logo
Mourners arrive for funeral of Chicago police Officer Krystal Rivera

Mourners arrive for funeral of Chicago police Officer Krystal Rivera

Chicago Tribune5 hours ago

Mourners, including police officials from across the state, started to arrive before noon at Living Word Christian Center in Forest Park for the funeral of Chicago police Officer Krystal Rivera, the first such ceremony in 2025 for a CPD officer killed in the line of duty.
By 11:30 a.m., hundreds of Chicago patrol officers lined the driveway of the Forest Park shopping center where the center is located. They walked single-file around a large parking lot as piano music merged from inside the church. An American flag fluttered from a crane parked at the mouth of the driveway.
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker and Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson were in attendance along with department leaders.
Rivera, 36, a CPD officer for four years, was assigned to a tactical team in the Gresham District (6th) when she was mistakenly killed by her partner which chasing a suspect. She is survived by her adolescent daughter.
On June 5, Rivera and her team attempted to detain a weapons suspect in the 8200 block of South Drexel. That person ran into a nearby apartment, and Rivera and her team gave chase, police previously said. The officers were met inside by two other people, one of whom allegedly pointed a gun at Rivera.
Rivera's partner, apparently standing behind her, fired a single shot, striking her in the back. With no time to wait for an ambulance, other officers placed Rivera in a CPD squad car to take her to University of Chicago Medical Center. During the drive, though, the police vehicle somehow caught fire and Rivera was transferred to another squad car. She was pronounced dead soon after arriving at the hospital.
The Cook County medical examiner's office said she was shot once in the back. Her death was ruled a homicide, though her autopsy report hasn't been finalized. A CPD incident report stated Rivera was shot in her left flank, presumably near an opening in her bulletproof vest.
In the chaos following the gunfire, the three people in the apartment were able to, briefly, evade police. Two were soon taken into custody, and one man, Adrian Rucker, was charged two days later. Rucker, 25, had six warrants at the time of his arrest, according to prosecutors. He was charged with armed violence, use of a firearm without a firearm owner's identification card, possession of a fake ID and drug possession. He was ordered held pending trial.
Last weekend, authorities announced charges against the man who, police say, was the subject of the initial street stop that sparked the shooting. Jaylin Arnold, 27, was charged with armed violence, being a felon in possession of a firearm and possession of a controlled substance. Like Rucker, he was ordered held pending trial.
Less than a year ago, another officer in the Gresham District, Enrique Martinez, was fatally shot while on-duty less than a half-mile from where Rivera was shot.
' ]

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Bondi, Merkley tussle over Trump meme coin dinner
Bondi, Merkley tussle over Trump meme coin dinner

The Hill

time21 minutes ago

  • The Hill

Bondi, Merkley tussle over Trump meme coin dinner

Attorney General Pam Bondi tussled with Sen. Jeff Merkley (D-Ore.) on Wednesday as he pressed the head of the Department of Justice (DOJ) over foreign influence concerns related to President Trump's meme coin dinner. Merkley has repeatedly voiced concerns about Trump's involvement in the crypto space, including the dinner the president hosted for the top 220 investors in his $TRUMP token last month. 'I want to know if, when the president held his dinner for 220 individuals who purchased the most of his meme coins, were there foreign interests attending that dinner?' he asked Bondi, who appeared before the Senate Appropriations Committee on Wednesday. At least one notable foreign figure attended the dinner: Tron founder Justin Sun, who bought millions of dollars' worth of Trump's meme coin. The attorney general pushed back on Merkley's question, underscoring that she was there before the panel to discuss her agency's budget. 'Senator, we're here to talk about the Department of Justice and my budget for the upcoming year,' she said. 'I would think that you would want to talk about the leader of the Sinaloa Cartel, who was living in Oregon, one of the top leaders. I would think that that's what you would want to talk about with me.' Bondi appeared to be referring to the arrest of a man from Salem, Ore., last month, who is accused of leading a drug trafficking operation with connections to the Sinaloa Cartel. Merkley accused the attorney general of avoiding his question, arguing that those who attended Trump's dinner sought to influence U.S. policy. 'This solicitation of investments in his personal product, his meme coin, led to many people who were coming from foreign countries attending that dinner,' he said. 'Don't you think the American people have a right to know? You said yourself you're very concerned about foreign influence on our government.' She, in turn, slammed Merkley's comments as 'wildly offensive.' 'Senator, it is wildly offensive that you would accuse President Trump of not protecting American interests in our country, when he is the president that has shut down our borders, unlike Joe Biden,' Bondi said. 'President Trump has done everything to make America safe and … keep America safe,' she added. 'You're trying to play a gotcha question at a budget hearing when you have murders left and right in your state, violent crimes, and we are doing everything we can to help your liberal state.' Merkley also raised concerns about the stablecoin released by World Liberty Financial, the crypto venture launched by Trump and his sons last fall. The stablecoin was used to complete a high-profile $2 billion transaction between an Emirati firm and the crypto exchange Binance. Trump and his family have continued to expand their involvement in the industry throughout his second term, as his administration pushes to pass long-sought digital asset legislation. Beyond World Liberty Financial and the meme coin, Trump Media & Technology Group has also moved into the crypto space, raising $2.5 billion to create a bitcoin reserve and preparing to launch several new crypto-related assets.

Music promoter pleads guilty in two pharmaceutical drug cases in Miami
Music promoter pleads guilty in two pharmaceutical drug cases in Miami

Miami Herald

time38 minutes ago

  • Miami Herald

Music promoter pleads guilty in two pharmaceutical drug cases in Miami

A music promoter charged with distributing millions of dollars worth of 'adulterated' psychiatric, cancer and HIV medications and laundering the profits pleaded guilty in two Miami federal cases on Tuesday. Boris Arencibia, 51, who has been detained as a flight-risk to Cuba since his arrest last year, was convicted in one case of conspiring to traffic in medical products with false documentation between 2022 and 2023. In another case, Arencibia was also convicted of conspiring to commit money laundering stemming from a pharmaceutical drug-diversion scheme dating back a decade. His partner in the first case, Jose Armando Rivera, 44, who has been free on bond, also pleaded guilty on Tuesday to the same false documentation charge. Both Miami-Dade men face between three and five years at their sentencing in September before U.S. District Judge Darrin Gayles. Their plea agreements in the first scheme require them to pay $21 million to the federal government for its losses, Gayles said in court. Separately, Arencibia must pay a forfeiture judgment of $7 million in the money laundering case. According to a charging document, Arencibia and Rivera owned part of a Texas wholesale distributor, Eclipse Meds, LLC. They bought pharmaceutical drugs from people in Puerto Rico and the United States and used Eclipse Meds to distribute them to pharmacies in Miami-Dade and other parts of the country. The pharmacies, in turn, sold them to patients with private or government insurance plans, such as Medicare for senior citizens. To make the wholesale network look legitimate, they forged documents saying the adulterated pharmaceutical drugs came from licensed suppliers, according to federal prosecutors. Arencibia and Rivera, represented by defense attorneys Frank Quintero and Michael Band, agreed to the plea agreements with prosecutors Frank Tamen and Jacqueline Zee DerOvanesian, to avoid potentially higher prison sentences. 'Based on the facts that Mr. Arencibia has been held without bond since January 2024 and that he is not cooperating, we felt that it was in his best interest to resolve both cases if we could negotiate favorable agreements in both cases,' Quintero said in a statement. 'We accomplished that. However, the ultimate sentence in both cases will be up to the Judge.' Of the two defendants, Arencibia stands out for his controversial history as a music promoter. Until his arrest at his Kendall home in January of last year, Arencibia worked as the owner and president of South Florida-based Caribe Promotions. He represented musicians and boxers, including Cuban professional boxer Guillermo Rigondeaux. The promoter caught the ire of Miami's Cuban community after acknowledging that he was an organizer of the Santa María Music Fest in August 2023, which was deemed controversial by some due to its financial links to the Cuban military. A social media influencer from Kentucky got into a fight with Arencibia over the concert, but no one was charged.. In February of last year, a magistrate judge rejected Arencibia's bid for a bond and ordered that he be held at a federal lock-after finding he might flee to his native Cuba because of his contacts from the Santa María festival. The latest criminal case wasn't the first time Arencibia caught the attention of federal prosecutors. In 2000, Arencibia was accused of possessing equipment that could create fraudulent credit cards, according to Miami federal court records. He took a plea deal and was sentenced to six months in federal prison followed by three years of probation. Arencibia's permanent residency status in the United States was subsequently revoked.

Pregnant Alabama woman's heartbreak as husband accused of being ‘ex-Iranian Army sniper' by ICE
Pregnant Alabama woman's heartbreak as husband accused of being ‘ex-Iranian Army sniper' by ICE

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Pregnant Alabama woman's heartbreak as husband accused of being ‘ex-Iranian Army sniper' by ICE

An alleged ex-Iranian Army sniper, detained by ICE agents in Alabama, may now be forced to leave behind his pregnant wife as he faces deportation. Ribvar Karimi was among a group of 11 Iranian nationals who were arrested over the weekend and accused of being in the country illegally, the Department of Homeland Security said. The arrests came hours after President Donald Trump ordered a series of strikes against Iran. Karimi 'reportedly served as an Iranian Army sniper' between 2018 and 2021, the DHS said Tuesday. Upon his arrest Sunday, the man was accused of having in his possession an Islamic Republic of Iran Army identification card. He is currently being held in ICE custody, where the DHS said he will remain pending removal proceedings. Karimi allegedly entered the U.S. in October last year on a K-1 visa, which is issued to a foreign national who is a fiancé or fiancée of a U.S. citizen. The document requires a couple to marry within 90 days of entry. His wife, Morgan Karimi, said he came to the U.S. so the couple could get married. The DHS claims that Karimi 'never adjusted his status,' suggesting that the visa terms were broken because he either failed to apply for a green card or didn't marry within the required timeframe. The agency did not provide further information. Morgan Karimi, however, contests that she and Karimi did marry within the 90-day window and that her husband was mistakenly swept up in the Trump administration's immigration crackdown. The Blount County resident, who is 31 weeks pregnant, revealed she first met Karimi online in February 2019 while playing Call of Duty Mobile, according to a website dedicated to the couple's wedding. The couple was due to tie the knot on February 22 in Blountsville. 'He came to the U.S. LEGALLY on a K1 fiancé visa. We followed all the rules—got married within the 90-day window just like we were supposed to,' Morgan Karimi said of her husband in a Facebook plea. 'We've done everything by the book.' Morgan Karimi has asked for financial help from the local community to hire an immigration attorney 'to fight for his freedom and keep our family together.' In another Facebook post on Tuesday, Morgan shared a montage of photos of her husband sporting several items of clothes adorned with the star-spangled banner. One video appears to show Karimi running around, jubilantly, waving the American flag. 'There is no one who deserves to be here more than this man. He loves our country,' she wrote. Morgan said she has managed to make contact with her husband in ICE custody, who said he is worried both about her and their unborn child. Her Facebook page chronicles the couple's relationship and their efforts to attain a visa for Karimi. On April 18, Morgan shared a picture of an ultrasound scan of the couple's baby. On September 21 last year, she asked for recommendations on how the couple could make their wedding more affordable 'because the visa process hasn't been cheap.' Three days later, Morgan shared that Karimi's visa had 'FINALLY been approved,' adding: 'Let the wedding planning begin!' According to screenshots shared on her Facebook profile, Karimi's case was approved on January 3, 2023. His visa application was allegedly first received in September 2021, according to the social media post. In a photo from August 2022, Karimi was photographed wearing a t-shirt clearly labeled with a black and white American flag on its chest. In May 2021, Morgan Karimi updated her Facebook status to say that she was engaged. Following the near-dozen ICE arrests over the weekend, the DHS rallied behind their aggressive immigration raids, vying to get the 'worst of the worst out.' 'Under Secretary Noem, DHS has been full throttle on identifying and arresting known or suspected terrorists and violent extremists that illegally entered this country, came in through Biden's fraudulent parole programs or otherwise,' DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said. 'We have been saying we are getting the worst of the worst out—and we are.' The Independent has contacted the DHS for more information.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store