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‘The punchers’ keep attacking while system fails them

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: Women have been victims of unprovoked attacks by men with severe mental illnesses — a failure of the health systems and social safety net in Chicago.

🗞️ Plus: The Trump administration threatens SNAP benefits as the government shutdown continues, our coverage of Saturday’s massive “No Kings” protests and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Bears beat the Saints, 26-14; the Blackhawks bested the Ducks, 2-1.

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⏱️: An 8-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER ☀️

Sunny with a high near 65.


TODAY’S TOP STORIES

Kathleen Miles was hospitalized with a concussion and broken facial bones after a punching attack in August in the Loop.

Victor Hilitski/Sun-Times

‘The punchers’ keep attacking women in Chicago, failed to be helped by mental health system

By Frank Main and Stephanie Zimmermann

The suspects: They’ve become known in Chicago as the “punchers.” Social media recently spotlighted two men accused of unprovoked attacks on women. The men have been in and out of mental treatment and jail for crimes that repeatedly included punching women in the head.

Systemic issues: The attacks are the latest in a series of encounters that have raised concerns about how the criminal legal system addresses the mental health of violent repeat offenders. Most people with severe mental illness are more likely to become a victim of violence. But for the small group of mentally ill repeat offenders and their victims, the social safety net is full of holes, experts say.

Key context: These kinds of cases were the subject of the Sun-Times’ “Failure to Treat, Failure to Protect” series earlier this year, examining how men with violent backgrounds and histories of serious mental illness or delusional behavior repeatedly cycled through jails and hospitals — sometimes for decades.

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SNAP recipients could lose food benefits in November due to the federal government shutdown.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times file

Trump administration threatens SNAP amid government shutdown, risks 1.9M Illinois residents

By Elvia Malagón

‘Catastrophic’ move: In a move that advocates call potentially “catastrophic,” President Donald Trump’s administration plans to withhold food stamp funding if the federal government shutdown is not resolved by the end of October, leaving 1.9 million people across Illinois in peril.

SNAP decision: The Illinois Department of Human Services announced Thursday it received notice from the U.S. Department of Agriculture that it would not fund November benefits for the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program across the country starting Nov. 1 unless there’s a resolution to the shutdown.

Bottom line: For Illinois, that would mean a loss of $350 million that the state administers to recipients. 

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Casey Szaflarski is shown in a 2025 mug shot at left and at the Dirksen Federal Building, right, in 2010.

Kane County sheriff/Sun-Times file

Casey Szaflarski, once portrayed as mob’s video gambling kingpin, is arrested in burglary

By Robert Herguth, Tim Novak and Frank Main

Northwest burglary: The sprawling far northwest suburban home of a Chicago area restaurateur whose establishments are pulling in millions of dollars through video gambling was burglarized. One of the three men arrested is a South Side resident once described as the Chicago mob’s video poker kingpin.

The charges: Casey Szaflarski was indicted May 28 on felony charges related to the burglary of the residence in unincorporated West Dundee in March, according to court records. His next court date is scheduled for December.

The trend: With the proliferation of video gambling, and the infusion of cash, a number of gaming sites including casinos have been hit by crooks in the region.

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MORE NEWS YOU NEED

Chicago Teachers Union head Stacy Davis Gates will lead the Illinois Federation of Teachers.

Tyler Pasciak LaRiviere/Sun-Times file


CHICAGO PROTESTS ✶

Protesters march downtown Saturday, the day of nationwide “No Kings” demonstrations.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times

Reign check: Throngs descend on Loop as part of ‘No Kings’ protests against Trump policies

By Mohammad Samra, Casey He, Erica Thompson, Cindy Hernandez, Anna Savchenko, Chip Mitchell, Somer Van Benton, Lynn Sweet, Mitchell Armentrout and Robert Herguth

Mass movement: More than a month after President Donald Trump sent federal agents to the Chicago region as part of a mass deportation effort targeting immigrants, tens of thousands who oppose that and other White House polices turned out in force Saturday to show what they think, marching downtown as part of a nationwide action dubbed “No Kings.” 

Rally and march: The hourslong, peaceful march was preceded by a massive rally at Grant Park, where Mayor Brandon Johnson and Gov. JB Pritzker spoke.

‘Who cares?’: Asked for comment about the mass showing of discontent, Trump’s spokeswoman had a short response: “Who cares?” Protesters in the Chicago area made clear they care, with demonstrations stretching into neighborhoods like Little Village and scattered across the suburbs including DuPage County, Orland Park, Park Ridge and Highland Park.

More headlines:

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WATCH: ‘NO KINGS’ PROTESTS ▶️

WBEZ and Sun-Times reporters take you to the streets of Saturday’s “No Kings” protest in the Chicago area. | WBEZ/Sun-Times


FROM THE PRESS BOX 🏈🏀


GAMES AND CROSSWORDS 🧩

This week’s Chicago-style crossword theme is: Concert venues

Here’s your clue: 
15A: Concert venue that occupies the former Morton factory

PLAY NOW


BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Sudan Archives, shown at Lollapalooza in 2023, bridges folk and classical violin with R&B and pop.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times file

Sudan Archives’ new album pulses with Midwest sounds

By Justin Curto

Dance music is in Sudan Archives’ blood.

The singer and violinist’s father is from Chicago, the birthplace of house music in the early 1980s. Meanwhile, her mother is from Detroit, where techno music developed around the same time. She grew up between the two cities, in Cincinnati, making regular trips to visit family in both.

But Sudan, whose real name is Brittney Parks, didn’t initially set out to pay tribute to her heritage when she made her new album, “The BPM,” released Friday. She just wanted to make songs that were fast. The Midwestern musical history came out naturally.

“I know what techno and house is, but I’m not ever, like, referencing anything,” Parks says during a video interview from her sunny home in Los Angeles. “I’m literally opening the computer and I’m putting that BPM [beats per minute] on 120 and I’m creating drums and I’m creating violins.”

Parks’ music gained recognition for bridging folk and classical violin with contemporary R&B and pop. Her stage name is partially a tribute to the Sudanese fiddle music that inspired her as a Black violinist.

“The BPM” is her third album, and she’ll take it on the road this winter, stopping by Thalia Hall on Feb. 5. Afterward, Parks is unsure if she’ll continue to make dance music, preferring to stay unpredictable.

What she will take from this era is the assurance of pulling off such a major pivot. The mark of a great house singer, after all, is confidence.

“Like, I’m 31 now,” Parks says. “This is the album that, I’m in my 30s. I know what I want and I know how to work it.”

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DAILY QUESTION ☕️

Where in Chicago do you feel most connected to your neighbors or other Chicagoans? Tell us why. 

Email us (please include your first and last name). We may run your answers in Tuesday’s morning edition newsletter.


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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