Windy City Smokeout marks 10 years

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Good morning, Chicago.

The Democratic National Convention will descend on the United Center next August like a made-for-TV political Cirque du Soleil spectacle, putting a spotlight on Chicago.

For residents of the proud West Side, the impending gala offers an opportunity, but it’s also something of a double-edged sword. They worry their part of the city will host the event at the arena without enjoying much of that light or seeing many trickle-down benefits of the expensive party.

Now they’re trying to figure out how to get a seat at the table with the decision-makers to ensure they get their say, while local members of Congress also are attempting to make sure the West Side residents and businesses aren’t left out.

Read the full story from the Tribune’s John Byrne.

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James Lewis, 76, walks along Cambridge Street on Aug. 22, 2022, in Cambridge, Massachusetts.

Lewis’ death comes after 40 years of intense scrutiny from law enforcement, in which Lewis played a cat-and-mouse game with investigators. Local authorities questioned him as recently as September as part of a renewed effort to bring charges in the case.

With the investigation’s only suspect dead, it now seems unlikely that charges will ever be brought in poisonings that killed seven people and caused a worldwide panic.

Associate Judge David Kliment on the bench for hearings in his felony courtroom on June 8 at the Kane County Judicial Center in St. Charles.

In just two short years, Kane County has reduced by half the backlog of people languishing in jail for more than a year. Only one defendant has been detained for more than three years without trial. Meanwhile, in Cook, delays have only worsened, as the Tribune recently reported in the investigation “Stalled Justice.” Some cases are now taking a decade or more to resolve.

The type of effort shown in Kane County is generally what experts have long recommended on a far larger scale in Cook. The Tribune’s investigation, published in April, found Cook County’s criminal courts were taking longer than ever to complete murder cases — more than four years in most instances. That’s longer than it takes in New York, Los Angeles or any other big city with available data.

State Rep. Anne Stava-Murray speaks at the Harold Washington Library in Chicago on June 12, 2023.

It’s been nearly four years since an Illinois law opened the door for nonbinary residents to mark “X” for their gender on driver’s licenses and other state IDs, but the seemingly simple change has yet to take effect in the face of challenges it presents to law enforcement and the health care industry.

Law enforcement officers and others listen as Elizabeth Leahy of the Firearms Safety Council conducts a training seminar on June 26, 2023, at College of Lake County in Grayslake on the state's firearms restraining order and clear and present danger report procedures for law enforcement, attorneys, school administrators and others.

In the weeks right after the mass shooting at the Highland Park Independence Day parade last year, a suburban man allegedly told a family member to hide his handguns, saying he was concerned he would hurt himself or someone else. A doctor worried his patient would take his own life if he was released from medical care to a home where weapons were present. Another man called 911, apparently intoxicated, and said he was on his way to kill his wife.

In response to all three cases, records show, police in Cook County suburbs utilized a tool that spiked in use after the Highland Park tragedy: the firearms restraining order, which is intended to take weapons away from people whom a judge deems threatening to themselves or others.

The Tribune found that FROs, which come from Illinois’ red-flag law, were used far more frequently after Highland Park, in Cook County and beyond. Authorities attributed the surge to increased public awareness of the law.

Shermann “Dilla” Thomas, Chicago’s urban historian, leads his Mahogany Bus Tour of Bronzeville on June 18, 2023.

The Mahogany Bus Tour is an initiative created by TikTok star, community historian and cultural worker Shermann “Dilla” Thomas — you may have seen him on TikTok — to encourage natives, transplants and tourists to move beyond their screens, off their blocks and into Chicago’s diverse communities. Thomas, a South Side native, shines a light on the rich history of Chicago’s neighborhoods that is often skipped over by the tourism industry.

Chicago White Sox center fielder Luis Robert Jr. (88) waits to see if he beat the throw to first base after the Chicago White Sox called a challenge during the seventh inning of the game against the Los Angeles Angels at Guaranteed Rate Field on May 30, 2023.

A somewhat reluctant entrant into the derby, Robert originally said he was not interested in participating but changed his mind last week after some lobbying by fellow Cubans Randy Arozarena and Adolis García. That’s good news for Sox fans, who have had little to cheer for this season and could use a “W” right about now.

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Northwestern head coach Pat Fitzgerald reacts after Michigan State scored a touchdown in the first half of a game at Ryan Field in Evanston on Sept. 3, 2021.

Northwestern President Michael Schill said he “may have erred in weighing the appropriate sanction” for football coach Pat Fitzgerald, who began a two-week unpaid suspension Friday after an outside investigation into hazing incidents on the team.

Fitzgerald’s suspension was among the measures Northwestern announced after a six-month investigation it commissioned into hazing allegations made by an anonymous player. Details of hazing involving sexual acts were published in The Daily Northwestern on Saturday.

The exhibition "Art for the Future" at DePaul Art Museum through August.

Is there anything so fleeting today as political attention? From raging fires in Quebec to war in Ukraine, from a worldwide refugee crisis to our national plights of racist policing, from unfair labor conditions to loss of access to abortion, the ceaselessness of urgencies might be the only constant.

A summer exhibit at DePaul Art Museum offers a historical model for how to proceed, writes Lori Waxman.

Zach Bryan performs during the 2022 Stagecoach Festival at the Empire Polo Field in Indio, California. He headlines Day 1 of this summer's Windy City Smokeout in Chicago.

Celebrating its 10th anniversary, Windy City Smokeout pairs nearly 30 renowned barbecue joints, more than a dozen breweries and 21 artists for a four-day bonanza that provides a taste of the South up north. Its fan-friendly logistics (every musician on the bill plays on one main stage), family-first policies (children under 10 are admitted free) and reasonable cost (single-day tickets start at $69.95 plus fees) help account for why it was named the Academy of Country Music Awards Festival of the Year in 2021. Daily capacity is capped at 20,000 concert-goers.

Then there are the mouth-watering smells and culinary delights, which make most of the options at a certain four-day festival at Grant Park in August seem like an afterthought, writes Bob Gendron.

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