice officers are willing to make to keep their communities safe.

Sgt. Nagle and Officer Perri are the only members of the Northlake Police Department killed in the line of duty.

The three robbers were sentenced to 199 years in prison; all died while incarcerated.

2 Investigators: Patients Being ‘Dumped’ At Homeless Shelters

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(CBS) — It happens late at night – after 10 p.m. and before 4 a.m. It’s called “patient dumping.”

Celeste Emrick says it happened to her: She was dumped at a homeless shelter by a nursing home. She’s not the only one, 2 Investigator Dave Savini reports.

Emrick, a 57-year-old Multiple Sclerosis patient, says two men in a white van drove her to Chicago’s Pacific Garden Mission and left her at the front gate. It was the middle of the night, she was in a wheelchair and she didn’t have her medication.

“The bottle they gave me was empty,” she says.

She says Kensington Place Nursing & Rehab did the dumping.

Mission Pastor Philip Kwiatkowski says folks get dumped there, daily, from different nursing homes, medical centers and psychiatric facilities. Reasons vary; it could be financial, or residents who complain a lot, or other issues.

“It’s unconscionable and inhumane to see how people at times can be treated.”

The shelter’s security director, Glen Reed, says patients are typically left outside between 10 p.m. and 4 a.m.

Illinois has led the nation in patient dumping. From 2011 to 2015, complaints skyrocketed 153 percent. Nationwide, it’s the No. 1 complaint reported to nursing home advocates.

“She was treated like a piece of garbage, with no value,” Linda Taylor says of Emrick.

She manages Emrick’s personal physician’s office. Taylor and Dr. Michael Wasserman have been helping Emrick, including getting her to a new nursing home.

“She’s a person who needs to have some sort of medical facility,” Wasserman says. “She needs supervision.”

No one would talk at Kensington Place. They did, however, talk to the Illinois Department of Public Health. The nursing home admitted taking her to the shelter but claims it was after 9 a.m. and she had medication and was taken inside to make sure she was safe.

Emrick disputes all that.

Kensington Place says Emrick owed more than $7,000. She says she gave someone cash and police are investigating.

State regulators say Kensington was cited for how they handled Emrick’s discharge. The facility was also cited earlier this year for a different improper discharge case.

In Illinois, this year, about 1,000 patient dumping cases will be investigated.

Saving Money On Flights During The Holidays

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(CBS) — If you haven’t booked a flight for holiday travel, you can still save up to $200.

CBS 2’s Dorothy Tucker has a few tips to cut costs, but you have to act fast.

When traveling during the holidays, the day of the week matters if you want to lower the price of your trip.

Traveler Sarah Deboer plans to leave Wednesday and return to Chicago on Sunday for Thanksgiving.

Cheap Air analysts say that’s the worst plan. Avoid flying on Sunday, Nov. 26. It is the most expensive day to travel.

“If you leave the Monday before Thanksgiving and you come back the Friday the day after Thanksgiving, you’ll save about $194,” CheapAir CEO Jeff Klee says.

Flexibility is key to cutting costs on Christmas travel, as well. Leaving on the Monday or Tuesday before Christmas, instead of Saturday, will save you $101.

Flying back on Thursday, Dec. 28 instead of New Year’s Day will take $62 off the plane ticket as well.

However, if you’re staying to ring in 2018, avoid the priciest days.

“New Year’s Day and the day after,” Klee says.

That could also save you another $45.

If you’re thinking about playing the waiting game, that may not be the best idea.

“That’s one of the biggest myths,” says Klee. “If you wait to the last minute, there aren’t going to be any last-minute seats.”

Procrastinators could see a $60 increase in November and another $100 in December.

The best U.S. bargains for Christmas travel are New York City, Dallas and Las Vegas. Internationally, the cheapest airfare prices are for Mexico and Jamaica.

4 Dead In Separate Accidents On I-57, Edens

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(CHICAGO) CBS – Four people are dead after two evening and overnight crashes in Morgan Park and the Edens Spur.

The first one involved a car and semi on 1-57 South and 107th Street.

A spokesperson with the Chicago Fire Department said another person was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn.

Another crash where one person was killed and another hospitalized involving a car and a semi. This accident occurred on the Edens Spur.

It happened early this morning at mile marker 28 near Waukegan.

Police said the driver of the car was killed and the driver of the semi was taken to an area hospital.

According to the Illinois State Police, a preliminary investigation of the I-57 crash reported the driver of a red 2012 Chevrolet crashed into the rear of a Truck Tractor Semi Trailer a high rate of speed.

The use of drugs or alcohol are unknown.

Delta: Bird Likely Caused Damage To Plane Carrying Oklahoma City Thunder

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(AP) Delta Airlines says a charter flight carrying the Oklahoma City Thunder from Minneapolis to Chicago apparently encountered a bird early Saturday when it was landing, causing damage that prompted some players to post photos on social media showing the caved-in nose of the plane.

Carmelo Anthony, Josh Huestis, and Steven Adams all posted photos of the plane shortly after it landed around 12:45 a.m.

Anthony wrote on Instagram, “What possibly could we have hit in the SKY at this time of night? Everyone is Safe, Though.”

Adams’ Twitter post said, “We had a rough flight to say the least.”

Huestis wrote on Twitter, “I guess we hit something? 30,000 feet up…”

Delta Airlines spokeswoman Elizabeth Wolf said maintenance was evaluating the situation and that the damage was likely caused by a collision with a bird. The Boeing 757-200 landed safely without incident at Chicago’s Midway International Airport, she said.

A spokesperson for the team told The Oklahoman newspaper that all of its players, staff and coaches were safe. The Thunder lost to the Minnesota Timberwolves, 119-116, on Friday night. Oklahoma City plays the Bulls at the United Center on Saturday night.

(Copyright 2017 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

10th Anniversary of Stacy Peterson’s Disappearance

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CHICAGO (CBS) — Today marks ten years since the disappearance of Stacy Peterson.

She is the fourth wife of convicted murderer Drew Peterson.

Stacy wanted out of her marriage to Drew when she vanished.

He is serving a 38-year sentence for killing his third wife Kathleen Savio in 2004.

Although her death initially was ruled an accident, authorities reopened the case after Stacy disappeared.

Police: Possible Human Remains Found In Lincoln Park Lagoon

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CHICAGO (CBS) — Authorities are investigating after fishermen found what may be a dead body in the Lincoln Park Lagoon on the North Side, police said.

Officers were called to the 2200 block of North Stockton Drive at 11:08 a.m. after fishermen reported “the discovery of suspected human remains” in the water, according to Chicago Police.

Chicago police were notified by a fisherman at the Lincoln Park Lagoon after discovering possible human remains in a duffel bag. Marine divers and detectives responded to the scene and a second bag was discovered with additional remains.

Detectives believe the remains are from the same individual as those found earlier.

This is a continuing death investigation and Detectives are actively looking into missing persons reports for any possible leads.

The Medical Examiner’s office will lead the investigation into the remains.

 (Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2017. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)


Godfrey Hotel Is ‘Haunted’ For Halloween

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CHICAGO (CBS) – The Godfrey Hotel Chicago has transformed to a ‘haunted’ hotel as it celebrates Halloween.

The creator of the event said he and his team want guests to see the hotel in a very different way.

“I want them to say I can’t believe they turned a hotel into this,” said Grant Gedemer. “I want them to say ‘I can’t believe this is a hotel room that someone stays in normally.’”

Many of the rooms on the fifth floor have been decorated to create what some say is the best Halloween party in the city.

The haunted hotel rooms are adorned with creepy dolls, skulls and bones.

Actors posing as ghosts and ghouls add to the frightening experience.

Ex-White Sox Batboy Auctions Off Historic Signatures

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CHICAGO (CBS) — In 1948, a 14-year-old Cubs fan won an essay contest and became a batboy for the White Sox.

He spent a dream summer whose memories are alive in the signatures he collected from some of the most recognizable names in the game.

It was the golden age of baseball, Ron Meadows recalled, with names like DiMaggio, Williams, Berra and Paige.

“And of course Yogi Berra, it was his first year,” Meadows said. “He was still known as Larry. He took a lot of ribbing because of his physique, and the colorful things that he said. Joe DiMaggio always carried himself somewhat regally I would say.”

Sometimes Meadows would sit with White Sox shortstop Luke Appling in the dugout.

“He’d always had a big chew of tobacco and he took great pleasure seeing if he could hit the top of my shoe,” Meadows said.

Meadows had free reign of the field and the clubhouses and got as many autographs as he could.

“In 1948, the Cleveland Indians, who of course won the World Series. New York Yankees, Boston Red Sox, most of the big names,” Meadows said.

Their signatures are on a collection of baseballs soon to be put up for auction. His daughter, Susannah Meadows, wrote about the collection and her dad’s memories in the New York Times.

A Mass of Healing And Hope

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A mass offered for survivors of childhood sexual abuse drew dozens on Saturday to Chicago’s West Side.

Michael Hoffman was at Holy Family Church.

He was sexually abused by a priest. Hoffman kept that secret for decades.

“I have a good job, I have a beautiful home. I have a beautiful wife and children,” said Hoffman. “And to be quite honest, I did not want to introduce this kind of sick and perverse and depraved story into my marriage,” he said.

Daily stress and anxiety ultimately led Hoffman to open up. He said he wasn’t judged as he had feared.

“Finding that caring person that can listen to you and hear the depth of your story and your sadness,” said Hoffman. “And with that some hope and healing.”

Hoffman is now sharing his story to help others. He’s also written a book called “Acts of Recovery.”

People are encouraged to visit the healing garden at Holy Family off Roosevelt Road on the near West Side.

Man Found Shot In Face After Crash In Elmhurst

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CHICAGO (CBS) —  A 65-year-old man was found shot after a crash Saturday afternoon in west suburban Elmhurst.

Officers responded to the crash about 2:13 p.m. near York Road and Diversey Avenue and found the man shot in the face, according to a spokesperson for Elmhurst police.

He was taken to Elmhurst Hospital by paramedics in serious condition.

Investigators believe the shooting and crash were related to an incident of road rage. Video surveillance from business on Grand Avenue and businesses in the area of York Road and Grand Avenue were being reviewed.

Police were urging the driver and occupants of the vehicle involved in the road rage incident to turn themselves in at the Elmhurst Police Department, 125 E. First St., or to call authorities at (630) 530-3050.

 (Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2017. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.)

Woman, Man Dead In Apparent Murder-Suicide In Plainfield

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A woman was fatally shot and a man died after shooting himself in the head in an apparent murder-suicide Saturday afternoon in Plainfield.

Plainfield Police say the shooting stemmed from a domestic disturbance, and that the suspect was later found dead after a long standoff with officials.

“This is the Plainfield Police Department. If you can hear me, I need you to come to your front door please,” negotiators were heard saying in a cell phone video shot from a neighbor’s upstairs window.

“I started seeing all the squads pull up and the snipers and everybody surrounding the house,” Heather Miller said.

The incident unfolded in a home off 119th in Plainfield, where more than 50 officers responded to a well-being check. The man barricaded himself in the garage, which turned into an hours-long standoff.

“He quickly entered the residence. As they attempted to make contact with him, they heard a single gunshot,” Cmdr. Ken Ruggles said.

According to Plainfield Police Chief John Konopek, a Joliet SWAT team made entry into the house and found the suspect deceased inside a vehicle from what appeared to be a gunshot wound.

Police say the same man was a suspect in a fatal shooting hours earlier. At a local Jewel-Osco, 1340 S. Illinois Route 59 — which is just two miles away from the residence where the barricade situation occurred — a woman was shot and killed in the parking lot.

“The two subjects were married at some point. That’s still part of our investigation,” Chief Konopek said. “It is absolutely unusual for our community to experience something of this magnitude.”

The identities of the man and woman have not yet been released.

19 Shot, 1 Killed In Chicago Weekend Shootings

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A 3-year-old boy was among 19 people shot, one fatally, in separate incidents across Chicago since Friday evening.

The boy was shot and seriously wounded about 12:30 a.m. Sunday while traveling in the back seat of a car in the Washington Park neighborhood on the South Side.

The westbound car stopped at a stop sign in the first block of East 60th Street when another vehicle pulled up on the passenger side and someone inside fired shots, according to Chicago Police. The car’s driver sped away from the shooting before realizing his only passenger, the 3-year-old boy, was shot in the back.

The driver took the boy to Holy Cross Hospital, where the white Pontiac Grand Am could be seen with at least four bullet holes, surrounded by crime scene tape at the emergency entrance. The boy “suffered what appears to be a graze wound” and was transferred in “serious-but-stable” condition to Comer Children’s Hospital, police said.

About 10 p.m. Saturday, 21-year-old Nadia Manjarrez was killed when a gun accidentally discharged inside a Portage Park neighborhood home on the Northwest Side, according to police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office. She and a 37-year-old man were inside the home in the 4800 block of West Hutchinson when the gun went off.

Manjarrez, who lived in the neighborhood, was shot in the head and taken to Illinois Masonic Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead at 10:50 p.m., authorities said. The man was detained for questioning, and the gun was recovered while Area North detectives were investigating the shooting.

The weekend’s most recent shooting happened about 3 p.m. Sunday when two people were wounded in the Far South Side West Pullman neighborhood. The pair was shot about at 118th and Emerald, according to police. An 18-year-old man was shot in the right buttocks. He was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn, where his condition stabilized. A second person was shot in the body and also taken to Christ. Their age and gender weren’t immediately known.

At least 16 other people were wounded in separate Chicago shootings between 4:30 p.m. Friday and 3 p.m. Sunday.

Last weekend, two men were killed and 26 others were wounded in citywide shootings.

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2017. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Man Shot To Death During Halloween Party In Lake Forest

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A 19-year-old man was shot to death early Sunday during a party at a posh home in north suburban Lake Forest.

Officers responded about 12:05 a.m. to a report of shots fired and found “numerous people fleeing a large house party” in the 1300 block of West Estate Lane East in Lake Forest, according to a statement from the Lake County Major Crime Task Force.

Shaft Wilson Jr., of North Chicago, was found dead with a gunshot wound outside of the home, according to the Lake County Major Crime Task Force. An autopsy at the Lake County coroner’s office was scheduled for Monday.

A preliminary investigation showed that an argument broke out between several partygoers, and someone pulled out a gun and opened fire, the statement said.

“The shooting is not believed to be random, and there is no indication of a threat to the community,” the statement said.

Anyone with information on the shooting is asked to call Lake Forest police at (847) 810-3818 or Lake County CrimeStoppers at (847) 662-2222.

 

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2017. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)


Public Defenders Pushed To Breaking Point By Masturbating Inmates

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CHICAGO (CBS) — Staffers in the Cook County Public Defender’s Office are used to clients who may have done horrible things, but over the last two years, female employees say their clients have become more brazen in doing horrible things right in front of them, the Chicago Sun-Times is reporting.

Masturbating inmates have become a common sight on the walk to and from holding cells where defense attorneys meet clients, and at the jail and in courthouse lockups, according to the Sun-Times. Last week, in a letter to Chief Judge Timothy Evans, Public Defender Amy Campanelli said her staff has reached a breaking point.

Campanelli declined to share a copy of the letter with the Sun-Times, but confirmed that she warned the judge that her staff won’t visit the jail starting Nov. 6 unless he or Sheriff Tom Dart can offer up a solution.

A spokesman for Evans told the Sun-Times Campanelli will have a chance to speak at a regularly scheduled judges’ meeting that day.

“There have always been these incidents since I became a public defender,” said Campanelli, who has been in the office for more than a decade. “But it’s never been like it is today, where it’s like the behavior we’re seeing now, every day, or every other day. It’s just become pervasive. We’ve tried everything.”

Campanelli — who lauded Dart’s efforts to combat the phenomenon — said nothing has worked. Her office provided a timeline dating back to October 2015, detailing attempts to deal with an increasing number of incidents. In letter obtained by the Chicago Sun-Times, Campanelli wrote to Dart in March, describing it as a “crisis” and calling for guards to be assigned to every lockup in the criminal courthouse.

“Of late, it has become a daily occurrence,” she wrote. “Male detainees constantly expose themselves and masturbate while in the lockup behind the courtrooms.”

Cara Smith, Dart’s policy director, said she wasn’t aware of Campanelli’s letter to Evans, but acknowledged the problem. Since January, 222 detainees have been charged with indecent exposure, including 144 cases where the victims were jail personnel, and 29 where complaints were filed by defenders. Smith, who ran the jail from 2013 to 2015, has been a victim herself.

“This is something that happens in custodial environments, period,” Smith said. “I don’t know that there is a silver-bullet answer. We’re willing to do anything that protects our staff and the rest of the criminal justice system.”

No other jail seems to have the same problem with public indecency on a similar scale to Cook County, according to the state Public Defenders Association and the Illinois Sheriffs’ Association. Smith said there seems to be no reason for the number of incidents, other than a bizarre sense of nihilism among a relative handful of the 7,000-plus detainees at the jail. Attempts to stop it have met mixed results — in part because of resistance from individual public defenders and Campanelli herself, according to Smith.

The sheriff lobbied for legislation that would have created increased penalties for indecent exposure inside jails and prisons, making the offense a felony requiring lifetime registration as a sex offender — a status that carries a stigma inside prison and creates a host of problems for offenders after they’ve served their time, Smith said.

“We feel very strongly that this would have been a tremendous deterrent,” Smith said. “The public defender objected to that bill.”

Campanelli said that, on principle, public defenders couldn’t support legislation that upgraded a misdemeanor to a felony. Female staffers say they face a similar dilemma when deciding whether to press charges after one of their clients pulls out his penis. The additional charges add potential jail time for their clients, and forces defenders to hand off the case to another attorney.

Campanelli said the problem did seem to improve when Dart this spring added additional sheriff’s officers to monitor courthouse lockups. Those extra guards were removed in August, and the masturbation incidents returned, Campanelli said.

The extra guards cost $40,000 per week in overtime, Smith said, but the sheriff has begun placing male employees — generally higher-ranking male civilian sheriff’s staff, who don’t get overtime pay.

“The sheriff is committed to working to solve this problem,” she said. “This is a very unfortunate reality.”

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2017. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Overnight Armed Home Invasions Reported On North Side

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CHICAGO (CBS) — Chicago Police are looking for an armed man who entered homes during overnight hours this month as people slept in their North Side homes.

The three reported home invasions and burglaries happened:

  • about 3:50 a.m. on Oct. 16 in the 2600 block of North Lincoln;
  • at 3:56 a.m. on Oct. 19 in the 3000 block of North Kenmore; and
  • about 4:30 am. on Oct. 25 in the 2400 block of North Jansen.

The suspect was described as an 18- to 25-year-old black man standing between 5-foot-4 and 5-foot-10 and weighing 150 to 180 pounds, police said. He was wearing a black baseball hat with white writing, a white or gray hooded sweatshirt and a green or dark-colored puffy vest.

Anyone with information was asked to call Area North detectives at (312) 744-8263.

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2017. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Woman Killed When Gun Accidentally Goes Off In Portage Park

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A woman was killed Saturday night when a gun accidentally discharged inside a Portage Park neighborhood home on the Northwest Side, police said.

About 10 p.m., 21-year-old Nadia Manjarrez and a 37-year-old man were inside a home in the 4800 block of West Hutchinson when the gun went off, according to Chicago Police and the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Manjarrez, who lived in the neighborhood, was shot in the head and taken to Illinois Masonic Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead at 10:50 p.m., authorities said. An autopsy was scheduled for Sunday.

Area North detectives recovered the gun and were investigating the shooting, police said. The man was detained for questioning.

(Source: Sun-Times Media Wire © Chicago Sun-Times 2017. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.)

Disabled Man Missing From Sauk Village Found

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CHICAGO (CBS) — 35-year-old Johnathan Barnes, who had been missing since Saturday evening, was found Sunday afternoon.

Representatives of CTF ILLINOIS, a non-for-profit organization that provides support and services to individuals with developmental disabilities and mental health disorders, weer seeking the community’s help in locating Barnes, who is a resident of their group.

CTF ILLINOIS tells CBS 2 that the agency had teams out looking for Barnes, and that they were very concerned due to the cold temperatures overnight.

Report Finds Chicago’s ‘Crime Guns’ Come From Outside City

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A new report of illegal guns confiscated by the Chicago Police Department finds most are coming from outside the city.

According to this year’s Gun Trace Report, 40 percent of “crime guns” are from parts of Illinois outside of Chicago — 20 percent of which are from Indiana. The report defines a crime gun as a firearm recovered by CPD that was illegally possessed, used, or suspected to be used in furtherance of a crime.

“Using this data, law enforcement and policymakers have identified the regular sources of crime guns trafficked into Chicago with pinpoint accuracy,” the report reads.

The vast majority of crime guns were handguns possessed by adults who were not the original purchaser of the firearm, the report says.

Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson says the review of guns, recovered between 2013 and 2016, had at least one surprise it in. “We know that a lot of the illegal guns are coming from Wisconsin and Indiana, but it was surprising that Mississippi actually right now is number two,” Johnson said.

Since 2013, CPD has reportedly recovered nearly 7,000 crime guns each year. “So far in 2017, CPD is already on pace to exceed last year’s gun recoveries,” the report says.

Delphine Cherry, president of the Chicago chapter of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, lost two children to gun violence. She is supporting a bill in Springfield that would make it easier for local police to trace gun sales.

capture2 Report Finds Chicagos Crime Guns Come From Outside City

From 2013 to 2016, without adjusting for population density, Chicago’s total firearm recoveries outnumbered Los Angeles and New York City each year. (Source: Gun Trace Report)

“The only thing I can do — I’m at the point where I can only fight, that’s all I have left in me,” she said.

The report directly links the availability of illegally circulated guns in Chicago to the city’s deadly street violence. Therefore, the City of Chicago and the CPD have partnered with the University of Chicago Crime Lab to examine available firearm trace data to identify the source of each crime gun recovered.

The report also finds ten license gun dealers — seven from Illinois, three from Indiana — account for a quarter of the guns recovered by Chicago Police.

While gun stores can now legally open in the city of Chicago, none have yet.

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