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Isabel’s afternoon roundup

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* SJ-R

The federal trial of former state senator and gubernatorial candidate William “Sam” McCann on wire fraud, money laundering, and tax evasion was on hold Monday after McCann was said to be in the hospital.

Court documents indicate that McCann’s standby counsel, Jason Vincent, informed Central District Judge Colleen Lawless that McCann’s wife told him that he had been admitted to the hospital and would be undergoing a procedure Monday.

Lawless then asked the Central District’s probation office to look into the matter, asking all those involved from McCann to his wife and the hospital to provide proof of his hospitalization. If needed, they could ask for a subpoena if they ran into resistance.

* Illinois Fraternal Order of Police press release…

The Illinois Fraternal Order of Police (FOP) State Lodge has issued a statement regarding Illinois House Bill 4603, proposed legislation that would prohibit law enforcement officers from stopping vehicles for infractions such as speeding, improper lane usage, obstructed windshields, defective headlights, expired registration stickers, or failure to wear safety belts. Evidence obtained in any of these instances would also be deemed inadmissible in court. The bill was pulled from immediate consideration by its sponsor, Rep. Justin Slaughter, after a public outcry against it, but the legislation is still alive in the House Rules Committee:

“Of all the anti-police laws we have seen in recent years, this truly takes the pro-criminal cake,” said Illinois FOP State Lodge President Chris Southwood. “How many lives will be lost if we can’t stop dangerous drivers? Such a law will only benefit lawbreakers, and common sense must have taken a vacation when this bill was drafted. Thankfully, the howls of indignation over this preposterous piece of legislation forced the sponsor to remove it from immediate consideration, but the bill is still far from dead. We urge the members of the Illinois General Assembly to never let such a potential legal lunacy rear its unhinged head.”

* It’s not often you see a poll that has 70 percent of Americans agreeing on anything



* News from DC

* Here’s the rest…

posted by Isabel Miller
Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 2:58 pm

Comments

  1. Never fearing to state the obvious: You posted “here’s the rest” twice.

    Comment by don the legend Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 3:08 pm

  2. A distinct tone of voice? Last primary I voted in in person the tone was the same mumble everything else is said in. Also in a nod to the Voting Rights Act and the fact that three languages can be voted on in my area, should the judge have to read it in three languages? Becuase that might truly be worth going in person to the polls again.

    Comment by cermak_rd Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 3:17 pm

  3. Since William “Sam” McCann faces fraud, money laundering, and tax evasion charges, is he still representing himself? Waiting for McCann to use the ineffective counsel ruse to delay the proceedings.

    Let’s not forget about the always reliable Vincent Gigante’s bathrobe and slippers attire as another strategy to delay proceeding.

    Comment by Rudy’s teeth Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 3:18 pm

  4. The Pantagraph story is spot on

    “If you own a contracting company in Cook County, are you ever gonna choose a Republican ballot? No…Illinois’ system allowed the political parties to keep tabs on their voters while keeping it relatively easy to register new voters.”

    Grew up with a mom who worked in local Gov’t - had to pull a certain primary ballot or skip it. Plus no election signs in our yard lest we run afoul of the mayor and his pals. The local Township would screen calls - ask for name and address - then quickly check the list of voters with party affiliation - if you voted for the opposite party good luck getting any help.

    Comment by Donnie Elgin Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 3:49 pm

  5. === Plus no election signs in our yard lest we run afoul of the mayor and his pals===

    What does that have to do with partisan primaries?

    Comment by Rich Miller Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 3:51 pm

  6. “What does that have to do with partisan primaries?”

    More about how local pols kept track of voters. Grew up in a small town - local party kept track of employees’ political activity - hence had to be careful of pulling the wrong primary ballot or putting up the wrong political signs

    Comment by Donnie Elgin Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 3:56 pm

  7. The estate tax. Just repeal it. Illinois is one of just a handful of states that has this, and what we have is extremely goofy. It taxes things like IRAs including Roth, deferred comp, your half of the house that your surviving spouse gets, and other things. Many folks are domiciled somewhere else to avoid it. It bugs farmers so much because land won’t move to Florida. But a special treatment for farmers is just ridiculous. The whole thing needs to go.

    Comment by Excessively Rabid Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 4:33 pm

  8. ===More about how local pols kept track of voters===

    Well, yeah, but the story is about Illinois’ partisan primaries.

    Comment by Rich Miller Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 4:41 pm

  9. “ but the legislation is still alive in the House Rules Committee”

    That’s the first time I’ve ever read “still alive” in the same sentence as “Rules Committee.”

    Comment by Proud Papa Bear Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 5:23 pm

  10. ===“Of all the anti-police laws we have seen in recent years===

    The FOP sure likes to whine a lot. They seem to treat every effort aimed at any kind of reform as being “anti-police.” They need to learn to stop taking things so personally. They seem to just be too emotionally out of control in so many of their interactions. The bill was a bad bill. The bad bill exists because the police in this country in general have a long history of targeting people because of their race and going above and beyond to convict innocent people of crimes through torture and other illegal and unethical methods.

    Just because a large portion of the public doesn’t trust or have a whole lot of confidence in the police or their union representation that seems to be more concerned about protecting cops who commit crimes than stopping criminals doesn’t mean every reform is “anti-police.”

    I can’t say how I feel about this whiny and emotional ‘me, me, me’ public positions because the language isn’t really permitted on this blog. They did win the public discussion, though, because the law has a lot of language like, “unless that violation is a misdemeanor or felony offense.”

    The FOP is a fun lot. They only are against criminals when they don’t pay dues, so maybe they should calm down their rhetoric. Not everything is about them that they try to make about them.

    ===* News from DC…===

    For those keeping track, that’s about 2.5 million apprehensions a year. That’s a lot.Even the logistics of returning that many people is a lot, but the buffoons that suggest placing people who make illegal border crossings in camps don’t really seem to understand that these camps they’re going on about would have a population that exceeds around 15 of our states depending on how long we’re planning on keeping each person in a camp.

    Comment by Candy Dogood Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 5:49 pm

  11. ===That’s the first time I’ve ever read “still alive” in the same sentence as “Rules Committee.” ===

    Same.

    Comment by Rich Miller Monday, Feb 5, 24 @ 11:42 pm

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