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  • Deadly Minneapolis ICE shooting echoes Franklin Park, Marimar Martinez shootings during Operation Midway Blitz

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    The fatal shooting of a woman by a U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent in Minneapolis on Wednesday recalls shootings by federal immigration agents in Chicago during the height of Operation Midway Blitz in the fall.

    Minneapolis police said federal agents and local protesters clashed starting around 9:30 a.m. near East 34th Street and Portland Avenue. Witnesses told CBS News Minnesota they saw a Honda Pilot blocked by multiple federal agents, and an agent trying to open the driver’s side door, where a woman was seated in the driver’s seat.

    The woman put her car into reverse, then into drive, and then three shots were fired, witnesses said. When the woman was pulled from the Pilot, paramedics could be seen giving her CPR. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security confirmed the woman died, and claimed the agent fired out of “fear for his life” as she allegedly tried to ram him, and that it was an incident of “domestic terrorism.”

    The woman was identified as 37-year-old Renee Good. City leaders said she was a legal observer of federal immigration agents as they conduct operations in the Twin Cities, and that she wasn’t the target of an immigration arrest.

    The incident may sound familiar to people in the Chicago area, as it recalls two shootings last fall at the height of Operation Midway Blitz. 

    ICE agent shoots, kills undocumented immigrant in Franklin Park

    On Sept. 12, 2025, an ICE agent shot and killed an undocumented immigrant from Mexico in Franklin Park, Illinois.

    DHS claimed at the time that 38-year-old Silvero Villegas-Gonzalez, a father of two, had tried to use his car to drive into agents when they tried to detain him. DHS officials also claimed the ICE agent who opened fire had been dragged by the car and suffered “severe injuries.”

    But surveillance video from two local businesses showed Villegas-Gonzalez backing up and driving away while an agent was on either side of his car; the agent on the passenger side continues standing there, but the agent at the driver’s side can’t be seen.

    And in body cam video released two weeks later, the agent is heard describing his own injuries as “nothing major” after the shooting.

    “I got dragged a little bit,” the agent says in the video.

    DHS claimed that Villegas-Gonzalez was being targeted by ICE agents because of a criminal history that included reckless driving, but CBS News Chicago investigators found that he only had a record of four traffic violations between 2010 and 2019 for offenses that included speeding, an expired driver’s license, not having insurance and not having a child restraint seat.

    Attorney Manuel Carednas, who represented Villegas-Gonzalez in two of those cases, said his client, while undocumented, was respectful, hardworking and compliant with all court instructions regarding his traffic violations.

    “If he had to go to court he would go to court. If he had to pay a fine or he had to do anything the court required, he was very compliant,” Cardenas said.

    Woman shot by federal agents, accused of “ramming” officers

    On Oct. 5, 2025, federal agents shot a woman in the city’s Brighton Park neighborhood after DHS officials said they had been “boxed in” by protesters opposing immigration enforcement operations in the neighborhood.

    DHS claimed U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents were “boxed in by 10 cars,” and that one driver had a gun, which they claimed was a semi-automatic weapon. As a result, DHS said, agents opened fire, striking the driver. The agents fired five shots while the driver was still inside her car.

    The driver was later identified as 31-year-old Marimar Martinez. She was not seriously injured and was able to drive away from the scene. Paramedics found her and her car at a repair shop about a mile away, at which time they were able to take her to a hospital where she was treated and released.

    Less than a week later, a federal grand jury indicted Martinez and her passenger, 21-year-old Anthony Ian Santos Ruiz, for assault and attempted murder of a federal employee in the incident. They claimed she had rammed the agent’s SUV before he opened fire.

    While DHS claimed Martinez had a semi-automatic weapon, she did not face any gun charges.

    Martinez pleaded not guilty, and it came out in court that the Border Patrol agent who shot Martinez had been allowed to drive that SUV back to Maine, more than 1,000 miles away, despite being central evidence in the trial. Martinez’s attorney sought a hearing to determine whether federal authorities improperly destroyed evidence in the cranial case against her by allowing the SUV to be taken back to Maine.

    Then, near the end of November, federal prosecutors dropped all charges against Martinez and Ruiz. The charges were dismissed with prejudice, meaning prosecutors cannot refile them in the future.

    “These agents were lying about what happened. Ms. Martinez never rammed anybody. These agents hit Ms. Martinez. These agents jumped out and shot Ms. Martinez, a U.S. citizen, whose only crime was warning her fellow community members that ICE was in the neighborhood,” said attorney Christopher Parente, who represented Martinez. “That is not a crime. She didn’t deserve to be shot.”

    Parente said there is another investigation with a separate U.S. Attorney’s office to hold the agent who shot his client responsible for the incident, but no further developments in that case have been shared. 

    Illinois politicians condemn Minneapolis ICE shooting

    Politicians in Illinois moved swiftly to condemn the Minneapolis shooting.

    “This is Donald Trump’s America: a woman is dead because ICE is operating with impunity in our neighborhoods,” wrote U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL 8th) in a statement. “This horrific loss of life is devastating and never should have happened. My heart is with her family and loved ones, who are now grieving a senseless tragedy. I will be demanding full answers and accountability from the Trump administration. When federal agents are unleashed without restraint or oversight, the consequences are deadly—and the responsibility for this killing is on their hands.”  

    “Today’s tragic shooting once again proves that ICE is not in our cities to protect people or for public safety. They are separating families, not only by distance and countries—but by death. My sincere condolences are with the family and loved ones of the woman who died,” wrote U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly (D-IL 2nd). ”  As details come forward about the shooting, I urge the truth to come to light. The city of Chicago knows all too well that DHS Secretary Kristi Noem only lies. After the deadly shooting of Silverio Villegas González during a traffic stop, Secretary Noem tried to hide the truth, but bodycam footage disproved injuries sustained by the ICE officer. The Minneapolis Mayor has already said that video disputes Secretary Noem’s claims. It’s clear that to achieve public safety, ICE must leave our cities immediately.”

    “The brutal, unnecessary shooting death of a woman in Minneapolis today by an ICE officer is a shocking and devastating tragedy and a stain on our entire nation,” wrote U.S. Rep. Brad Schneider (D-IL 2nd). “The agents carrying out these ICE raids are federal officers with a sacred duty to uphold the law and protect our communities, not terrorize them. Those officers responsible for today’s horrific shooting must face a thorough investigation and be held to full account for their actions. Sending strength to the Minneapolis community. Chicagoland knows all too well the trauma and terror Trump’s chaotic immigration operations bring to otherwise peaceful communities. Our President should be making America and Americans safer. He is failing.”

    Mayor Brandon Johnson, in a social media post, spoke on the shooting in Minneapolis and how it is similar to incidents in Chicago, and the city stands in solidarity with Minneapolis.

    “The video that many of us have seen of I.C.E. officers fatally shooting a woman at point-blank range is deeply disturbing and, unfortunately, all too similar to incidents that have transpired here in Chicago. No community deserves to be subjected to the terror that’s stemming from this president’s use of I.C.E. as his personal militarized force,” he said.

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  • Emmanuel Episcopal brings world class musicians to La Grange for ‘Messiah’ performance

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    About 250 people became the chorus last week as La Grange’s Emmanuel Episcopal Church brought to life George Frederic Handel’s “Messiah” at the church on Kensington Avenue, backing four soloists in the rendition of the Christmas classic.

    Mary Hopper, emeritus professor of Choral Music at Wheaton College, conducted the performance.

    “This is great and such a great experience,” Hopper said before the performance. “People really enjoyed singing last year and I enjoyed that.”

    Hopper described Handel’s most famous work as one that resonates with the American people.

    “It’s the story of Christmas and the story of the Gospel,” she said. “It’s got music that’s familiar, probably the most familiar piece of classical music that anybody has.”

    During her 43 years at Wheaton College, Hopper directed the Women’s Chorale and the Men’s Glee Club. She has toured nationally and internationally.

    Since 2018, Hopper has been director of the Hinsdale Chorale, several of whose members were dispersed through the crowd at Emmanuel Episcopal for the performance, singing along to the choruses.

    The oratorio, written in only 24 days by the German-born master, is considered among the most recognizable pieces of English language music.

    The Messiah was first performed in Ireland in 1741, and quickly became a favorite of music-lovers of the era. While it originally was considered appropriate for the Easter Holiday, over the years “Messiah” has become a Christmas staple.

    Oratorios are typically large-scale music works for orchestra and voices, focusing on religious themes; “Messiah” is no exception, with lyrics taken from scripture.

    Chicago-based soprano Olivia Doig, who has performed in venues throughout the Midwest, also returned after performing in last year’s rendition in La Grange.

    “Last year I was eight months pregnant and this year I’m not,” Doig said after the performance, “But my children are here this year.”

    Doig is a veteran of venues like the Chicago Opera Theater, Ohio Light Opera, and the Haymarket Opera. She is currently a guest lecturer in voice studies at Wheaton College.

    Other performers included mezzo soprano Janet Mensen Reynolds, who retired after 26 years in the chorus of the Chicago Lyric Opera, made her concert debut at Carnegie Hall, and currently has a private voice studio of 25 students. Baritone Ryan Cox has been a professional member of the Grant Park Chorus and the Chicago Symphony Chorus, and was the baritone soloist in the 2010 recording of Grant Park’s Pulitzer Project. Lyric Opera tenor Joseph Fosselman has been with the Opera since 1992 and has performed many solo roles in Lyric productions.

    The Kaia String Quartet, dedicated to bringing the music of Latin America to the public, provided the instrumentation for the performance. The group has performed at many Chicago-area venues, including the Chicago Jazz Fest, the Studebaker Theatre, the Morton Arboretum, the Chicago Latino Music Festival, and Chamber Music on the Fox.

    But some artists were first-timers for Emmanuel Episcopal Church’s new tradition.

    Harpsichordist Kathy Christian has served on the music faculty of North Central College in Naperville for 26 years. She is the organist and pianist for the First Congregational Church of Western Springs, as well as the accompanist for Hinsdale Chorale.

    Organist Bobby Nguyen, a native of Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, is the organist at the First United Church of Oak Park. He began his piano studies at Ho Chi Minh Conservatory of Music, continued his education at North Park University and ultimately studied organ at the Juilliard School.

    “At first when Mary contacted me a few months ago, I was a bit worried,” Nguyen said. “The Messiah is a pretty big piece and when I showed up here everything was very casual feeling, a friendly atmosphere, so I said, ‘oh, I can do this.’”

    Dan Mottl, junior warden at Emmanuel Episcopal Church, said bringing the performance back this year was an easy choice.

    “We were pretty confident because of the response from last year,” he said before the performance. “We had a good turnout, the excitement was building and people were saying ‘I hope you do this every year. It was planned to be an annual event and it looks like it’s catching on.”

    Mottl talked about bringing together different artists who normally didn’t work together.

    “We assembled them from all over the neighborhood, some were from La Grange, some from Wheaton, some from Chicago,” he said. “So we assembled the best singers and best musicians that we knew. The Kaia String Quartet was wonderful. So we brought all these people together.

    “Of course Mary Hopper was the key. She knew a lot of the people, but this is independent from anything she had worked on before.”

    After the show, Mottl said “everything was great. It’s probably better than last year.”

    Audience members came away impressed and inspired.

    La Grange resident Nanci Davidson, a member of Emmanuel Episcopal Choir, was also part of the effort to bring the Messiah to the church last year.

    “Oh my gosh this is the best community event this church could be doing,” Nanci said. “It brings everyone together at a very tumultuous time — depending on how you sit — and it sets you off in this wonderful, joyous mood in the holidays.”

    Western Springs resident Janet Helin agreed.

    “It’s just such a thrill,” she said. “Especially when you think of all those who would like to sing it, and especially the text that came up in our sermon this morning. Handel composed this in 24 days. It’s hard to even conceive of this whole thing.”

    Hank Beckman is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press. 

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    Hank Beckman

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  • Clarendon Hills police join Hinsdale and other departments for social worker services

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    Police departments from Clarendon Hills, Hinsdale, Burr Ridge and Willowbrook have formed a team that will enable them to provide additional services by sharing a social worker from Northeast DuPage Family and Youth Services.

    The Hinsdale, Burr Ridge and Willowbrook departments put the Police Social Work Program in place for fiscal year 2025, said Clarendon Hills police Chief Ed Leinweber. He said he and acting village manager Paul Dalen were approached in September by Hinsdale police Chief Brian King about getting involved in the program.

    The cost now is just over $23,000 for a year for each of the four departments. Clarendon Hills becomes part of the local group Jan. 1.

    Leinweber said each department will have the social worker in-house one day per week for 10 hours.

    “The social worker also has the flexibility to respond to one of the other towns, should there be an active critical incident where their services could be utilized,” he said, adding that the social worker would provided services to children, adolescents, adults and families of all backgrounds.

    Leinweber said the social worker would focus on mental health incident follow-up, on-site response to mental health incidents, case management, short-term counseling to achieve crisis stabilization, suicide & mental health assessments, assistance with DCFS calls, homelessness, food insecurity and other basic needs, 24/7 on-call coverage for social service emergencies, ”walk-in” services for residents during designated office hours, domestic violence counseling, safety planning and resource assistance, outreach and training for residents and village officials and community meetings and events.

    “Many police departments are moving toward having a social worker on staff, either on a part-time or full-time capacity,” Leinweber said. “There has been a lot of interest nationwide to have social workers work with police departments in responding to calls involving mental health crisis and domestic violence.  Mental health crisis and domestic violence calls are two of the more common calls for service received by police departments.”

    Leinweber said police and village officials believe partnering with Northeast DuPage Family and Youth Services will further strengthen the commitment to promoting the mental health and social needs of the Clarendon Hills community.

    “We look forward to working with NEDFYS and our neighboring villages in an effort to provide the best police service possible,” he said.

    Chuck Fieldman is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press.

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    Chuck Fieldman

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  • Hinsdale-Clarendon Hills District 181 schools grade well on state report card

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    As has been the norm, Hinsdale-Clarendon Hills Elementary District 181 performed very well on the recent Illinois Report Card for schools in the state.

    “District 181 is proud of its nine outstanding schools,” said Karen O’Connor, District 181’s director of communications. “All of our schools across the district are scoring in the top academic tier of student achievement in the state.

    O’Connor said the Report Card reflects the district’s performance data from the 2024–2025 school year.

    “This is just one component in a larger system of data that provides us with information on how District 181 schools are progressing on a variety of educational goals,” she said.

    Elm, Madison, Prospect, The Lane, and Walker schools were designated as “Exemplary,” while Clarendon Hills Middle School, Hinsdale Middle School, Monroe and Oak schools were in the “Commendable” category.

    To be designated as an Exemplary, schools must have a performance in the top 10% of schools statewide, no underperforming student groups. Commendable schools have a performance that is not in the top 10% of schools statewide and also have no underperforming student groups.

    None of the District 181 schools fell into the other categories used by the ISBE: •Targeted: Schools, where at least one student group is performing at or below the level of the “all students” group in the lowest-performing 5% of schools. These schools receive targeted support and enter a four-year improvement cycle.

    • Comprehensive: Schools, which are in the lowest-performing 5% of Title I-eligible schools in Illinois, or any high school with a graduation rate of 67% or lower. These schools receive comprehensive support and funding through a four-year improvement cycle.

    • Intensive, which is a designation for schools that are in the lowest-performing category. These schools also enter a four-year cycle of continuous improvement and receive additional support and funding.

    “Our summative designations of Exemplary and Commendable provide us with opportunities to celebrate our strengths and reflect on our goals so every student can reach their fullest potential,” O’Connor said.

    She said that according to the state’s targets, the district is one of the highest-performing elementary districts, exceeding all of the state’s academic targets for student proficiency on state-mandated assessments.

    During the 2024-2025 school year 88.6% of District 181 students were proficient in English Language Arts (the state average was 52.4%); 83.9% were proficient in Math (the state average was 38.4%; and 78.4% were proficient in Science, above the state average of 44.6%.

    “These indicators, designations, and associated index scores confirm D181 schools’ status as among the state’s top elementary and middle schools,” O’Connor said.

    She said It’s essential to recognize that attendance is a factor in the ISBE rating system, which can negatively impact a school’s score, even if a student is performing exceptionally well academically.

    The ISBE is in the midst of a redesign of the accountability system.

    “Designations and indicators will change, starting next year, and we will continue to respond to the shifting expectations to best meet the needs of our learners and community,” O’Connor said.

    “As with any rating system, we remain committed to reviewing the information and looking for opportunities to enhance our efforts.”

    Chuck Fieldman is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press. 

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  • Elmhurst University’s new $30 million Health Sciences building offers ‘hands-on’ clinic, community services

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    The new 45,000-square-foot Health Sciences Building at Elmhurst University opened Oct. 3 amid ribbon-cutting pomp. The state-of-the-art facility now houses the Departments of Nursing, Public Health, Occupational Therapy, and Communication Sciences and Disorders.

    The $30 million building was financed through existing funds from philanthropic gifts, grants and reserve funds, officials said.

    “The institution needed it, the community needed it,” said Heather Hall, dean of the School of Health Sciences and professor in the Department of Kinesiology. “It is allowing our various health professions across campus to come together into one space.”

    The Nursing Department alone has 436 students. There are 166 in the Communication Sciences and Disorders program and 54 in the Masters of Occupational Therapy program.

    Hall said the building makes it possible for the university to foster Interprofessional Practice and Education methods, and it also means the school no longer has to use Elmhurst Memorial Hospital.

    “We were able to bring all of that learning to campus,” Hall said.

    Bringing all of the departments under the same roof has been “transformational and game-changing for us,” said Becky Hulett, chair of the Department of Nursing and Public Health, and associate professor of Nursing. “Our faculties now collaborate every day.”

    The new building’s facilities also enable some specialization in teaching, Hall said, while expanding services available to the community.

    “Increased space has tremendously assisted us in separating some of the underclassmen from the upperclassmen in their learning environment,” she said. “We’ve been able to expand our Speech-Language-Hearing Clinic which serves the community. We have more treatment rooms, a larger waiting room, additional reserved parking.”

    Consequently, they are able to treat more clients, Hall noted. That includes school age children in the afternoons.

    Elmhurst University nursing students, from left, Diana Ferrer of Northlake, Gianna Imperatrice of Bartlett, America Magana of Elgin, and Krystina Gaytan of Bartlett, perform a respiratory and cardiac assessment on a simulated patient in the university’s new Health Sciences Building. (Elmhurst University)

    Hall was excited about the state-of-the-art equipment in the new building, as well as its new Activities of Daily Living Lab for occupational therapy.

    “It’s an actual apartment that is set up with a bathroom, bathtub, shower, living room, bed, kitchen,” Hall said. “The students have an opportunity to practice what it will be like simulating real life experiences working with clients.”

    Hall said community members are invited to come on certain days, free of charge, to be evaluated by second-year master’s degree students, who will offer tips about improving their daily living activities.

    “We have a much bigger low-fidelity lab where we have new low-fidelity mannequins,” Hulett said. Curtains separating beds make each space look like a hospital room, she noted. There is classroom space in the middle of the lab.

    “Our students can learn how to take blood pressure, learn how to do things, and then immediately go to the bed and practice those skills on low-fidelity mannequins,” Hulett said.

    Simulation labs are equipped with high-fidelity mannequins that can breathe, sweat, have seizures, and respond to treatment.

    There are baby and adult mannequins, and mannequins of different skin colors.

    “We are the only school in the Midwest that has a 360-degree immersive virtual reality room,” Hulett said. “This room is going to allow our students to experience patient rooms, patient conditions before they’re stepping into a situation in a hospital with real patients.”

    Hall said that immersive experience will benefit Elmhurst students as well as their patients down the road.

    “The bottom line is that we want to have a hands-on learning environment — one that mirrors the complexity of the demands of a real-world clinical setting,” she said.

    Myrna Petlicki is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press.

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  • Flag football offers female athletes another outlet for sports, and scholarships

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    Very few female athletes could have seen this coming when they entered high school in 2022.

    Flag football scholarships? Really?

    It would have been almost impossible for athletes in Illinois to think about back then because schools were not offering the sport on a varsity level. But two years ago, it was a club sport sponsored in part by the Chicago Bears.

    Last year, the Illinois High School Association sanctioned flag football and Fremd High School in Palatine became the sport’s first state champion. This year, 216 teams have entered the postseason, which starts Oct. 6.

    Colleges have taken notice and Triton College in River Grove is one of the first in the Chicago area that will offer scholarships for flag football starting in 2026.

    “This is exciting news for Triton Athletics,” Garrick Abezetian, associate vice president of Triton College Athletics said in a news release. “Flag football has seen immense popularity recently, and this is an opportunity for us to contribute to that movement and offer more for Triton students and our community. I can’t wait to see everyone out on the field.”

    According to womenscollegeflagfootball.com, there are 29 members of the National Junior College Athletic Association  that have either announced teams or have active varsity squads. Triton joins the College of DuPage as community college teams planning on starting up programs in the Chicago area for the 2026 season.

    The website said there are hundreds of college club teams.

    There are also only two NCAA Division I varsity teams with three on the way, and 14 Division II teams with 10 more coming. There are 21 Division III schools with 24 coming including Aurora and North Park. There are 32 NAIA teams with 12 more announced.

    Oak Park River and Forest High School senior Elianna Brucato already has locked in Illinois Wesleyan in Bloomington as her college choice for academics and flag football, but she is happy a school close to home is offering opportunities.

    Oak Park and River Forest quarterback Julia Henderson prepares to pass the ball during a Sept. 22 game against against St. Laurence in Burbank. (Jeff Vorva/Daily Southtown)

    “I think it would be great if the colleges around us would have teams,” Brucato said after a recent game against St. Laurence in Burbank. “It would be cool to see the sport grow even more.”

    St. Laurence’s Sara Burzycki is weighing her options and seeing what’s out there.

    “I’ve been doing a little bit of research,” she said. “There are not a lot of colleges that offer scholarships for flag football but there are a lot who offer it as a club team.

    “Expanding flag football in colleges is a good thing. It’s a really good sport.”

    OPRF’s Tabia Allen, who is also considering Illinois Wesleyan, said she is glad Triton is offering flag football and hopes that the many small colleges in the area follow suit.

    “Any schools like Triton or Concordia who would offer flag football would be amazing regardless of what level it is,” she said.

    St. Laurence senior Ciyah Thomas, who has played basketball at Bolingbrook and Hammond Central high schools, is looking at colleges for both basketball and flag football.

    St. Laurence High School athlete Sara Burzycki hauls down a touchdown pass against Oak Park and River Forest High School during a Sept. 22 flag football game in Burbank. (Jeff Vorva/Daily Southtown)
    St. Laurence High School athlete Sara Burzycki hauls down a touchdown pass against Oak Park and River Forest High School during a Sept. 22 flag football game in Burbank. (Jeff Vorva/Daily Southtown)

    “My mind is still open. I’m definitely looking to play both sports in college because I have a passion for it,” she said. “I’ve played football my whole life. I never thought about getting a scholarship for it.”

    St. Laurence coach Steve Vodicka said that last year two Vikings players committed to Graceland University and thinks there will be more college interest to come.

    “The Graceland coach came out to meet the players and showed the opportunity they had for them,” Vodicka said. “Two of them ran with it and I feel a lot more are going to continue to see what that opportunity is like, especially when it comes to scholarships and getting financial aid.

    “I can see that growing, especially in the state of Illinois and Chicago area.”

    St. Laurence High School defensive back Evalin Campos-Cuellar intercepts an Oak Park pass in the endzone during a Sept. 22 flag football game in Burbank. (Jeff Vorva/Daily Southtown)
    St. Laurence High School defensive back Evalin Campos-Cuellar intercepts an Oak Park pass in the endzone during a Sept. 22 flag football game in Burbank. (Jeff Vorva/Daily Southtown)

    Triton is getting some financial support for its new venture, including a $5,000 grant from the NJCAA Foundation, NFL FLAG, and Reigning Champs Experiences.

    “The decision supports strategic enrollment and athletic program growth for our institution,” Triton President Mary-Rita Moore said in a news release. “Equally important is that this investment supports our community’s passion for Trojan athletics and the growing interest nationwide in flag football as an emerging sport for women. This is how a public community college can make a positive difference in the lives of our students.”

    Jeff Vorva is a freelance reporter. 

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  • Senate candidates Robin Kelly, Juliana Stratton make their pitches at Oak Park forum

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    Contrasting styles were on display Saturday morning when two of the three Democratic candidates running to succeed retiring U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin appeared before approximately 100 people at the Oak Park Public Library in an event organized by the Democratic Party of Oak Park.

    Congresswoman Robin Kelly and Lieutenant Governor Juliana Stratton spoke, but the third major candidate, Congressman Raja Krishnamoorthi, who was also invited, called to cancel the night before the event. Krishnamoorthi, a prodigious fundraiser, has raised the most money in the campaign thus far and is the only candidate who has run extensive television advertising.

    Both candidates appeared separately before the crowd. They first spoke for a little less than 10 minutes and then answered questions for about 20 minutes.

    Kelly, who some have said is too nice for politics, spoke first and was calm and thoughtful. She stressed her experience as an experienced congresswoman while Stratton was much more animated and fiery, pitching herself as a fighter.

    “We need fighters in Washington who will stand and go to the mat fighting for the people in Illinois,” Stratton said. “I want to be that fighter for you.”

    Stratton suggested that times demand more than normal politics

    “People have told me I’m not looking for someone to go along just to get along, nobody wants to see that,” Stratton said. “But I’m not looking for the same old, same old. People are looking for bold, courageous leadership and they’re looking for people to not only tell us what we’re fighting against but what we’re fighting for.”

    While Kelly stressed her experience in Congress and her role in passing legislation, Stratton said that the current situation demands much more than that.

    “I don’t see my role as your next United States senator just to pass legislation, although that’s a big part of the role,” Stratton said. “I do not see my role as your next United States senator to just have a bully pulpit and to speak with moral clarity although I believe that that is my role, I also see my role to push our party to be courageous and bold.”

    While Kelly stressed the need to work with Republicans and craft legislation that can pass, Stratton said she doesn’t want Democrats to compromise in the upcoming showdown and advocated shutting down the government if Republicans refuse to budge.

    Illinois Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton discusses her candidacy for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by retiring Sen. Dick Durbin during a forum Sept. 13 at the Oak Park Public Library. (Bob Skolnik/Pioneer Press)

    “This is not a normal budget showdown because we don’t have a normal president,” Stratton said. “And if the president and congressional Republicans are not going to come to the table in good faith and as far as I’m concerned if they’re going to strip away health care and they’re going to strip away funding for critical federal services and think we’re going to compromise I say shut it down.”

    Kelly, who since 2013 has represented the 2nd Congressional District, which runs from the south side of Chicago all the way to Danville, stressed her experience not only in Congress but as a state legislator, along with stints in administrative positions in state, county and municipal government.

    “I know the job, I’m enjoying the job, I know how to build relationships. I know you have to resist now. I know how to work across the aisle,” Kelly said. “I’ve been in Congress 12 ½ years, I’ve only been in the majority for four years of those 12 ½ years so if you can’t work with people that are different than you, you’re not going to get things done. And I think the public wants us to get things done.”

    Kelly said she is ready for the job.

    “When Dick Durbin leaves we need someone that can hit the ground running and ladies and gentlemen I am that person,” Kelly said. “I have built relationships in the House of course but also in the Senate. I have worked with Democrats and Republicans in the Senate to get things done.”

    Kelly also noted that people want Democrats to resist and said that she is ready to do that, but said that she will remain true to her moral compass.

    “They resist us to resist,” Kelly said. “I don’t give up my values for anyone and I don’t give up my joy for anyone. I love my job.”

    Both candidates spoke mostly in generalities, as most candidates do.

    Although Stratton pitched herself as a fighter she also said that she has worked as a mediator and said during her short stint as a state representative she made it a point to get to know her Republican colleagues and worked with them to get 10 bills passed.

    Both candidates seemed to impress the audience but in different ways.

    “Of these two I thought that Juliana looked like she would be the stronger fighter,” said Oak Parker Gene Armstrong. “Robin might be the stronger legislator but I’m kind of the view that right now we need a stronger fighter.”

    Gail Ginsberg, of Oak Park, thought the event was eye opening. Going in, she knew the most about Krishnamoorthi due to his extensive television advertising but said both Stratton and Kelly impressed her.

    “I thought it was a terrific, terrific event today. Very sorry that Raja Krishnamoorthi wasn’t here,” Ginsberg said. “It would have been so important to see him in contrast to the two candidates that we heard from, but I thought they were both terrific. They both impressed me in different ways.”

    Bob Skolnik is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press.

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  • Illinois officials demand release of video in deadly shooting involving ICE officer in Franklin Park

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    FRANKLIN PARK, Ill. (WLS) — An Illinois congressman is among those who are calling for all video of the deadly shooting involving an ICE officer in the west suburbs to be released by federal officials.

    The shooting happened in Franklin Park on Friday.

    ABC7 Chicago is now streaming 24/7. Click here to watch

    U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement spokesperson said its officers were conducting “targeted law enforcement activity,” and during a vehicle stop, a man, who ICE says was a suspect, resisted arrest and tried to drive his car into the arrest team.

    The man struck an officer, dragging him as he tried to flee the scene, ICE said. The officer shot the man, who was later identified as Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez. The Department of Homeland Security described him as an undocumented immigrant with a criminal history of reckless driving.

    ICE said the man was taken to a local hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The officer suffered severe injuries and is stable, ICE and DHS said.

    Congressman Jesús “Chuy” García says all video of the incident should be released.

    “We want to know everything about what occurred and for all evidence to be put forward publicly so the public can make its own conclusions, but this was totally preventable, unnecessary and most tragic,” García said.

    Illinois Governor JB Pritzker has also called for transparency in the investigation into the shooting.

    ABC7 reached out to ICE for comment and to see if the officers involved were wearing cameras, but has not yet heard back yet.

    The family of Villegas-Gonzalez told ABC7 he was a father from Mexico, working at a restaurant in the Portage Park area, and has been in the United States for decades. His shooting death is sparking outrage.

    This deadly encounter came as ICE operations have ramped in the Chicago area within the last few weeks. Around 300 ICE agents are stationed just north of city.

    To the man’s girlfriend and stepdaughter, Villegas-Gonzalez was a working 38-year-old father of three from Mexico who’s lived in the United States for more than 20 years.

    Cellphone video obtained by ABC 7 showed the moment with ICE officers removed the man from his crashed car near Grand and Elder Lane.

    “He got a hole on his head and bleeding, so both men, they tried to help and cover with a band-aid, his neck,” witness Victoria Connolly said.

    Congressman García spoke at the scene Friday with other politicians, shortly after flying from the nation’s capital.

    “Look, without a doubt, there’s massive racial, ethnic profiling that’s taking place and it’s shameful,” García said.

    Governor Pritzker posted a statement to X Friday, saying, “I am aware of the troubling incident that has unfolded in Franklin Park. This is a developing situation and the people of Illinois deserve a full, factual accounting of what’s happened today to ensure transparency and accountability.”

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  • Illinois Democrats call for investigation of fatal shooting of Franklin Park man by ICE agent

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    Hours after U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents fatally shot a man in Franklin Park, U.S. Rep. Jesus “Chuy” Garcia, a Democrat from Chicago, called for a full investigation of the shooting at a news conference Friday night held in tandem with local officials and immigrant rights leaders.

    He spoke over a loud group of protesters who called out, “Don’t investigate, abolish ICE!” The shouts drowned him out and aides brought him a microphone.

    Garcia condemned the U.S. Department of Homeland Security for “judging an individual who was killed by one of their agents” and “casting him in the worst light.” He said he met with the man’s family after the shooting.

    Asked whether the agents had been wearing body cameras, Garcia said he was not aware.

    The man who was killed, identified by federal officers as Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, 38, was fatally shot after he allegedly tried to flee a traffic stop and struck an officer with his vehicle, leaving him with serious injuries.

    The shooting in the typically quiet, working-class northwest suburb, which has a population that is more than half Hispanic, immediately brought calls for transparency from Illinois political leaders and condemnation from activists who decried the “aggressive” tactics of immigration agents.

    Federal officials, meanwhile, said the officer who opened fire acted appropriately and in fear for his life. He was recovering from severe leg injuries Friday at a local hospital, where his condition had stabilized.

    The Department of Homeland Security said in a written statement that Villegas-Gonzalez is a citizen of Mexico and was in the U.S. illegally, though further details were not provided.

    According to DHS, immigration officers conducted a vehicle stop Friday morning to arrest Villegas-Gonzalez, who has a record of reckless driving offenses.

    Records show that a man whose name and age matches Villegas-Gonzalez has received a number of traffic tickets in Cook County, but an initial search by the Tribune revealed no criminal incidents locally.

    Villegas-Gonzalez “refused to follow law enforcement commands and drove his car” at officers, striking one of the ICE agents and dragging him “a significant distance,” the DHS statement said. “Fearing for his life, the officer discharged his firearm and struck the subject.”

    Both the agent and Villegas-Gonzalez were taken to nearby Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, where Villegas-Gonzalez was pronounced dead, authorities said.

    At Friday night’s news conference, state Rep. Norma Hernandez, a Melrose Park Democrat, said Villegas-Gonzalez had only a traffic violation when agents stopped him Friday.

    “We don’t trust you and we don’t want you here,” she said. “We need to abolish ICE. You cannot get rid of the 14 million undocumented immigrants here.”

    U.S. Rep. Delia Ramirez, a Chicago Democrat, and other public officials on the city’s Northwest Side, condemned the shooting and also called for an investigation.

    “We demand a full and thorough investigation into what happened today. DHS is not above the law,” the statement released Friday said. “They should immediately release all body camera footage, warrants, and relevant information on this case. Our community deserves answers and accountability, not the scapegoating of our most vulnerable.”

    One of Villegas-Gonzalez’s Franklin Park neighbors said he had a girlfriend and two young kids, and he believed he worked at a factory or warehouse.

    Several videos surfaced quickly on social media Friday showing the disturbing aftermath of the shooting.

    One, taken by a bystander from across the street, showed two officers in front of a gray sedan that had smashed into the side of a semitruck. The officers could be seen opening the driver’s side door and dragging a limp Villegas-Gonzalez to the side of the road.

    A local activist who was out in the area documenting ICE patrols Friday morning posted another video to his Facebook profile where a truck driver could be heard talking to emergency dispatchers. The camera then pans over to Villegas-Gonzalez, who is lying on the side of the road bleeding, with his hands apparently restrained behind his back. The two officers who removed him from the car are kneeling over him, calling for help and putting on gloves.

    The fatal shooting occurred just days after Trump’s administration announced it was beginning a surge of immigration law enforcement in Chicago, dubbing it “Operation Midway Blitz” and claiming it would target “criminal illegal aliens” who have taken advantage of the city and state’s sanctuary policies.

    The announcement marked the first official word from the Trump administration about increased immigration enforcement after Trump vacillated between vows of “going in” to Chicago with the potential deployment of National Guard troops to fight overall crime, to a stepped-up immigration enforcement role by ICE agents.

    By Friday night, about 25 protesters stood by a small memorial of candles and flowers along Grand Avenue, near the site of the shooting.

Originally Published:

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  • ICE agent shoots, kills man in Franklin Park, Illinois, after suspect tries to drive into agents, DHS says

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    A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed a man in Franklin Park, Illinois Friday morning after authorities say he attempted to drive into agents.

    A Department of Homeland Security official first told CBS News the agent was trying to make an arrest, which the man resisted and tried to drive his vehicle into agents. The agent then opened fire.

    ICE officials confirmed the fatal shooting, saying the incident began with “targeted law enforcement activity.”

    “During a vehicle stop, the suspect resisted and attempted to drive his vehicle into the arrest team, striking an officer and subsequently dragging him as he fled the scene. Fearing for his life, the officer discharged his firearm and struck the subject,” the statement said.

    The incident ended when the undocumented driver crashed into a truck. 

    ICE said both the agent and the suspect were taken to a local hospital for treatment, where the man died. ICE said the agent was dragged and suffered “severe injuries.” The agent is being treated at a local hospital where his condition has stabilized, ICE said. 

    DHS officials identified the man shot and killed as Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, who they said had a criminal history of reckless driving. They said he entered the country at an unknown date and time. 

    The agent was dragged by the car and suffered “multiple injuries” according to DHS.  

    The FBI confirmed it has been informed of the situation and is helping with the investigation.

    “The FBI is aware of the incident in Franklin Park and is assisting law enforcement in response,” a spokesperson for the Chicago field office said. “There is no threat to public safety or further information available at this time.”

    Gov. JB Pritzker posted to his X account, writing, “I am aware of the troubling incident that has unfolded in Franklin Park. This is a developing situation and the people of Illinois deserve a full, factual accounting of what’s happened today to ensure transparency and accountability.”

    The village of Franklin Park is about 15 miles northwest of Chicago, near O’Hare International Airport.

    Federal agents have been ramping up immigration enforcement activity all week as part of what the Trump administration is calling “Operation Midway Blitz.”

    contributed to this report.

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  • ICE agent shoots, kills man in Franklin Park, Illinois, after suspect tries to drive into agents, DHS says

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    A U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agent shot and killed a man in Franklin Park, Illinois Friday morning after authorities say he attempted to drive into agents.

    A Department of Homeland Security official first told CBS News the agent was trying to make an arrest, which the man resisted and tried to drive his vehicle into agents. The agent then opened fire.

    ICE officials confirmed the fatal shooting, saying the incident began with “targeted law enforcement activity.”

    “During a vehicle stop, the suspect resisted and attempted to drive his vehicle into the arrest team, striking an officer and subsequently dragging him as he fled the scene. Fearing for his life, the officer discharged his firearm and struck the subject,” the statement said.

    The incident ended when the undocumented driver crashed into a truck. 

    ICE said both the agent and the suspect were taken to a local hospital for treatment, where the man died. ICE said the agent was dragged and suffered “severe injuries.” The agent is being treated at a local hospital where his condition has stabilized, ICE said. 

    DHS officials identified the man shot and killed as Silverio Villegas-Gonzalez, who they said had a criminal history of reckless driving. They said he entered the country at an unknown date and time. 

    The agent was dragged by the car and suffered “multiple injuries” according to DHS.  

    The FBI confirmed it has been informed of the situation and is helping with the investigation.

    “The FBI is aware of the incident in Franklin Park and is assisting law enforcement in response,” a spokesperson for the Chicago field office said. “There is no threat to public safety or further information available at this time.”

    Gov. JB Pritzker posted to his X account, writing, “I am aware of the troubling incident that has unfolded in Franklin Park. This is a developing situation and the people of Illinois deserve a full, factual accounting of what’s happened today to ensure transparency and accountability.”

    The village of Franklin Park is about 15 miles northwest of Chicago, near O’Hare International Airport.

    Federal agents have been ramping up immigration enforcement activity all week as part of what the Trump administration is calling “Operation Midway Blitz.”

    contributed to this report.

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  • Oak Park District 97 enacts leadership plan after abrupt resignation of superintendent Ushma Shah

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    The Oak Park Elementary School District 97 Board of Education quickly turned to familiar faces to fill the superintendent’s role in the district after superintendent Ushma Shah suddenly resigned, effectively immediately, on Aug. 15.

    At a special meeting on Aug. 18 the School Board voted 6-0 to appoint current assistant superintendent Patrick Robinson to be acting superintendent until Sept. 15. At that time retired superintendents Griff Powell and Patricia Wernet will take over as co-interim superintendents for the remainder of the 2025-26 school while the board searches for a new leader.

    Powell and Wernet are familiar with District 97 having served as co-interim superintendents in District 97 in the 2021-2022 school year before Shah was hired in 2022.

    “We are excited to welcome back Dr. Powell and Dr. Wernet, who bring both deep experience and a strong connection to Oak Park,” said Cheree Moore, president of the District 97 Board of Education in a news release issued by the district after the special meeting. “Alongside our dedicated administrative team, they will help guide the district with stability and care. We are also grateful for Mr. Robinson’s steady leadership during this transition. With this team in place, we are confident District 97 will continue moving forward for our students, staff, and families.”

    Powell and Wernet have also worked together as interim superintendents in Glenview School District 34 and both have served as interim superintendents and superintendents in a number of school districts. Because they are both retired and receiving pensions from the Illinois Teacher Retirement System, they can only work a certain number of days to continue receiving their pension benefits so they will share the superintendent job in District 97 and neither will work full time. Their pay from District 97 was not disclosed because their contracts still must be negotiated.

    Powell, 79, has been a permanent superintendent in five school districts. This will be his 14th interim superintendent assignment since he retired from his last permanent superintendent position at Niles Township High School District 219 in 2002.

    I know I’m the most experienced interim (superintendent) in the state,” Powell told Pioneer Press. “I’m probably the most experienced superintendent in the state.”

    When a school district calls him and asks him to fill in, Powell can’t resist answering the call.

    “I love the work and I’m not a person that has a lot of hobbies,” Powell said. “I don’t play golf, I don’t fish, I don’t play a musical instrument and I really do love working and I love the field of education. I’ve spent my whole life dedicated to it.”

    Wernet has been superintendent in Berwyn South School District 100 and Lisle Community Unit School District 202 as well as serving as an interim superintendent in a number of districts.

    “Our job as co-interim superintendents is to provide the teaching staff, most importantly, and the support staff all the resources and support necessary to give maximum services to our students,” Powell said. “We want to allow the board to focus on hiring their new leader on a more permanent basis.”

    Robinson has been assistant superintendent for elementary schools in District 97 since 2023. Prior to that he was the principal of Whittier School in Oak Park for five years.

    At the Aug. 18 board meeting, members also, without any discussion, voted 6-0 to accept Shah’s resignation. After the meeting they shed little light on why Shah resigned, referring to a joint statement the school board and Shah released announcing Shah’s immediate resignation. That statement did not give a reason for Shah’s resignation and did not include a comment from Shah. In response to a specific question Moore did say that Shah was not asked to resign.

    Ushma Shah resigned Friday as superintendent of Oak Park Elementary School District 97. (School District 97)

    “She voluntarily resigned,” Moore said.

    Shah was at the Aug. 12 School Board meeting, just three days before she resigned, and gave no hint in open session that she was going to be resigning.

    Moore declined to say when she learned that Shah was resigning.

    Bob Skolnik is a freelance reporter for Pioneer Press. 

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