Daywatch: At least 29 people shot, 8 fatally, over the weekend

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Good morning, Chicago.

At least 29 people have been shot, eight fatally, in Chicago since Friday evening, according to police. Reports of weekend violence also include a deadly beating on the West Side and a stabbing on a CTA platform in the Loop.

The weekend’s violence follows a particularly deadly stretch on the previous weekend when 45 people were shot, at least seven fatally, according to preliminary statistics from the Chicago Police Department and information from the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Five of the people shot this weekend were between 16 and 17 years old, according to police reports. Two of those died from their wounds. The shootings come days after a gunman fired a semi-automatic rifle toward a Near West Side housing complex, killing 7-year-old Jai’Mani Amir Rivera on Tuesday. In that case, Raysean Comer, 16, was charged as an adult with first-degree murder.

Read the full story from the Tribune’s Adriana Pérez.

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Visitors walk around Cloud Gate, also known as The Bean, at Millennium Park on June 23, 2024, in Chicago. The sculpture officially reopened Sunday morning. (Armando L. Sanchez/Chicago Tribune)
The Bean reopens after nearly a year of construction and limited access

The reopening comes after ten months of construction that limited visitor access. According to the Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events, the podium on Grainger Plaza, the area of Millennium Park surrounding The Bean, was rebuilt, with new stairs, accessible ramps, paver replacement, a waterproofing system and other accessibility measures.

Equity ClinicShanna Madison/Chicago TribuneA surgical abortion room at Equity Clinic in Champaign on May 21, 2023. (Shanna Madison/Chicago Tribune)
Dobbs, 2 years later: Out-of-state medical providers flock to Illinois for abortion training as opportunities dwindle

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Since U.S Supreme Court case Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ended federal abortion rights on June 24, 2022, 14 states have enacted abortion bans and several others restricted termination to very early gestation limits, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a research group that supports abortion rights.

Ex-Ald. Edward Burke, 14th, exits the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse on June 5, 2024, following a post-trial motions hearing for acquittal in his corruption trial which ended in December 2023. (Vincent Alban/Chicago Tribune)
Sentencing for ex-Ald. Edward Burke offers referendum on Chicago’s old-school corruption

After a lifetime of backroom wheeling and dealing, former Chicago Ald. Edward Burke faces the most consequential negotiation of his life on Monday — and in the most public of places.

In a federal courtroom on the 25th floor of the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse, Burke, the longtime Democratic machine stalwart who dominated the City Council for most of his 54 years as an alderman, will be sentenced in a corruption case that rocked city politics and tanked Burke’s extraordinary career as a lawyer and elected official.

Dan Proft listens April 29, 2024, during a hearing of the State Board of Elections after Illinois Democrats filed a complaint against the GOP strategist and right-wing radio talk show host for alleged illegal election coordination with former GOP gubernatorial nominee Darren Bailey. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
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University of Illinois basketball standout Terrence Shannon Jr. appears in court June 12, 2024, during his trial in Lawrence, Kansas. (Chris Conde/The Lawrence Journal-World)
A jury found Illini basketball star Terrence Shannon not guilty of rape. Then the online harassment of his accuser started.

Less than two hours had passed since the not guilty verdict came down, and their names and photographs were already published and viewed millions of times on social media.

Some said the 19-year-old should be prosecuted for accusing Terrence Shannon Jr. of rape when a Douglas County jury decided no such crime could be proved beyond a reasonable doubt. Others said the Chicago native and University of Illinois men’s basketball star should sue her and her best friend, also 19, for damaging his reputation and possibly his NBA dreams.

Gretchen Stelter, shown Friday near her home in Madison, Wisconsin, has filed a lawsuit against American Airlines alleging its employees did not protect her when a male passenger sexually harassed her during a flight. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
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The complaint alleges two flight attendants were nearby when the man “made vile, offensive, and harassing comments.”

Other passengers took notice, including a man seated directly in front of Gretchen Stelter who summoned a flight attendant after he inquired if Stelter was OK and she told him she wasn’t, according to the lawsuit. Her seatmate told the employee he was just “having fun,” and Stelter said the flight attendant took “no action to protect” her.

The Guaranteed Rate logo is shown on the big screen in August 2016 at what was then known as U.S. Cellular Field. The name changed to Guaranteed Rate Field later that year. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)
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Players pause to honor Willie Mays before the start of a the game between the Cardinals and the Giants at Rickwood Field on June 20, 2024, in Birmingham, Ala. (AP Photo/Vasha Hunt)
Column: A powerful night at Rickwood Field, where Willie Mays wasn’t present but was everywhere

Sam Allen, 88, last played at Rickwood Field in 1959 with the Kansas City Monarchs. He returned to the oldest professional ballpark in America on Thursday for Major League Baseball’s “Tribute to the Negro Leagues” game featuring the San Francisco Giants and St. Louis Cardinals.

It was the marquee event of four days of celebrations during which Allen and fellow former Negro League players and their families were honored. But the long-planned homage had an undertone of sadness, writes Shakeia Taylor. Just days before the game, baseball legend Willie Mays died at age 93.

W.W. Norton“Negative Space” by Gillian Linden. (W.W. Norton & Company)
Biblioracle: ‘Negative Space’ by Gillian Linden writes a whole new definition for deadpan

The framing of “Negative Space” is simple, a first-person narrative from the point-of-view of an unnamed, married mother of two young children and part-time teacher at a private school in New York City. The entire story spans a week from Monday to Saturday, each day getting a chapter, and each chapter starting (roughly) with waking up and ending with the narrator putting her children to bed and trying to find sleep for herself.

Chef/owners Doug Psaltis and Hsing Chen are photographed in their restaurant Mano a Mano, 2534 N. Milwaukee Ave. in Chicago, June 20, 2024. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune)
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The new Italian restaurant is located next door to Andros Taverna, their critically acclaimed Greek restaurant on Milwaukee Avenue, which was named Best Restaurant in the Tribune’s 2022 Reader’s Choice Food Awards.

“We really love the community in Logan Square,” award-winning chef Hsing Chen said. They’re surrounded by small independent restaurants, she added, all supportive of one another. “It feels almost like a small town within a big city.”

Melissa Barrera stars in director Caroline Lindy’s “Your Monster.” (Will Stone/Sundance Institute/TNS)
Sundance Institute x Chicago opens soon, a front-row seat on the current moviemaking moment

A lot of summertime Chicago events can be elevator-pitched in four words. The Air and Water Show: planes in the sky. Lollapalooza: music in Grant Park.

For the newbie known as Sundance Institute x Chicago, starting Friday, how about: A three-day gathering of Sundance Institute and Sundance Film Festival leaders, local and national filmmakers, producers, screenwriters, directors, industry workers and movie audiences eager for a taste of Sundance festival programming (with four films screening at two venues), along with public panel discussions (requiring free reservations) addressing heavy questions about filmmaking, including the heaviest question of what the hell the future of moviegoing even looks like.

Chicago Tribune , 2024-06-24 13:33:44

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