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Emails reveal why O’Neill Burke wouldn’t denounce Trump

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Gov. JB Pritzker wants to drastically change the way the state regulates — currently via the Illinois Gaming Board — its ever-expanding casino, video poker and sports betting industries.

🗞️ Plus: Emails show why the Cook County state’s attorney wouldn’t denounce the president, lawmakers try to keep the Bears in Illinois and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs beat the Phillies, 5-1.

📧 Subscribe: Get this newsletter delivered to your inbox weekday mornings.

⏱️: A 7-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER 🌤️

Mostly sunny with a chance of late afternoon thunderstorms and a high near 75.


TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

The temporary Bally’s Casino in River North.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

Will transparency fold under Pritzker’s plan to revamp the Illinois Gambling Board?

By Robert Herguth and Mitchell Armentrout

Shuffling oversight: Gov. JB Pritzker plans to revamp the Illinois Gaming Board in a dramatic reorganization, potentially eliminating key aspects of public transparency that have existed for decades.

Key context: Casinos as well as video and sports gambling have exploded across the state on Pritzker’s watch, and video poker could expand further if it happens in Chicago. Tasked with regulating it all is the gaming board, which reports to Pritzker and has struggled with a main task: Ensuring the integrity of the billion-dollar industry and keeping people with ties to organized crime out of it.

The plan: In short, there would no longer be members of the gaming board, nor of the Illinois Racing Board — their functions would be merged. Deliberations and voting on gaming licenses, qualifications, discipline and other gaming matters, as well as the racing board’s functions, would all be folded into a new or existing arm of state government, operating like a department of the executive branch.

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IMMIGRATION ✶

Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

O’Neill Burke wouldn’t denounce Trump, wanted to ‘maintain’ relationship with feds, emails show

By Jon Seidel and Sophie Sherry

Criticism quelled: Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke declined to criticize the Trump administration in the weeks leading up to Operation Midway Blitz because she wanted to keep her “excellent working relationships” with federal law enforcement, emails in newly filed court records show. An Aug. 11 email discussed an effort by Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle’s office to get county agencies to sign onto a statement “responding to the recent actions and rhetoric coming out of the Trump administration.”

Calls for special prosecutor: It’s evidence that Cook County’s top prosecutor has a conflict that justifies the installation of a special prosecutor who could investigate the feds behind last fall’s deportation campaign, argues a coalition that is made up of more than 200 elected officials, clergy, attorneys and  journalists, including the Chicago News Guild, which represents members at the Sun-Times.

What’s next: The fight over appointing a special prosecutor could come to a head as Cook County Circuit Judge Erica Reddick is set to hear arguments Friday. She is the presiding judge of the court’s criminal division. O’Neill Burke’s office promised a “comprehensive response.”

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STADIUM SAGA 🏈

A rendering of the proposed Chicago Bears stadium in Arlington Heights.

Provided by Manica Architecture

Lawmakers sweeten pot to keep Bears in Illinois with stadium bill

By Fran Spielman and Tina Sfondeles

Property tax relief?: Illinois hopes to take the lead over Indiana in the Chicago Bears stadium battle with a new proposal that would give the NFL team property tax certainty while also providing statewide property tax relief. State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, plans to brief Illinois House Democrats on the new amendment Tuesday. 

The plan: The PILOT measure, shorthand for payment in lieu of taxes, would allow the Bears to renegotiate their property taxes with Arlington Heights. The property tax relief element, a new addition to stadium-related legislation in Springfield, is essential in getting support from lawmakers outside of Chicago, including Republicans.

What’s next: Buckner told the Sun-Times he would push for lawmakers to hold a committee hearing on the measure and get the proposal to the floor this week, depending on how much support, or resistance, he hears in the caucus.

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MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

A Brown Line train moves around the Loop.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file


ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN 📐

Workers from Berglund Construction remove old paint from the historic pergolas at the Sears Sunken Garden in North Lawndale.

Manuel Martinez/WBEZ

Restoration starts on pergola at North Lawndale’s historic Sears garden

By Lee Bey

New chapter: A faded Mediterranean Revival-styled pergola that is the main feature of a North Lawndale garden created 120 years ago by Sears, Roebuck & Co. is being restored. Work began Friday on the 100-foot-long pergola at 3330 W. Arthington St. 

Key context: The structure is the centerpiece of the nearly 2-acre garden built in 1907 as a rest spot for employees at what was then Sears’ sprawling campus headquarters. The $1 million restoration is being funded by a grant from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation — the first step in a larger effort to revive the entire garden, an idea launched by the North Lawndale Community Coordinating Council’s Greening, Open Space, Water, Soil and Sustainability committee in 2021.

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MUST-READ COMMENTARY ✍️

Sun-Times reporter Violet Miller, left, and Sun-Times and WBEZ Innovation Editor Ellery Jones

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times


ON WBEZ 91.5 FM 📻

In the Loop with Sasha-Ann Simons, 9 a.m.

Say More with Mary Dixon and Patrick Smith, 10 a.m.

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FROM THE PRESS BOX 🏈🏀


CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 4A: Sculptor Lorado, whose Chicago workshop is a National Historic Landmark

PLAY NOW


BRIGHT ONE 🔆

The artist known as Boots and her work are shown in West Loop.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

Pilsen artist’s poetry snippets are painted around Chicago and the country

By Genevieve Bookwalter

You’ve probably seen her poetry by now.

Maybe it was spray-painted on the sidewalk outside a coffee shop or record store, or wheat-pasted on a utility pole that you walked by. Maybe you found the words within a giant heart painted inside an abandoned, run-down building you decided to explore.

The Pilsen artist known as Boots, whose real name is Kimberly Brown, has painted thousands of her original poetry snippets on sidewalks and elsewhere around Chicago since she began sharing her words with the world just before the pandemic.

Now, you can find her painted poetry while walking through towns in all 50 states, part of a project that Brown says has “become bigger than me at this point.” All of them are tagged @poetrybyboots, which is her Instagram handle. The biggest number by far are in Chicago.

“It’s always extra special when my hometown appreciates it,” says Brown, who receives tags, photos and messages nearly every day from fans who found her work. “It still blows my mind how many messages I’ll get.”

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

Yesterday, we asked you: Should Illinois ban cellphones in classrooms during school hours?

Here’s some of what you said…

“I think such a law, while popular, may be unenforceable. A better solution would be to jam the signal in classrooms; that way students cannot access distractions on their phones.” — Patricia Boughton

“I am a former Illinois student … I believe with all the school shootings that go on around the country, these students need their phones. What if something happens to the teacher and no one else has a phone to call for help in that classroom? … One more phone could save countless lives!” — Gregory Bell-Bey

“I do think that cellphones should be banned during school hours. They provide a distraction from education and a barrier for teachers trying to communicate … Schools should also ensure that students will have easy access to an office phone if they need to call their parents or guardians.” — Margaret McCoy

“I’m finishing my 22nd year as a CPS high school teacher. Brain rot is real. Critical thinking has atrophied. Attention spans are measured in seconds. Students are addicted to the dopamine hits endless scrolling or game-playing … provide. I was an early adopter of Google Classroom, which I still use … However, I now make paper copies and direct students to put their Chromebooks and phones away. It’s a daily battle. I can’t tell you how many times a student has told me, ‘I’m talking to my mom.” — Sharon Marzano

“Absolutely! As an educator for more than 40 years, I can say … It distracts students from focusing … even if the phone is in a backpack and on silent, the temptation to check it is overwhelming. It fractures concentration, and over time leads to decreased attention span. It also contributes to diminished social skills, as kids are more focused on their devices than on human interaction. When phones are not allowed in school, teachers report students are way more engaged with learning and with one another.” — Anita Caref


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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