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Police Officer, K9 Injured In Hobart, Indiana Crash

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HOBART, Ind. (CBS) — A police officer and dog in Hobart, Indiana was injured in a car crash this weekend.

The officer and the K9 were responding around 4:30 p.m. Saturday to a call of a shoplifter who was armed with scissors, police said.

The officer was making a southbound turn into a Target store parking lot from Route 30, police said. An eastbound car struck the officer’s car on the passenger side, and it caused his sport-utility vehicle to roll several times.

A squad car was involved in a crash in Hobart, Indiana on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020. (Credit Hobart police)

A squad car was involved in a crash in Hobart, Indiana on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020. (Credit Hobart police)

A squad car was involved in a crash in Hobart, Indiana on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020. (Credit Hobart police)

The officer suffered minor injuries and was treated and released from the hospital, police said. His K9 partner was kept at a veterinary clinic overnight for observation.

Hobart Police Crash - K9 Injured

A police officer and a K9 were injured in a crash in Hobart, Indiana on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020. (Credit Hobart police)

Hobart Police Crash - K9 Injured

A police officer and a K9 were injured in a crash in Hobart, Indiana on Saturday, Feb. 8, 2020. (Credit Hobart police)

The occupants of the BMW that hit the squad car were also treated and released from an area hospital.

Both vehicles were demolished in the crash.

The officer who was injured has been on the force for about eight years.


Chicago RealTime Weather: Evening Drizzle, Dry For Next Few Days

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CHICAGO — After some drizzle this evening, it will be dry for the next few days.

The next chance of snow is late Wednesday, with a few inches possible.

Arctic air follows the snow as temperatures tumble into the lower 20s for the end of the week. Lows by Friday morning could be near or below zero.

On Sunday night, look for possible drizzle, and then cloudy conditions with a low in the middle 20s.

On Monday, look for partly to mostly cloudy skies with a high in the middle 30s.

There is a chance of light snow Wednesday and lake-effect snow showers Thursday.

Snowfall Tracker: 02.13.20

(Credit: CBS 2)

It will be colder by Thursday with highs near 20 both Thursday and Friday.

7-Day: 02.09.20

(Credit: CBS 2)

It will be warming up to 40 or more by Sunday with a chance of rain.

‘Lost Corvettes’ Featured At Chicago Auto Show Will Benefit War Vets

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CHICAGO (CBS) — Some old corvettes that had no TLC for decades have made it to the Chicago Auto Show.

Thirty-six classic ‘Vettes from the 1950s and ’60s were rusting in a garage in New York City. Now they have been completely restored and will benefit war vets.

“The Lost Corvettes” were once owned by pop artist Peter Max after he purchased them from the winner of a VH-1 giveaway in 1989.

Max was going to use them as one-of-a-kind art canvases, but instead they stayed in a series of New York City parking garages.

The owners of those garages, the Spindler and Heller families, bought the entire collection and, together with Chris Mazzilli, they formed Corvette Heroes.

Six are being featured at the Chicago Auto Show. Those are from 1955, 1956, 1957, 1966, 1967 and 1969.

(Credit: Corvette Heroes)

They are valued from $60,000 up to $500,000, but it was a long road to getting them showroom ready.

“We started work on these cars a few years ago, so the newest one’s the ’89 and it only had about 7,000 miles. It only needed about 40 hours of work,” Mazzilli said. “The ’53, first-year Corvette, that car needed 4,000 hours in it.”

Once the restorations are complete, the cars will be raffled off this summer to raise money for the National Guard Educational Foundation.

Tickets are $3 each and can be purchased online at corvetteheroes.com.

The sweepstakes will end in the late spring with the last car being raffled off in late summer.

Father Makes Bold Offer To Hit-And-Run Driver Who Struck Son With Autism In Deerfield

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DEERFIELD, Ill. (CBS) — A father was offering a $10,000 reward Sunday to find the person who hit his young son with autism while driving in Deerfield.

But the money isn’t just a reward.

Chase Thompson, 12, was struck by a hit-and-run driver on Deerfield Road near Beverly Place shortly after 7 p.m. Friday.

Chase Thompson

Chase Thompson, 12, was struck in a hit-and-run in Deerfield on Friday, Feb. 6, 2020. (Credit: Thompson Family)

Chase’s father on Sunday evening was making a bold offer to bring the driver who hit him to justice, one way or the other.

As CBS 2’s Mike Puccinelli reported, Chase remained hospitalized and unconscious at Lurie Children’s Hospital Sunday night. His family hopes he is going to recover.

The driver who hit Chase is still out there.

Puccinelli spoke on the phone with Chase’s father, who is making an unusual proposal because “this was an accident before it became a crime.”

On the police radio at the time of the accident, a dispatcher said someone had reported a “kid on the ground with a bloody face, no shoes.”

Chase’s father said his son ran outside in the cold without shoes. The Caruso Elementary School student has autism and is nonverbal.

Chase is not supposed to be able to get out of his house. But he did, somehow, through the garage.

It was 7:10 p.m. at the time, so it was already dark when Chase made his way into the street.

Seconds later, there was a disaster.

Chase lives just yards away from Deerfield Road, where he was struck here in the westbound lanes.

We now know it was not a regular car that hit Chase, but a sport-utility vehicle.

Police believe the driver was behind the wheel of a dark Ford Escape with an SEL or titanium trim package. It may have heavy front-end damage on the passenger side.

And Chase’s dad didn’t want to go on camera. But did announce a $10,000 reward for information leading to an arrest.

But he also said the money can be used by the actual driver if that individual surrenders to police.

He said he doesn’t blame the driver for the accident, but the person “left him in the street to die, and that will never stop haunting him until he turns himself in.”

‘Hair Love,’ By Chicago Native Matthew A. Cherry, Wins Oscar For Best Animated Short

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LOS ANGELES (CBS Chicago/CBS News) — “Hair Love” took home an Oscar on Sunday night for best animated short.

The heartwarming animation from a Chicago-born director tells the sweet story of an African-American father who learns how to do his little girl’s hair for the first time.

MORE FROM CBS NEWS

Former NFL player and Chicago native Matthew A. Cherry, who is behind the touching short film, said “Hair Love” was done “because we wanted to see more representation in animation, we wanted to normalize black hair.”

(Credit: Shaniqwa Jarvis)

“There is a very important issue that’s out there – it’s the CROWN Act. And if we can help to get this passed in all 50 states it will help stories like DeAndre Arnold’s,” Cherry said as he accepted his award.

The CROWN Act is a law that bans discrimination based on hairstyles associated with race. So far, only New York, New Jersey and California have signed it into law.

Arnold, a senior at a Texas high school, was suspended and told he could not walk at his graduation in the spring unless he cuts his dreadlocks. After his case gained widespread attention, the “Hair Love” team invited Arnold to the Oscars as their special guest.

“We have a firm belief that representation matters deeply. Especially in cartoons,” said the film’s producer Karen Rupert Toliver as she accepted the award. “In cartoons that’s when we first see our movies, that’s how we shape our lives and how we see ourselves.”

Cherry is a native of the Northwest Side of Chicago and attended Loyola Academy in Wilmette. He was a wide receiver in the NFL for the Baltimore Ravens, Cincinnati Bengals, Jacksonville Jaguars and Carolina Panthers before retiring in 2007.

It’s not his first foray into movie making. Cherry has been working steadily in Hollywood for almost two decades, first as a production assistant, then moving on to working as a director of music videos, short films, and long form features including “The Last Fall” and “9 Rides” and was an executive producer on Spike Lee’s “BlacKKKlansman.”

(Credit: Sony Pictures Animation)

The win makes Cherry just the second professional athlete to win an Oscar. Two years ago, Kobe Bryant won the same award for “Dear Basketball.”

Cherry paid tribute to the late NBA champion, who died alongside eight others in a helicopter crash in California two weeks ago.

“This award is dedicated to Kobe Bryant, may we all have a second act as great as his was,” Cherry said.

Long-time supporters of the animated short took to Twitter to share their congratulations.

“Shaking crying grateful,” actress Gabrielle Union wrote. “Representation realllly matters!!!!!”

“Pass. The. Crown. Act. #HairLove,” tweeted rapper Common.

Cherry’s book “Hair Love” is also based on the story.

CBS News’ Chevaz Clarke contributed to this report.

(© Copyright 2019 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. CBS News contributed to this report.)

Council Committee Plans Vote On Climate Emergency Declaration

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CHICAGO (CBS)– A group of aldermen want to fight back and protect Chicago from record high lake levels.

CBS 2’s been showing the damage along Lake Michigan for weeks.

For some time now, the answer to the ever rising water’s been concrete barriers and big walls.

But last month, a couple of aldermen introduced the idea that the city should be considering this a climate emergency.

Members of the Committee of Environmental Protection and Energy plan to sit down at noon Monday and listen to testimony about the consequences of abrupt climate breakdown.

Lakefront erosion, citywide flooding and severe unseasonal weather, these are the problems included in a resolution explaining why lawmakers believe this is a climate emergency.

It wasn’t long ago we showed you huge waves tearing up big chunks of asphalt on the trail near Fullerton Avenue.

The committee’s plan mentions solutions like zero greenhouse gas emissions and removing all excess carbon from the atmosphere in Chicago, hoping it will help the situation.

The chairman of the Environmental Protection Committee says he hopes to push a vote on the resolution Monday.

If passed, the declaration would still have to be approved by the full city council.

Evanston Council To Debate Assisted Suicide

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CHICAGO (CBS)– Elected leaders in Evanston will debate the issue of assisted suicide for people who are terminally ill on Monday.

The city council will discuss whether or not a mentally competent person, with less than six months to live, can be prescribed medication to end their life.

If Evanston passes a resolution, it would be sent to Illinois lawmakers — pushing them to write and pass what other states call “Death with Dignity Laws.”

So-called medical aid in dying procedures are already allowed in nine states including Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, California, Montana, Colorado, New Jersey, Vermont and Maine.

The last time Illinois considered anything like this was 1997.

Do you support death with dignity? CBS 2 asked and got quite the response on Facebook.

Most people commented they do agree, a few disagreed for religious reasons.

Others said they support it as long as it was the person’s choice and not a way for doctors or insurance companies to make money.

2020 Chicago Auto Show: CBS 2 Anchors Show Boston How Chicago Does ‘Smart Park’

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CHICAGO (CBS)– CBS 2’s Ryan Baker, Yasmeen Hassan and Ed Curran showed Boston how Chicagoans use “Smart Park.”

A Super Bowl commercial for the Hyundai Sonata  featured Chris Evans, John Krasinski, Rachel Dratch and David Ortiz using the Smart Parking System. Or as Bostonians say it, “Smaht Pahk.”

In honor of the Chicago Auto Show, CBS 2 created a parody.


The 2020 Census: A Timeline And Key Dates

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CHICAGO (CBS) — This early February, signs for the 2020 Census blanketed Chicago’s City Hall and PSAs were popping up nationwide.

The message is, “Be counted.” But how can you be sure?

CBS 2 Morning Insider Lauren Victory on Monday explained the tight deadline and key dates to look out for.

RELATED: Census Bureau Hiring Thousands Of Workers; Jobs To Pay Nearly $30 An Hour In The Chicago Area | Census Bureau Hiring Thousands Of Workers; Jobs To Pay Nearly $30 An Hour In The Chicago Area | Twelve Questions About The 2020 Census, Answered

When you’re expecting the Census, you can expect more patriotic pushes – PSAs that juxtapose images of farmland and lighthouses with bustling scenes of Midtown Manhattan, with messages in several different languages urging people to get counted.

Demographic data and population numbers will affect the next decade of federal funding and congressional representation in each area of the country.

So how to make sure everyone will indeed be counted?

“We completed an operation which was a door to door canvass of addresses to make certain that we have a complete and accurate address list,” said Marilyn Sanders, Chicago Region Director for the U.S. Census Bureau.

Sanders’ team started hitting the streets in October. They focused in January on recruiting more employees.

February will be spent figuring out point people at shelters, senior centers, and colleges. And in mid-March, a blitz begins of 95 percent of mailboxes nationwide.

April 1 is Census Day.

“The first is an invite, and then you get a reminder card, and then you get a reminder letter,” Sanders said.

You won’t receive that familiar-looking questionnaire the first three mailings. The federal government hopes to save paper and increase response rates by encouraging participants online or by phone.

If people do not make the April deadline, Sanders said, “We have several keys dates in terms of the census.”

Another important date is May 12. That is when the Census sends in its troops by the hundreds of thousands.

Most will be out and about armed with official gear, laptops, and iPhones, while others man the lines inside.

Over the summer, you might get a visit or call after submitting your information.

“The post enumeration survey helps us to determine the overcount or the undercount of the population,” Sanders said.

The full report is due on President Donald Trump’s desk on Dec. 31.

Another important date is March 31, 2021. That is the deadline to redraw legislative districts based on population changes.

Vivid Tickets Loses Top Rating From Better Business Bureau After Repeated Complaints

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CHICAGO (CBS) — The Better Business Bureau has pulled its “A-plus” rating for a popular Chicago ticket broker because of repeated problems exposed by the CBS 2 Investigators.

CBS 2 Investigator Pam Zekman on Monday exposed how the company is costing consumers big.

Take the case of Christine and Gary Waller.

They contacted CBS 2 after their frustrating and failed attempt to get a refund for Cubs tickets they say they paid for but never received.

It was supposed to be for a “fun family outing” at Wrigley Field, said Gary Waller. But it turned into “a disaster,”  he said, when they went online to buy tickets to a Cubs vs. Cardinals game last summer.

Christine said the family is “big Cubs fans win or lose,” and this was to be a special game to introduce the newest member of their family to the game – their granddaughter Harper.

They bought their tickets to see the Cubs play the Cardinals in September.

Gary used his phone to order the tickets electronically. He thought he was getting them through Major League Baseball.

But he wound up doing business with a secondary ticket reseller called Vivid Seats based in Chicago.

Vivid Seats sent Gary a confirmation thru his phone after he paid the $445 required for the 4 tickets. He kept checking for the actual tickets to be sent electronically, but says they never arrived. So he assumed the confirmation of payment that he received would be accepted as their tickets.

No deal. The group was denied entry at the gate.

The box office tried to help them find the tickets through Gary’s cell phone, following instructions from a Vivid customer service representative. Still no deal.

So they drove home.

“It was heartbreaking, because we were just so psyched to take her to her first game,” said Christine Waller.

They had even purchased a Cubs onesie for their granddaughter to wear to the game.

When they tried to get a refund, Vivid refused – insisting they were sent the tickets to the ball game.

“My husband called Vivid Seats and couldn’t get anywhere.” Christine said.

And it got worse. Their bank initially refunded Gary’s money, then changed their mind because of Vivid’s objections – causing the Wallers to bounce some checks.

Late fees on their bills piled up to $800, just before Christmas.

“Very upsetting,” said Christine Waller. “We are still not caught up.”

Vivid Seats is a Chicago-based company located in the West Loop. It has racked up more than 900 complaints with the Better Business Bureau for everything from billing problems to ticket delivery issues over the past three years, but had an A-Plus rating with the BBB until we started asking questions.

“We have taken the grade away from them,” Bernas said. “We have currently put them on ‘No Rating’ while they investigate the complaints and Vivid Seats response to them.

“We’re making certain that there are no types of patterns of complaints or issues that we’re aware of,” Bernas said.

The Wallers’ issue seemed simple to Christine Waller.

“For us to not go to the game and still not get our money back,” she said. “That’s disheartening…. It’s just so cruel.”

After we inquired about the Wallers’ complaint, the company refunded their money and gave them a gift card for Cubs tickets this summer. A company spokesman said there was a “technology issue” that lead to the Wallers’ problems involving the transfer of the tickets.

As for the hundreds of other complaints filed with the BBB, a Vivid spokesman said it’s a small percentage compared to the millions of tickets the company sells each year.

Generally speaking, when you are purchasing tickets for an event, the BBB recommends that if possible buy them directly from the box office. If you can’t, be careful that you don’t get tricked into thinking you are dealing with the venue when you are not. Secondary brokers may mislead you into thinking they are the venue or directly connected to the venue.

“Ticketmakers” is one of the names they use, consumers have alleged to the BBB.

“That’s pretty similar to Ticketmaster and they thought they were dealing with them (Ticketmaster) and they actually weren’t,” said Bernas.

He also warned the consumers should know that prices on the secondary market are typically much higher than at the box office because of service fees and other add-ons. And “guarantees” that you’ll get your seats promised in bold print may be undermined in the fine print of an agreement that discloses there are “no refunds” except for a concert cancellation.

“A lot of times with these ticket brokers is that the big print giveth and the little print taketh away,” Bernas said, “and consumers are not reading fully what they’re getting themselves into.”

When you are dealing with a secondary broker or reseller, they may be selling you tickets “on spec” meaning they don’t actually have the tickets. When they get them, the tickets may not be for the seats you thought you were getting.

If you have complaints about ticket brokers, you can contact the following agencies or organizations:

The Federal Trade Commission is available at 1-877-FTC HELP (382-4357). Or you can file a complaint on line at FTC.gov/complaint.

Also the Better Business Bureau 312-832-0500  or BBB.org to file a complaint on line.

MISSING GIRL: Bobbie Lynn Garza, 17, Last Seen On Jan. 29

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A 17-year-old girl has been missing from the South Side for more than two weeks, and police said she might be in need of medication.

Bobbie Lynn Garza was last seen on Jan. 26 near 89th Street and Burley Avenue in the South Chicago neighborhood, according to a Chicago Police Department missing person alert.

She is a student at George Washington High School at 114th Street and Avenue O in the East Side neighborhood.

Bobbie Garza (Source: Chicago Police)

Bobbie, whose nickname is Ruby or Roberta, was last seen wearing a black leather coat, black pants, black shoes, and a black school bag.

She is a 5-foot-4, 185-pound Hispanic girl with brown hair and brown eyes.

Chicago police said she is believed to be in the East Side neighborhood or in the area of Whitign, Indiana.

Bobbie has a medical condition and might be in need of medication.

Anyone who sees her should call 911 or contact Area South SVU detectives at 312-747-8274.

Illinois Supreme Court Justice Robert Thomas Retiring At The End Of Februrary; Played Kicker For Chicago Bears For 10 Seasons

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CHICAGO (CBS) — Illinois Supreme Court Justice Robert Thomas is retiring at the end of the month, after nearly 20 years on the bench of the state’s highest court, and will be returning to private practice with a prominent Chicago law firm.

Thomas, 67, was first elected as an Illinois Supreme Court Justice in December 2000, and served as the court’s chief justice for three years from September 2005 to September 2008. Before joining the state’s highest court, he was an appellate court judge for six years, and a DuPage County circuit judge for six years.

His retirement will be effective Feb. 29.

“It has been a great honor and privilege to have served on the Illinois Supreme Court as well as on the appellate and circuit courts over the past 32 years,” Thomas said in a statement Monday morning. “While I will miss the collegial atmosphere with my colleagues on the court, I am ready to return to the practice of law and help clients achieve justice.”

He will join the Power Rogers law personal injury law firm in Chicago, where he will practice law with his son, Jonathan. Power Rogers represented Justice Thomas in a successful 2006 defamation lawsuit against the Kane County Chronicle.

Thomas, a graduate of the University of Notre Dame, was also a place kicker for the Fighting Irish for three seasons, kicking the winning field goal against the Alabama Crimson Tide in the 1973 Sugar Bowl, to win the national championship. He was an Academic All-American in 1974.

Notre Dame kicker Bob Thomas puts his best toe forward on a 19-yard field goal to give the Irish a 24-23 upset victory in the Sugar Bowl against Alabama in New Orleans, Jan. 1, 1973. Holding is Brian Doherty. (AP Photo/JW)

He was also a Chicago Bears kicker for 10 seasons during two stints in the 1970s and 1980s. While still playing for the Bears, Thomas attended Loyola University Law School, obtaining his law degree in 1981. Thomas also was a kicker for the Detroit Lions, the San Diego Chargers, and the New York Giants – also practicing law with several firms during that time, before becoming a DuPage County judge in 1988.

“The Lord has truly blessed me. Starting with my fantastic wife, Maggie, three great kids, Brendan, Jonathan and Jessica, and eight soon to be nine grandchildren. With a football career that included a National Championship at Notre Dame and 10 years with the Chicago Bears,” Thomas said. “With the tremendous honor and privilege of serving as Chief Justice of the Illinois Supreme Court. And now, the opportunity to practice law at Power and Rogers with my son, Jonathan, alongside the best trial lawyer in the country, my close friend, Joe Power. I have been truly blessed.”

The Illinois Supreme Court has appointed Illinois Appellate Justice Michael J. Burke to fill the remainder of Thomas’ term, from March 1 through Dec. 5, 2022.

Burke has been an appellate judge in the Second District in Elgin since 2008.

Chicago RealTime Weather: Snow Mid-Week, Then Big Temperature Plunge

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CHICAGO (CBS)– It’s going to be a calm and sunny start to the week, but snow could arrive in the middle of the week, and then we could have a very cold end to the week.

Monday is going to be one of the warmer days this week with high temperatures in the mid 30s.

There is a chance fore snow Wednesday into Thursday, with more than 2 inches of snow possible.

After that, temperatures will plunge Thursday night into Friday, possibly hitting the single digits Friday morning, and a high possibly only around 16.

The blast of bitter cold won’t last for long, as milder temperatures are on tap again by Saturday, with highs back in the mid 30s.

 

CPD: 9 Homicides In Chicago’s Deadliest Weekend Of The Year

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CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago police say there were nine homicides in what has been the deadliest weekend of the year in a city where fatal shootings had been in decline.

So far this year, there have been 50 homicides compared to 33 during the same period in 2019.

The early totals have heightened concerns about a new spike in violence. Homicides and shootings have dropped significantly the past three years in Chicago, after a 2016 surge in deaths captured national attention.

Chicago Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi says the department will be making some “deployment adjustments” to combat the rising number of shootings.

Copyright 2020 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Voter Registration Error Risks Deportation For Immigrants

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CHICAGO (AP) — The day Margarita Del Pilar Fitzpatrick applied for an Illinois driver’s license upended her life. When a clerk offered to register her to vote in 2005, the Peruvian citizen mistakenly accepted, leading to long legal battles and eventually deportation.

A decade and a half later, she struggles to find work at 52, is nearly homeless and hasn’t seen her three American citizen daughters in years because of a secretary of state’s office mishap.

“It has derailed our lives,” she said in a phone interview from Lima. “Immigrants should not be put in this situation.”

In this Feb. 6, 2020, photo, Peruvian Margarita Del Pilar Fitzpatrick, poses for a portrait at San Martin de Porres neighborhood in Lima, Peru. The day Fitzpatrick applied for an Illinois driver’s license upended her life. When a clerk offered to register her t o vote, the Peruvian citizen mistakenly accepted, leading to long legal battles and eventually deportation. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

A handful of other immigrants could face a similar fate, or criminal charges, after a mistake in Illinois’ automatic voter registration system allowed of hundreds of people who identified themselves as non-U.S. citizens to register. Sixteen cast ballots.

The fiasco in a state with a reputation for election shenanigans triggered a partisan battle, infuriated voter advocacy groups and left immigrant rights activists doing damage control.

“It’s disappointing because the situation could have been avoided,” said Lawrence Benito, head of the Illinois Coalition for Immigrant and Refugee Rights. “They voluntarily told people they were noncitizens. It was not their fault.”

Voting by noncitizens is forbidden by state and federal laws and is statistically rare. But President Donald Trump has repeatedly made unsubstantiated claims that millions voted illegally in 2016. His comments gave a political charge to the issue and put voting modernization efforts such as automatic registration in the spotlight.

“The political appearance is terrible,” Jessica Levinson, a professor at Loyola Law School in Los Angeles, said of Illinois. “The political reality is people are looking for any potential sense of error when it comes to noncitizen voting to indicate that things like automatic voter registration give rise to fraud.”

Illinois made headlines in 2017 when then-Gov. Bruce Rauner was among the first Republicans to sign automatic voter registration into law. The multi-faceted law focuses largely on the secretary of state’s office, which issues driver’s licenses.

A “programming error” wrongly sent data from more than 500 people to election officials, even though when asked if they were U.S. citizens, they hit “no” on an electronic keypad. Ultimately, 545 people were registered.

It’s unclear whether some people were confused and mistakenly hit “no.” About half of the voters appeared to be citizens. One was confirmed as a noncitizen with legal status to live in the U.S. Six others remain in question.

Whether that individual, or others yet to surface, could face criminal charges boils down the will of prosecutors.

Experts say there’s little chance of charges being filed around Chicago, where the Cook County state’s attorney is a Democrat. However, authorities in more conservative pockets might be more inclined to act. Election officials said they have not been contacted by law enforcement.

Stepped-up efforts to crack down on noncitizen voters have netted results elsewhere. In 2018, a federal task force in North Carolina uncovered voting violations that led to charges against 19 foreign nationals related to the 2016 election.

It can take years for a noncitizen’s illegal vote to surface. Immigration authorities might not find out until an immigrant applies to adjust their status, like a green card holder seeking citizenship with a form that asks if the applicant has ever voted. An affirmative answer could disqualify the applicant and lead to deportation.

Two of the highest-profile cases, heard in the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals, also started with the Illinois secretary of state’s office, which has since changed how clerks discuss voter registration.

In this Feb. 6, 2020, photo, Peruvian Margarita Del Pilar Fitzpatrick, poses for a portrait at San Martin de Porres neighborhood in Lima, Peru. The day Fitzpatrick applied for an Illinois driver’s license upended her life. When a clerk offered to register her to vote, the Peruvian citizen mistakenly accepted, leading to long legal battles and eventually deportation. (AP Photo/Martin Mejia)

Fitzpatrick presented both her Peruvian passport and U.S. green card when applying for a driver’s license in 2005. She was confused by a clerk who said it was “up to you” if she wanted to register so she did. Then she voted, saying she did not learn it was illegal until applying for citizenship years later. The government moved to have her deported, which courts upheld. She was removed in 2017.

It was the opposite for Elizabeth Keathley, a Philippine citizen in the U.S. on a marriage visa. She applied for a driver’s license and was sent a registration card. She voted in 2006. In processing her green card, immigration authorities discovered she had voted, and she was ordered removed. However, judges determined she did not falsely represent herself, allowing her to stay. She’s since become a citizen, and her story was recounted in an off-Broadway play.

Keathley, 41, said the threat of being separated from her family was devastating, especially since her daughter was then an infant. She also lost her hospital job.

“Our lives were turned upside-down,” said the Bloomington woman.

Chicago attorney Richard Hanus represented both women. He believed Illinois’ error could work in their favor, since his clients did not misrepresent themselves as citizens.

Illinois officials vowed to protect immigrants, including fighting subpoenas.

Some voter rights advocates say the state law contains a caveat that could help. It says if a registration is wrongly processed “that person shall not be found on that basis to have made a false claim to citizenship.”

Noncitizen voting isn’t common. A 2017 study by the Brennan Center for Justice found roughly 30 incidents of suspected noncitizen voting when it looked at election jurisdictions representing nearly 24 million votes in the 2016 general election.

Secretary of State Jesse White said his office takes full blame and issued letters to the people affected explaining that. Immigrant-rights advocates want additional protections.

White also countered any insinuation of intentional wrongdoing.

“This was an error, and there was no effort put forth to hide anything or ‘to cook the books,’ so to speak,” White, a Democrat, said recently at a state Capitol hearing. He said the glitch, covering registrations from July 2018 through December 2019, was fixed.

Republicans have called for the system to be suspended after other registration glitches were made public. They’ve also pointed to issues with mistaken noncitizen voter registrations elsewhere, including California.

“The fundamental right to vote and the sanctity of our democracy is too important to bury our heads in the sand and trust that Illinois’ state government has everything under control when it clearly does not,” Illinois Republican Party Chairman Tim Schneider said after the error was made public last month.

Nearly 20 states have approved some form of automatic voter registration with the goal of increasing civic participation.

Aside from delays and technical issues, voter groups said repeated problems show Illinois has not done enough to safeguard the system.

The state has not “fully come to terms with the harm that can be caused with errors like this in our voting system,” said Ami Gandhi with the Chicago Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights.


Second-Grader Found With Gun Magazine At School In Cedar Lake, Indiana

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CEDAR LAKE, Ind. (CBS) — A second-grader was found with a gun magazine at a school in Cedar Lake, Indiana on Monday, police said.

Around 12:10 p.m., a school resource officer at Jane Ball Elementary School in Cedar Lake was notified that a second-grade student had a gun magazine in his possession.

Cedar Lake police Officer Dustin Corbin was called to the scene and found that the boy did indeed have an empty and unloaded handgun magazine.

The boy was taken to the principal’s office and his parents were contacted, police said. It turned out that the empty magazine did come from his home, and that he never had any access to any fully-assembled weapons or ammunition – just the gun magazine that was accidentally left out.

There was no threat of safety to the other children, police said.

Suspicious Package Shuts Down Stretch Of Clark Street In Edgewater

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CHICAGO (CBS) — Police were called and a stretch of Clark Street in Edgewater was closed Monday afternoon for a suspicious package.

The suspicious package was found in the 5800 block of North Clark Street. The police Bomb and Arson Section was called to the scene, police said.

Southbound Clark Street was closed at Ardmore Avenue, and northbound Clark Street was closed at Rosehill Drive, police said.

The affected stretch of Clark Street is merged with Ashland Avenue and has six lanes of traffic.

Illinois Lawmaker Proposes Bill That Would Forbid Motorists From Pumping Their Own Gas

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Chicago (CBS) — An Illinois lawmaker has proposed a law that would forbid motorists from pumping their own gas.

State Rep. Camille Y. Lilly (D-Oak Park) on Wednesday of last week filed HB4571.

It would create the Gas Station Attendant Act, which would provide that no gas could be pumped by anyone except an attendant employed by a gas station.

If approved, the law would take effect on Jan. 1 of next year.

The bill was referred to the Rules Committee last Wednesday after being introduced.

Elsewhere in the country, the state of New Jersey has a law that forbids residents from pumping their own gas.

Oregon only allows motorists to pump their own gas in rural counties with populations of less than 40,000.

Chicago Theatre Week Kicks Off Thursday

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By Yolanda Perdomo, CBS Digital Producer

CHICAGO (CBS) — Get ready to laugh, cry, sing and maybe do some dancing in the aisles because Chicago Theatre Week is back!

(Credit: Chicago Theatre Week)

From Thursday, February 13 and going through February 23, theaters big and small will showcase the best live performances to hit stages in Chicago.

It all got started in 2013 and according to Deb Clapp, executive director of the League of Chicago Theatres, the goal of the celebration is to get people out to the theater, big fans and newbies, at a discount.

(Credit: Chicago Theatre Week)

“We hope that people will use the opportunity of discounted tickets to see a show at a theatre that they may not have experienced before, or that they might get out and see two or three or more shows over the course of the 10 days,” Clapp said.

She added “Chicago is unique in that we have so many different kinds of theatre happening all across the city.  Many people will find a theatre right in their own neighborhood.”

(Credit: Chicago Theatre Week)

Around 270 theatres in the area will participate with different kinds of live experiences for all ages. From dramas, to musicals, to comedies, dance performances, comedy and some indescribable kinds of performances (think Blue Man Group)  For people who haven’t gone to see a live theatrical performance, Clapp said there’s something for everyone.

 

“The performing arts are the only art form that requires an audience to actually be present in the making of it. Because we have so many different kinds of theatre in Chicago, they can choose how they want to take part.”

In other words, what do you want to get out of it?

(Credit: Chicago Theatre Week)

“Do they want to be uplifted or challenged?  Do they want to be entertained?  Do they want to laugh?  Do they want to have an emotional experience,” asked Clapp. “An audience member can find all of that by looking through what’s playing on any given night in Chicago.  Sometimes all in one show!”

There are close to 130 performances on stage during Chicago Theatre Week. Some of the theatres will have special events such as talk backs and receptions.

“I would recommend that people check in with the theatre after they have made their choices of plays to see what each theatre is offering,” Clapp noted.

(Credit; Chicago Theatre Week)

Want to see what you could be seeing on a Chicago stage? Click here for more on Chicago Theatre Week and the performances that’ll be showcased.

 

Jose Aguirre, 49, Gets 20 Years In Prison For Attempted Murder Of Girlfriend; Ran Over Yesenia Rodriguez At Yorktown Mall

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CHICAGO (CBS) — A Cicero man has been sentenced to 20 years in prison for running over his girlfriend with his SUV two years ago at Yorktown Mall in west suburban Lombard.

DuPage County prosecutors said 49-year-old Jose Aguirre tried to kill Yesenia Rodriguez by hitting her with his Ford Explorer on Aug. 27, 2018, in the parking lot of Yorktown Mall as she was on her way to work.

Jose Aguirre (Source: DuPage County Jail)

Aguirre ran her over with both the front and rear driver’s side tires of the SUV and fled the scene, according to prosecutors.  Rodriguez suffered injuries to her spine, hip, and jaw, and is still recovering from her injuries.

Lombard Police arrested Aguirre the next day. Investigators determined he had sent Rodriguez several threatening text messages, including “You’ll pay for this and with blood.”

“Every day in the United States, domestic violence claims countless victims, many of whom carry their physical and emotional scars with them for the rest of their lives. We are all thankful that Yesenia survived this horrific attack and wish her the best as she continues to recover both physically and emotionally. Mr. Aguirre’s outrageous actions that morning have certainly earned him every minute of his twenty-year sentence,” DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin said in a statement.

Aguirre pleaded guilty last year to one count of attempted murder. DuPage County Judge Brian Telander sentenced him to 20 years in prison on Monday. Aguirre must serve at least 85% of his sentence before he is eligible for parole.

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