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Chicago’s air bag theft problem

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Air bag thefts are booming in Chicago, but police have made only one arrest.

🗞️ Plus: Feds drop charges in a hospital fraud case, our sports columnist visits Hammond and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs beat Colorado, 9-3. The White Sox game was rained out and postponed to Aug. 20The Sky fell to Indiana, 114-106.

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⏱️: An 8-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER ☀️

Sunny with a high near 82.


TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

Maeve Priestley started using a bar to protect the steering wheel of her Honda Civic after her air bag was stolen.

Manuel Martinez/WBEZ

1,200 crimes, 1 arrest: Chicago police fail to address boom in air bag thefts

By Zoe Singer, Keenan Chen and Sophie Sherry

Air bag theft surge: Chicago saw more than 1,200 air bag thefts reported in the first four months of this year. Between 2023 and 2025, there were only 70 such thefts, according to police data. Thieves smash car windows, swipe air bags and sell them on the black market for a few hundred bucks. Amid this year’s surge, the Chicago Police Department has suspended air bag theft investigations more quickly and virtually all of the cases have gone unsolved. 

1 arrest: The one man charged with stealing air bags this year has entered into a deferred prosecution agreement, meaning he won’t be convicted if he meets conditions imposed by the court. A police spokesperson says theft investigations “often take time and can be difficult to solve without video or forensic evidence.”

Where it’s happening: Lake View has seen the most air bag thefts. Together with West Town, Logan Square, Belmont Cragin, Humboldt Park and Avondale, just six neighborhoods accounted for 42% of all reported thefts citywide. The reason for the surge is not yet known, but it’s clear Hondas are the primary target.

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COURTS ⚖️

Loretto Hospital

Sun-Times file

Feds drop charges in case tied to Loretto exec

By Jon Seidel

Avoiding trial: One day after a federal judge threatened to hold a hearing that could have put Chicago U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros on the witness stand, Boutros’ office moved to permanently drop charges against two defendants in a massive $300 million fraud prosecution.

Key context: The development means damage from the tainted “Broadview Six” case, which nearly went to trial as a misdemeanor matter, has now officially spread to a far more serious prosecution involving former Loretto Hospital chief financial officer Anosh Ahmed.

Exec still charged: The feds are not dropping charges against Ahmed, who has been held in Serbia and is fighting extradition. Rather, they moved only to drop charges against two co-defendants who once worked for him: Mahmood Sami Khan and Suhaib Ahmad Chaudhry. Still, Boutros’ office now appears to be dropping criminal charges to avoid sworn testimony about the scandal that has rocked the Dirksen Federal Courthouse.

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HOUSING AND DEVELOPMENT 🏠

The North Lawndale community space Starling.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Chicago has made progress on transit-oriented development, report says

By Abby Miller and Amy Yee

Policy pushed progress: Five years after adopting a plan to encourage more development near public transit in the South and West sides, Chicago has made substantial progress, according to a report from Elevated Chicago, a coalition of community-based organizations, artists, developers and civic leaders.

Key context: In 2021, city leaders created an Equitable Transit-Oriented Development plan. The city had long pushed for transit-oriented development near CTA bus or rail stops, but shifted its framework to ensure more development in historically disinvested neighborhoods.

What it looks like: The North Lawndale community space Starling is one of several equitable transit-oriented developments that received city funding in part to its proximity to bus lines. Duo Development acquired the former vacant lot and transformed it into a hub for community events, a coffee shop, a co-working space and more.

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POLITICS ✶

Gov. JB Pritzker in February

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times


MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Family members of Rafael Cruz unveil honorary street signs on Thursday.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times


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FROM THE PRESS BOX 🏈

Steve Greenberg, sports columnist for the Sun-Times, at Wolf Lake, Ind.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times

From Soldier Field to Hammond and back: A journey like no other

Column by Steve Greenberg

Trip to Hammond: It has been a week since the Bears announced they were “advancing” their stadium project in Hammond, Indiana. Our sports columnist Steve Greenberg took a trip to see, and smell, the site for himself.

Key quote: “I write to you from a territory worlds apart from our fair city of Chicago. A travel-weary visitor, having journeyed here without sustenance or rest, can only wonder if he has reached the metropolitan rim of Indianapolis. Colts country, this must be. Let a preposterous scribe take you along on his expedition to Hammond, will you?”

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WATCH: OUR MAN IN HAMMOND ▶️


CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 1A: Common sight in a Chicago alley

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BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Cole Bennett, founder of the Lyrical Lemonade multimedia empire

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

Cole Bennett, co-founder of major music fest and onetime music video prodigy, is pressing on

By Erica Thompson

Most people hope for a moment that changes their life. Even better if it impacts the culture around them. By the summer of 2016, Cole Bennett had at least three such moments.

Barely out of his teens, the burgeoning director had garnered 1 million views with his music video for Chicago rapper Famous Dex. He booked Philadelphia rapper Lil Uzi Vert’s first Chicago show, which sold out Metro in Wrigleyville. And he co-founded the Lyrical Lemonade Summer Bash, a precursor to Summer Smash — the premier hip-hop festival of the Midwest, which kicks off Friday at Bridgeview’s SeatGeek Stadium.

Ten years, 500 music videos, eight festivals and one multimedia empire later, the thrill hasn’t faded. This week at his Lyrical Lemonade headquarters in Chicago, Bennett raved about the lineup for Summer Smash 2026, his company’s festival that this year features headliners Playboi Carti, Lil Uzi Vert, Chief Keef, Baby Keem and Skrillex.

He also gushed about his newfound passion for shooting or transferring music videos onto tactile film. (The results can be seen in visuals for Justin Bieber’s “Yukon,” Sienna Spiro’s “Die On This Hill” and more.)

The now-30-year-old entrepreneur is also venturing into full-length filmmaking with a documentary on Chicago rapper Chief Keef and a narrative movie that he is still writing. 

“I always worried that, when I got older, my excitement, my passion and my imagination would wither,” Bennett said. “But I feel like it’s more intact than ever, and that makes me really excited for the future.”

More on Summer Smash

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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Michael Lansu


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