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Illinois State Police trooper injured after squad car hit by SUV on I-57 in Kankakee County

Illinois State Police trooper injured after squad car hit by SUV on I-57 in Kankakee County

CBS News03-03-2025

An Illinois State Police trooper was hurt after their squad car was hit in a Scott's Law-related crash Saturday afternoon on Interstate 57 in Kankakee County.
State police said just before 2 p.m., a trooper responded to a report of debris in the roadway at milepost 302 near Chebanse. That's where they parked their squad car in the right travel lane with emergency lights activated and removed the debris.
The trooper returned to their squad car, which was then hit in the rear by a Lincoln SUV that failed to move over.
The trooper was taken to an area hospital with non-life-threatening injuries.
The driver of the Lincon, a 66-year-old man from Mahomet, Illinois, was also taken to an area hospital with minor injuries.
He was cited for Failure to Reduce Speed to Avoid an Accident and a Scott's Law violation.
It's the third Scott's Law-related crash this year.

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Measure before Gov. JB Pritzker would streamline firearms ID process for low-level gun offenders
Measure before Gov. JB Pritzker would streamline firearms ID process for low-level gun offenders

Chicago Tribune

timea day ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Measure before Gov. JB Pritzker would streamline firearms ID process for low-level gun offenders

On the final day of the spring legislative session, the Democrat-led Illinois General Assembly passed a measure intended to make it easier for people who have been arrested for carrying guns illegally to obtain a state firearm permit so they would be allowed to own firearms. The bipartisan bill marked a rare instance in which Democrats and Republicans largely agreed on a measure involving guns. Democrats have been criticized by the GOP for promoting measures that restrict the flow of guns to the point where they negatively affect law-abiding gun owners. But Democrats say this legislation, which awaits Gov. JB Pritzker's signature, encourages the legal ownership of firearms while still emphasizing accountability. 'Getting guns off the streets, yes, absolutely, to me that means stopping the flow of illegal weapons into our streets. That means keeping weapons out of the hands of people who wish to do harm,' said state Rep. Kelly Cassidy, a Chicago Democrat who supports the bill. 'That doesn't mean preventing people from owning a tool that is used for both personal protection and sport.' The legislation applies to participants in diversion programs that serve as alternatives to prosecution. Cook County's Democratic state's attorney, Eileen O'Neill Burke, pushed legislators to expand the programs to include a more streamlined opportunity for their participants to obtain a firearm owner's identification, or FOID, card — the form required by the Illinois State Police for state residents to be allowed to legally own guns. The legislation would apply to people eligible for placement in the diversion programs and charged with gun crimes designated as Class 4 felonies, offenses that can carry one-to-three-year prison sentences but are the least severe level of felonies. Under the measure, a person charged with those low-level gun felonies would be able to apply for a FOID card once receiving a court order attesting to their completion of a diversion program, enabling the state police to perform a background check as part of the process of granting them the card. Once the felony case is officially dropped, the state police would grant that individual a FOID card if they pass the background check, the measure would allow. As it stands now, state police can't start the process for someone requesting a FOID card until their felony case is dropped, which may not be until well after the applicant completes the diversion program. The legislation is aimed at helping people like Shamyia Phillips, who was arrested in November 2023 on a felony gun charge. When police stopped her in a car that she said had been reported stolen, she had a handgun in her purse that she said she purchased legally in Texas, an open-carry state where she lived for a time. Unaware of Illinois' gun laws, she didn't have a FOID card or concealed carry license. 'It was just to protect me and my daughter,' said Phillips, a 26-year-old single mother. 'I wasn't using it to harm anyone or anything.' Unemployed at the time, Phillips said she entered a diversion program that helped her get a job and led to the charges being dropped. Seeking work in the security field, she plans to apply for a FOID card and concealed carry license. During a visit to the Tribune Editorial Board earlier this month, O'Neill Burke said one factor motivating the legislation was that during the COVID-19 pandemic, there were major delays for people applying for FOID cards through the state police. At the same time a lot of people acquired guns illegally because of fears stoked by a nationwide rise in violent crime. 'So, we were putting people in a catch-22,' said O'Neill Burke, who took office at the end of last year. 'Suddenly we had this large population of otherwise law-abiding people who are now charged with a Class 4 felony.' The solution, she said, is part of her office's balanced approach toward gun prosecutions: Prioritizing gun cases that involve the use of 'switches,' rapid-fire devices that can convert semiautomatic guns to fully automatic use, while at the same time ensuring that others entitled to have firearms are following the law. 'It's two very different approaches to gun crimes because they're treated very differently under the law,' O'Neill Burke said. 'The goal is to get as many people into compliance with the regulation as possible, while at the same time addressing the very real threat that automatic weapons pose.' More than 2.4 million Illinoisans have FOID cards. The state police has 20 employees processing FOID applications while additional employees handle applications for concealed carry licenses, which allow for a gun owner to carry a firearm outdoors. 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Senate Republican leader John Curran, a former assistant Cook County state's attorney, agreed with Sims' rationale behind it. 'Ultimately, if someone's going to possess a gun again down the road, they should have a FOID in Illinois. It's the law of the land. So, we should encourage that behavior. This bill does,' said Curran, of Downers Grove. State Rep. John Cabello of Machesney Park was one of 11 House members to vote against the new legislation. A Republican who has worked as a police detective, he said he's been supportive of diversion programs but was skeptical of the Democrats' motivation for this legislation. 'What they're doing in Springfield, is they take baby steps to what their final goal is. What is their final goal? Is their final goal to make sure that we can't charge felons with possession of a (gun) any longer?' Cabello said. The legislation would apply to various diversion programs for people arrested on Class 4 felony gun charges, including Cook County prosecutors' first-time weapon offense program. People charged with such crimes are eligible for the diversion program only if they've gotten permission from a judge, with the consent of the state's attorney. O'Neill Burke's office said Cook County had roughly 2,800 Class 4 felony gun cases last year of which defendants in some 1,200 were put in gun diversion programs, most of them in the first-time weapon offense program. The program was initially established by the General Assembly in 2018 as a pilot and limited to defendants under 21, while also being part of a law allowing for penalty enhancements for certain people convicted of repeatedly carrying illegal firearms. But in the last several years, especially with the makeup of the General Assembly becoming more progressive, lawmakers let the penalty enhancement provisions expire, made the diversion program permanent and removed its age restriction. Participation in the program could last from six months to two years, according to the law, and to stay in the program, the defendant must not break any laws or use any guns or other weapons. The law doesn't allow someone in the program if they've been arrested for a felony gun crime that was committed during the commission of a violent offense; if they've been previously convicted or placed on probation or conditional discharge for any violent crime; if they've completed the program in the past; or if they have an existing order of protection issued against them. Cook County Public Defender Sharone R. Mitchell Jr. said the legislation's emphasis on obtaining FOID cards is an acknowledgement by the government that the people who often get in trouble for illegal gun possession are not dangerous criminals. But if they have a blemish on their record like a Class 4 felony, that could hurt their chances to get a job and potentially be deprived of other opportunities. But Mitchell says many people might not acquire FOID cards or CCLs for a host of reasons, including ignorance of the law or a criminal conviction from decades ago preventing them from owning a gun. 'People's baseline need is to keep themselves safe and some individuals have made the decision in our community that carrying a gun is their only path toward that safety,' he said. 'People are making really tough decisions based upon safety.' 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Former Ohio State employee, 2 others plead guilty to financial fraud
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  • Yahoo

Former Ohio State employee, 2 others plead guilty to financial fraud

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Prosecutors: Musician was trying to call for help when he was killed in the West End
Prosecutors: Musician was trying to call for help when he was killed in the West End

Yahoo

time2 days ago

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The West End musician who was killed in February was likely trying to call the police to stop a robbery, prosecutors said. Allen Scott, 50, was fatally shot in the 500 block of West McMicken on Feb. 6. About 10 days later, the 17-year-old was arrested and charged with murder in his death. More: 'Grandpa Doom': Man killed in West End shooting was talented musician, noble friend The teen's case was in Hamilton County Juvenile Court on June 13. Prosecutors are arguing to have the teen tried as an adult. The teen's lawyers argued that there was no probable cause and the case should be dismissed. Prosecutors showed surveillance video and said DNA evidence connected the teen to a jacket that was recovered near the scene of the shooting. That jacket also had gunshot residue on it, according to a report from the Hamilton County Crime Lab. Assistant prosecutor Kate Buffington presented a reconstruction of what happened that day. She said the teen was walking down the street when Scott walked out of his home with a bag of ice. The teen demanded money from Scott, but he didn't give him any, Buffington said. Then the teen turned his attention toward another person who was walking across the street and tried to get money from him, she said. Buffington said that Scott decided to try to help by calling the police and went back inside his home, but when the teen figured out what was happening, he fired a single round through the door killing Scott. The defense said the DNA evidence only places the teen in the vicinity of the killing, but argued that the witness statements were not consistent about a description of the suspect. Luis Godines, who is representing the teen, said the teen was swabbed for gunshot residue shortly after the killing, and the test was negative. He pointed out that the murder weapon was never found and said a search of the teen's phone did not yield any location data that places him at the scene. He said the teen also never confessed. Police did search his phone. During the hearing, Detective Delecia Grisby searched the teen's phone and found messages about robberies, messages about wanting to get money to leave with his girlfriend, as well as a picture of a gun. Judge Stacey DeGreaffenreid did not make a ruling during the June 13 hearing about whether the case will be bound over to adult court. Another hearing was scheduled on June 23 for her to announce her decision. Scott was a decade-long Cincinnati resident and Northern Kentucky native. He gained a following in the area through his heavy metal band Opium Doom Cult. The teen has had no prior contact with the juvenile court system and no prior charges in Hamilton County. Court documents show that in 2024, the teen had no disciplinary issues in school. In Ohio, cases of murder involving 17-year-olds are considered "mandatory bindovers." But the juvenile court judges are required to find that there is probable cause in the case, meaning that there is enough evidence to suggest the defendant committed the offense. This article originally appeared on Cincinnati Enquirer: Prosecutors: Musician was trying to call for help when he was killed

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