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Tag: Highland Park Police

  • 2 found dead in Highland Park house fire, authorities say

    2 found dead in Highland Park house fire, authorities say

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    HIGHLAND PARK, Ill. (WLS) — Two people were found dead in a house fire in Highland Park Wednesday morning, authorities said.

    Authorities responded at about 3:55 a.m. to the 1700-block of Park Ave. West after a report of flames coming from the roof of a home.

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    Firefighters located the two deceased people, but no other victims were found.

    The fire was extinguished and an investigation into the fire is ongoing.

    SEE ALSO: 1 dead after explosion, fire destroys Lake Zurich home on Overhill Drive

    Authorities closed Park Ave West is closed between Ridge and Sunnyside as they investigate the fire.

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  • Police return Highland Park man’s beloved Thunderbird after he accused the city of stealing it

    Police return Highland Park man’s beloved Thunderbird after he accused the city of stealing it

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    Highland Park Police returned a resident’s 1985 Ford Thunderbird on Thursday after he accused the city of stealing his beloved car.

    Bob Nelson says he’s grateful but still angry.

    “There is still too much shit that doesn’t add up with this car,” Nelson tells Metro Times.

    The city also waived hundreds of dollars in tow fees, which Nelson was unable to afford.

    On March 28, police stuck an orange tag on his Thunderbird, saying the car “may be impounded if it is not removed within 48 hours” because it lacked a license plate.

    But less than 48 hours later, while Nelson was planning on moving the car off the road outside his house on Geneva Street, a tow truck removed the Thunderbird, which belonged to his mom before she died on Thanksgiving. He recently towed the car from Ottawa County, where his mom had lived.

    Nelson says police didn’t bother to knock on his door or even try to determine who owned the car. Before towing a car, he insists police are required to run his vehicle identity number (VIN) on the Law Enforcement Information Network (LIEN) and claims that never happened or police would have seen he owned the car.

    “If they called the fucking VIN number in, they would have known it was my car,” Nelson says.

    Earlier this week, Troy’s Towing refused to release the car unless Nelson paid $245 for the tow, $15 for each day it was in storage, and $150 to tow the car back to his home.

    Nelson says he went broke towing the car from Ottawa County.

    Without the money to retrieve his car, Nelson was so upset he sought mental health counseling.

    “I was so pissed off that I wanted to do something crazy,” Nelson recalls. “How about give a motherfucker some due process? A city ordinance doesn’t supersede the Constitution.”

    Eventually, Nelson talked with police Chief James McMahon, who said the city wanted to help him retrieve his car. But first he needed the title, which Nelson knew was in one of dozens of boxes that he had hauled from his mom’s house.

    After he prayed, Nelson says he found the title in one of the boxes.

    At about 4:30 p.m. on Thursday, a flatbed tow truck, escorted by a police car with flashing lights, returned the car to the backyard of one of Nelson’s neighbors.

    “I’m grateful the police chief helped me,” Nelson says. “He could have tried to cover this up. But there are still too many unanswered questions.”

    Nelson says he suspects the car would still be in the tow yard if he didn’t speak up.

    “This car would still be sitting there if I didn’t raise hell,” he says.

    Nelson has reached out to an attorney and is considering suing the city.

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    Steve Neavling

    Bob Nelson cleans up his block every spring, even though it’s dominated by blight and abandonment.

    “I read the Constitution,” Nelson says. “I know about the law. I want the city of Highland Park to compensate me for lost wages and the mental damage.”

    Meanwhile, like he does every spring, Nelson is cleaning up his block, which is dominated by blighted, abandoned homes. Across the street is a hulking, vacant school building that he says is owned by the Highland Park City Council president.

    “Why don’t they bother cleaning up this mess instead of taking my car? It makes no sense,” he says. “This is a fucked up street.”

    Metro Times couldn’t reach Highland Park officials for comment. Mayor Glenda McDonald referred questions to McMahon, who couldn’t be reached.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Highland Park man inherited his mom’s beloved Thunderbird — then police ‘stole’ it

    Highland Park man inherited his mom’s beloved Thunderbird — then police ‘stole’ it

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    Bob Nelson is so angry he’s shaking.

    His beloved 1985 Ford Thunderbird that he parked outside his home in Highland Park is gone.

    And he knew who took it.

    The 57-year-old handyman and author recently sank most of his money to tow the car from Ottawa County, where his mother lived until her death on Thanksgiving Day.

    “She wanted me to have that car,” Nelson tells Metro Times. “She knew how much it meant to me.”

    When he was 32, Nelson traded his brother a 1987 Porsche 924 for the Thunderbird. Then on his mom’s birthday in 2001, Nelson gifted her the Thunderbird.

    After she died from lung cancer, Nelson towed the car more than 180 miles and parked it outside his home on the 30o block of Geneva. He deflated the tires to deter thieves from stealing it.

    Then on Thursday, Highland Park police stuck an orange tag on the Thunderbird, saying the car “may be impounded if it is not removed within 48 hours” because it lacked a license plate.

    Less than 48 hours later, Nelson returned to his home with a compressor and jack to fill the tires with air and move it to his neighbor’s backyard, where he had permission to park it.

    But the car was gone.

    Even though 48 hours hadn’t passed, police called a tow truck to remove the car and take it to an impound lot.

    Nelson says police inaccurately described his vehicle as a Pontiac Firebird.

    While he was in church on Easter, an employee from Troy’s Towing told him the car would not be released until he presents the title for the car. Nelson doesn’t know where the title is and doesn’t have enough money to get a new one from the Secretary of State’s office.

    Interim Police Chief James McMahon defended the department’s handling of the car, saying it wasn’t registered, had no license plate or insurance, and appeared to be abandoned.

    “It’s unregistered, and it’s an unsafe vehicle,” McMahon tells Metro Times. “It’s the definition of an abandoned vehicle.”

    McMahon says the police department sympathizes with Nelson’s situation, but there was no way for officers to know the car wasn’t abandoned or stolen.

    “Our dilemma is that the car isn’t registered with him,” McMahon says. “I can’t just turn over a vehicle to him without ownership paperwork. … We’re enforcing the law. It’s as simple as that.”

    Nelson counters that the car is registered to him and that his name is on the mailbox near where the car was parked. 

    Meanwhile, Nelson is heartbroken and angry. He can’t understand why a crime-riddled city like Highland Park would spend its limited resources on towing a car from a block where he’s the only homeowner with a vehicle.

    “I pretty much bankrupted myself to get that car here,” Nelson says. “I’m so fucking pissed I’m shaking. It’s fucking ridiculous. The police stole the car. I don’t have the money to bail this car out. I broke myself getting this car here.”

    Nelson was so enraged that he sought mental health counseling on Monday.

    “I went into a psychotic rage,” Nelson says. “I can barely talk about it. My mother wanted me to have that car back. I’m in emotional turmoil about it. If I had the money, I’d get it out.”

    Nelson suspects the cash-strapped city seized his car as a quick money grab.

    “They are motivated by greed,” he insists. “You want to have broken windows policing on the only mother fucker who has a vehicle on the block? No one is trying to move here. This is third-world antics. It’s like living in Russia.”

    McMahon says the city takes action against vehicles without license plates because residents were complaining about abandoned cars.

    “It allows us to rid the city of nuisance,” McMahon says. “Fortunately during this process, while recovering and tagging vehicles, we occasionally find stolen vehicles, and we are able to recover those vehicles. That’s why it’s important for us to do it and continue to do it. The majority of citizens were requesting this.”

    Nelson says he plans to file a federal lawsuit against the city, claiming city officials violated his 14th Amendment rights by depriving him of due process of law.

    “I’m going to ask the court for a restraining order to stop Highland Park from doing anything to that car,” Nelson says. “The city ordinance doesn’t supersede the U.S. Constitution. That orange tag doesn’t mean shit.”

    Nelson says police should focus on unsolved murders and the prostitutes who “give blowjobs” near his house.

    “It’s not like this is a controversial hot spot of parking where people are getting into fights and shootouts over parking,” Nelson says. “I’m a litigious prick. It’s real simple to rectify this. They have to give me my car back and don’t worry about what the fuck I have parked outside my house ever again. Ever. Don’t ever put me through this mental aggravation again.”

    A manager at Troy’s Towing wasn’t available to answer questions.

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    Steve Neavling

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  • Recall campaign seeks to oust ‘incompetent and unqualified’ mayor of Highland Park

    Recall campaign seeks to oust ‘incompetent and unqualified’ mayor of Highland Park

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    Highland Park Mayor Glenda McDonald.

    Less than a week after successfully ousting Highland Park’s seven-term treasurer, a prominent local activist is now turning his attention to expelling another of the city’s elected officials – Mayor Glenda McDonald.

    Robert Davis recently submitted language to recall McDonald, telling Metro Times she’s “incompetent and unqualified” to lead the cash-strapped city.

    The Wayne County Election Committee is meeting Thursday to determine if the language of the recall meets the standards to begin the process of removing the first-term mayor.

    Davis submitted three reasons to recall McDonald: She uses on-duty police officers to chauffeur her around, she allegedly recommended that the city council approve a water agreement that resulted in an increase in residents’ utility bills, and she declined to veto the water agreement.

    Under state law, the recall language must be clear and factual. It does not have to prove criminal wrongdoing.

    If the committee approves the language, Davis has 180 days to submit enough signatures to place the recall on the November ballot. Under state law, Davis must collect signatures equal to 25% of all votes cast for governor in Highland Park in the 2022 election. That amounts to roughly 500 or so signatures.

    Davis, who lives in Highland Park, says voters are angry that the city reached an agreement with the Great Lakes Water Authority to end a years-long dispute over millions of dollars in unpaid water bills. As a result of the pact, Davis says residential water bills have skyrocketed.

    “The citizens are up in arms,” Davis says. “My water bill doubled.”

    Davis also took issue with McDonald using on-duty cops to chauffeur her around at a time when the city has a police shortage and a high crime rate.

    “Our cops need to be patrolling our streets and keeping our community safe, not chauffeuring around an elected official,” Davis says.

    Davis decided to pursue the recall because he says McDonald is the wrong leader for a city that desperately needs competent governance.

    “She has no experience leading a government, and it is glaringly obvious that she is in over her head,” Davis says. “She wanted the position, not because she is qualified, but because she wanted the notoriety, fame, and attention.”

    Ironically, McDonald ended up running unopposed in November 2022 because Davis had filed a lawsuit that resulted in her opponents being removed from the ballot for failing to properly fill out their Affidavit of Identity to run in the non-partisan race.

    “She would not have won the election had her opponents not been removed from the ballot,” Davis insists.

    McDonald declined to address the recall effort or the allegations leveled against her, saying her attorney advised her that she should wait until after the commission makes its decision.

    “The only thing I would need to defend is what is approved,” she tells Metro Times.

    She adds that “allegedly Mr. Davis is who Mr. Davis is. I don’t have anything to say about him.”

    No doubt Davis has been a perpetual headache for Highland Park officials. In addition to getting Treasurer Janice Taylor-Bibbs booted from office and the mayoral candidates removed from the ballot, Davis successfully sued the city over its controversial marijuana ordinance. In July 2023, a Wayne County Circuit Court judge agreed with Davis that the ordinance violated the Michigan Zoning and Enabling Act because city officials failed to get approval from the city’s Planning Commission to create eight zones where cannabis businesses were permitted to open.

    Davis alleged that some city officials created the ordinance to help supporters open a cannabis business in the city.

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    Steve Neavling

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