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Mayor’s ICE crackdown plan under scrutiny

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Nearly six months after Mayor Brandon Johnson ordered Chicago police to investigate alleged abuses by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, it’s unclear what the decree has accomplished or what needs to be done to enforce it. 

🗞️ Plus: Reports of sexual assault persist at Country Thunder music festival, a “first of its kind” quadruple-organ transplant and more news you need to know.

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⏱️: A 7-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER ☀️

Beachgoers take a dip in Lake Michigan at Ohio Street Beach as temperatures soared Tuesday.

Pat Nabong Sun-Times

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TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

Mayor Brandon Johnson unveils a newly named snowplow, “Abolish ICE” in March.

Zubaer Khan/Sun-Times file

Mayor Johnson’s ICE crackdown plan faces City Council scrutiny

Reporting by Mariah Woelfel

Crackdown plan: On Jan. 31, Mayor Brandon Johnson inked an “ICE on Notice” executive order directing Chicago police to investigate federal immigration agents and potentially seek charges, as the city reeled from the federal government’s Operation Midway Blitz, launched last fall. Johnson’s order also requires police officers to refer felony matters to Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke “at the direction of the Mayor’s Office.” O’Neill Burke slammed that piece as “wholly inappropriate.” 

Council scrutiny: Police were directed to form new procedures within 30 days to implement the mayor’s order. Nearly five months after that deadline, it’s unclear what the decree has accomplished or what more needs to be done to enforce it. Those questions will be the topic of a City Council hearing Friday as immigration enforcement intensifies in the area. The Committee on Immigrant and Refugee Rights is holding the hearing.

More from City Hall: The mayor’s plan to seize control over the Chicago Housing Authority board, which is led by mayoral challenger Matthew Brewer, was thwarted Tuesday after another City Council revolt. Johnson had introduced to a housing committee three CHA board appointments.

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THE WATCHDOGS ✶

The four-day Country Thunder music festival runs Thursday through Sunday in Twin Lakes, Wisconsin.

Rick Diamond/Getty Images

At Country Thunder music festival, reports of sexual assaults continue

Reporting by Robert Herguth

Assaults alleged: At the popular Country Thunder Music festival in Twin Lakes, Wisconsin, near the Illinois border, reports have persisted over the last decade that young women and underage attendees are being assaulted by men on site.

No comment: Sex crimes have been so worrisome at Country Thunder that, more than a decade ago, local nurses launched an awareness campaign that included a booth at the event. As organizers prepare for another festival running Thursday through Sunday, they won’t discuss the assault allegations with the Sun-Times.

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HEALTHCARE 🩺

Elizabeth Wehrle underwent a unique four-organ transplant at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.

Provided

Woman with cystic fibrosis gets quadruple-organ transplant

Reporting by Cindy Hernandez

‘First of its kind’: After undergoing a lifesaving surgery, Elizabeth Wehrle, 36, had a quadruple-organ transplant at Northwestern Memorial Hospital — the first such procedure performed in the United States on someone who’d already received a lung transplant, Wehrle and her doctors said Tuesday.

Medical history: At 11, Wehrle was diagnosed with cystic fibrosis, and she had a double-lung transplant in 2017, but her health declined this year. “We couldn’t just say that nothing can be done,” one of her doctors said, describing their decision to transplant two other lungs, a liver and a kidney. Wehrle said Tuesday: “Because of their [donors’] selfless gift, I get to go home this week, hug my son and continue living a life I wasn’t sure I’d get to have.”

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MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Illinois has reported 216 cases of cyclosporiasis, which is often contracted by eating fresh fruits and vegetables.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times file


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BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Co-owners Maya Matta and Nathalie Del Valle stand in Mikono, a Greek frozen yogurt shop in Pilsen on the Southwest Side.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

Pop-up to permanent: Friends open Greek frozen yogurt spot and fans line up

By Ambar Colón

In January, best friends Nathalie Del Valle and Maya Matta got a big idea to open a Greek frozen yogurt shop. Two days later, they had ordered their first test machine, a soft-serve ice cream maker, Matta said.

After months of selling froyo out of their apartment and later hosting sold-out pop-ups all around the city, the best friends this week officially opened the first brick-and-mortar home for their independent froyo brand, Mikono. It debuted in Pilsen on Monday to a long line of enthusiastic followers that wrapped around the building.

They’re operating out of the kitchen at the Latina Sweat Project, 949 W. 16th St., a yoga studio also offering classes in Pilates and dance. Mikono’s residency at the studio is open 5 p.m.-9 p.m. Monday through Friday and 1 p.m.-9 p.m. on weekends while the duo works on their permanent storefront, set to open in Lincoln Park later this fall.

Del Valle and Matta, both 23, have dipped into their savings and upgraded their equipment. They made a nearly $15,000 investment into an ice cream machine sourced from New Zealand. So far, their gamble has been worth the risk.

“When we started, we would bring people into our apartment … and all these girls would knock on our door, and we’d just serve them the froyo,” Del Valle said. “It was just a really beautiful community that we started to build. We never expected it to turn into this.”

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

What’s the best way to enjoy summer in Chicago on a budget?

Email us your answer to this question  (please include your first and last name). We may run your answer in a future newsletter or story.

On Tuesday, we asked you: What’s your favorite iconic Chicago sign?

Here’s some of what you said…

“Trim and Tidy Cleaners in Jefferson Park. The sign hasn’t changed in 50 years.” — Jon Larson

“The Town & Country Liquor Mart neon sign in Brighton Park.” — Jaime Duque

“The Chicago Skyway Toll Bridge signs and their infamous typography (see ‘The Blues Brothers’).” — Marty Regan

“My favorite Chicago sign was the Magikist sign along the Kennedy [Expressway]. As a kid, when I saw that sign, I had some idea of how much longer till the family station wagon arrived downtown or arrived home from a trip downtown … I always sat in the third row, which faced backwards, and got to stare at the lips for a long time as they filled in with vertical lines of bright, red lights over and over.” — Loretta Namovic

“The Heart O’ Chicago Motel neon sign at Ridge and Peterson [avenues]. It graced the cover of Nick Freeman’s ‘Good Old Neon: Signs You’re in Chicago’ book. My wife and I would sometimes spend nights during the pandemic driving to the different neon signs in the book. A few years later, we ended up moving about 10 blocks from the Heart O’ Chicago sign.” — Jordan Mainzer


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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