Midwest
Chicago getting 'window dressing' treatment for Democratic National Convention: former chief
Chicago will soon be in the national spotlight when it hosts the Democratic National Convention in August, but primarily in the glitzed-up areas leaders want to be seen.
The city is facing a few complications: its stubborn problem with violence, the “wild card” of left-wing anti-Israel agitators, worn-down infrastructure, and the specter of the infamous clashes when Chicago hosted the DNC back in 1968.
Street and walkway upgrades are already underway. And according to a law enforcement source, the plan is to isolate the convention area from the rest of the city entirely, with access only for the media, law enforcement and DNC designees.
CHICAGO POLICE SUPERINTENDENT PLEDGES DNC PROTESTS ‘WILL NOT BE 1968’ RIOTS
This view shows United Center, home to the Chicago Bulls and Blackhawks, on March 10, 2021, in Chicago. The site is one of two primary locations for the 2024 Democratic National Convention. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
“We are going to basically never see a protester or rioters, period,” the source said. “The convention sites are completely cordoned off. There will be nobody that is not authorized.”
Authorities are imposing strict measures on people who live and work inside the secure zone as well, including vehicle checks, FOX 32 Chicago reported Wednesday.
The city already has a 10 p.m. youth curfew for the summer, and some leaders are looking to move the start time to 8 p.m.
“They want to portray an image of calm, of peace, an orderly convention,” said Gene Roy, the Chicago Police Department’s former chief of detectives and a public safety consultant. “They obviously do not want any negative images, whether it’s protesters or confrontations with police, to get out. So, the people that are planning this are doing their best to avoid that.”
CHICAGO WATCHDOG AGENCY WARNS POLICE UNPREPARED FOR PROTESTS AHEAD OF DEMOCRATIC NATIONAL CONVENTION
Police officers run in formation as the Chicago Police Department offers a first look at officer training at McCormick Place on June 6, 2024, in preparation for the Democratic National Convention in August. The officers at the training session are among the 2,500 officers who will be on the front lines during the DNC. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
The two sites chosen for the DNC, United Center and the McCormick Place convention center, will become highly secured bubbles, he told Fox News Digital. The city’s problems with violence and rowdy youths will be tucked away out of view.
“The DNC and all the political types, they are going to parachute in or helicopter in, and they’re not going to be affected by this,” he said. “Days ago, we had a terrible tragedy, a 7-year-old playing outside in front of his house shot with an AK-47. That’s terrible.”
DNC TO HOLD 2024 CONVENTION IN CHICAGO
He blamed progressive bail reforms, selective prosecutions and lenient punishments for the continued struggles with violence.
While murders have declined two years in a row after rising in 2020 and 2021, violent crime as a whole, led by soaring robberies, has climbed in the Windy City, police statistics show. Yearly car thefts nearly tripled between 2020 and 2023 from 9,910 to 29,287.
“You can’t just turn that climate around in six weeks,” Roy said.
Signage is displayed for the Democratic National Convention at United Center in Chicago. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images/File)
Still, crews are at work improving the roadways in and out of the convention areas and replacing rusted handrails as city leaders continue their preparations for the event, which could see protests from right-wing critics of the Democratic Party and also from far-left anti-Israel extremists who have been critical of the Biden administration in demonstrations across the country.
“About a month ago, they came out and replaced all the guard rails – what a coincidence,” Roy said. “It’s window dressing.”
Democrat leaders from the White House down to the mayor’s office are hoping to minimize disruptions and avoid bad optics.
ANTI-ISRAEL GROUPS ACCUSE CHICAGO, DNC OF TRYING TO ‘PROTECT’ BIDEN FROM PROTESTS AT 2024 DEM CONVENTION
With the Chicago Police Department’s roster down by an estimated 2,000 officers, they are leaning on police from the state and surrounding jurisdictions to step in through mutual aid so that the convention can be secured and that the city can meet its normal patrol obligations.
The McCormick Place convention center, one of the sites of the 2024 Democratic National Convention, is seen in Chicago. (Jamie Kelter Davis/Bloomberg via Getty Images/File)
“There are 2 million people outside these two little bubbles, and they need 911, they need the police,” Roy said. “It’s no fault of the police or the police administration, it’s the fault of the city administration, which has systematically allowed police personnel to be depleted down through the years.”
Another specter is that of the city’s infamous Democratic National Convention in 1968.
That’s the year massive left-wing protests against the Vietnam War erupted outside the DNC and were met with a violent crackdown. This year, experts are concerned that anti-Israel agitators who have disrupted city roadways could use the convention to get more attention to their cause. They have already protested at the convention sites, months before it opens.
Anti-Israel demonstrators stand outside United Center, the venue for the upcoming Democratic National Convention, in Chicago on May 22, 2024. (REUTERS/Jim Vondruska)
“If they can embarrass Chicago, if they can embarrass the governor, the mayor, the president, they’re happy,” Roy said. “Mission achieved. They don’t have to score a touchdown with a two-point conversion. A field goal will do, and they’ll settle for a field goal.”
The 2020 riots that followed the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis police custody are also fresh on many minds.
Chicago Police Superintendent Larry Snelling vowed in a recent Chicago Tribune op-ed that this year’s convention would be free of the chaos seen in 1968 and 2020.
Demonstrators rally outside an anti-Israel encampment that was dismantled by police at DePaul University in Chicago on May 16, 2024. (REUTERS/Jim Vondruska)
“As I’ve said repeatedly, if you want to protest and have your voice heard, CPD will protect your right to do so,” he wrote. “But looting, burning property, inflicting violence on innocent people and attacking the police are criminal acts and are not protected by the First Amendment or tolerated by CPD. We are not going to allow anyone to destroy this city.”
The key to that, he added, is extensive planning and preparation.
Chicago Police Superintendent Larry Snelling responds to a question during a June 4 news conference about the upcoming Democratic National Convention. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
“Most importantly, I have complete faith and trust in the department, our officers and the people of Chicago,” he wrote. “We all want the same thing: a successful and safe convention.”
DNC organizers said the safety zones are standard procedure and that similar measures would be taken in Milwaukee for the Republican National Convention.
“A security perimeter is a Secret Service requirement that is standard at all National Special Security Events, regardless of party or location,” the DNC told Fox News Digital in a statement.
There are also concerns among the officers being asked to assist from out of town.
Anti-Israel demonstrators gather at DePaul University on May 5, 2024, in Chicago, prompting a heavy police presence to prevent further escalation. (Jacek Boczarski/Anadolu via Getty Images)
“There is an anticipation that it’s going to be a chaotic situation,” said Betsy Brantner Smith, a retired police sergeant and spokesperson for the National Police Association.
Chicago police are also governed by an outside oversight agency known as the Civilian Office of Police Accountability, or COPA, she said. Its impact on assisting officers from other departments, should something go wrong, is not immediately clear.
“There’s just a lot of concern, not so much for their safety but for their careers and their freedoms, which is so unfortunate,” she said.
In addition to crime and protests, she added, city residents are also dealing with an unfettered influx of migrants.
Police investigate a shooting on Jan. 26, 2024, in Chicago. (Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune/Tribune News Service via Getty Images)
Last week, viral video emerged showing a large group of young people partying in the street. When police tried to take one of them into custody, someone ran up behind the officer and hit him in the back of the head. Then a group of girls started twerking as others recorded the event on their smartphones.
“The Democrats should be able to have their convention without strife. This is our American political system,” Brantner Smith said. “But the problem you have is they are the party who has now so vilified law enforcement. I would love to sit and chat with all of the abolish the police and defund the police Democrat politicians and ask them exactly how would you run this convention without the police?”
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Detroit, MI
Thompson: The new year brings a promising future for Detroit students
Detroit Public Schools Community District often gets a bad rap due to declining enrollment issues or longstanding challenges that led to the historic takeover of the school system before voters returned it to an elected board.
And in many cases, that is the lens through which the school system’s performance is examined and viewed across the state. But there are hidden stories of progress within a school system that is still struggling to define itself and to give young Detroiters hope for a meaningful future.
I saw that first-hand last week at Denby High School, part of the Detroit Public Schools Community District, on the city’s east side, where hundreds of young Black and Brown male students gathered in the basketball gym for the annual policing and prosperity forum.
The annual event initiated and led by tenacious Detroiter Sharlonda Buckman, the district’s assistant superintendent for family and community engagement, is one of the hidden jewels of the public school system and brings together male students from various high schools to discuss their interaction with law enforcement. On the panel were senior and junior police officers from the Detroit Police Department, as well as the district’s public safety chief, Labrit Jackson, all of whom took hard questions from the students about how to navigate the complexities of the criminal justice system.
Before the start of the forum, I met three students: 17-year-old Justin Montgomery, 17-year-old Exavier Ward and 16-year-old Wesley Lewis, all students of Denby.
The three of them live on the east side and are serious and determined students who believe they have an obligation to be worthy ambassadors of their communities.
“I just got a scholarship from Cleary University for track and field and cross country and I just signed the papers so I can be committed,” Ward told me. “I am excited for the new year and I’m ready to live my adult life.”
His parents are also joyful about his future because, “out of all of my siblings, I’m going to be the first one to go to college. I want to major in cybersecurity,” he says.
Montgomery is scouting Oakland University or Central Michigan University and is also interested in a trades school. He’s keeping his options open.
“I have been here for a while and I’m ready to get out of high school. The experience has been good for me,” he says.
For Lewis, graduating in 2027 will make him the first in his family to be committed to college. That alone keeps him upbeat for the new year as he prepares for the challenges and the pressures of being an 11th grade student.
“I’m really ready to go to college. I’m looking at Kentucky State University, Wayne State University and Michigan State University,” he says. “I probably would major in music in college because I currently play the piano. But sometimes I get nervous about college because I feel like it is going to be harder than high school.”
These impressive young men speak to the vitality of the school system and the need to continue to nurture and support them.
The forum on policing and prosperity reinforces that need.
“This forum is so important because we give the students an opportunity to have a voice and talk about the things that are important to them and how they interact with law enforcement,” says Marty Bulger, the district’s senior director of male mentoring.
“Even a more dynamic piece is the fact that because the city has seen a reduction in violent crime, we believe as we reach our young people, we will continue to see a decline. These young men are our future leaders.”
X (formerly Twitter): @BankoleDetNews
bankole@bankolethompson.com
Bankole Thompson’s columns appear on Mondays and Thursdays in The Detroit News.
Milwaukee, WI
Pregnant Milwaukee woman killed; suspect appears in court on arson charges
MILWAUKEE – New details are emerging in the death of a pregnant woman found dead after a house fire investigators say was intentionally set, as the man charged in the case appeared in court.
What we know:
21-year-old Cameron Washington appeared Sunday, Jan. 11, at the Milwaukee County Courthouse, where prosecutors outlined allegations tying him to the death of 22-year-old Gladys Johnson-Ball.
Washington faces six felony charges, including first-degree recklessly endangering safety and arson, all connected to the fire that broke out the night of Jan. 5.
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According to the criminal complaint, Johnson-Ball was the mother of Washington’s 3-year-old daughter and was pregnant with another child at the time of her death. Investigators say Washington lived with Johnson-Ball and her family at a home near 26th and Locust.
Police were called to the home for reports of a person with a weapon. When officers arrived, they reported seeing flames on the second floor of the house. While clearing the home, officers found Johnson-Ball unconscious in a bedroom that was on fire.
She was taken outside and pronounced dead at the scene.
Investigators noted Johnson-Ball had bruises across her body and blood coming from her nose and mouth, according to the complaint.
The complaint says Johnson-Ball’s mother told police Washington and her daughter had been inside the bedroom together all day and that family members had been unable to reach her. She told investigators Washington would not allow anyone inside the room and pointed a gun at family members.
What they’re saying:
“He was blocking the door like, ‘No you not getting in here,’ then I turned around and that’s when he pointed the gun at my daughter Kayla,” said Michelle Johnson, the victim’s mother.
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Family members told investigators the fire started moments later in the bedroom and Washington ran away from the house. He was later arrested, and police say a lighter was found in his pocket.
“Ultimately, this is extremely dangerous and deliberate behavior,” said Assistant District Attorney Anthony Moore.
Dig deeper:
In court, Washington’s bond was set at $100,000. Prosecutors said he could face more than 50 years in prison if convicted on all charges.
Court Commissioner Maria Dorsey noted Washington has not yet been charged with homicide because the medical examiner’s report was not completed when charges were filed.
What’s next:
Washington’s next court appearance is scheduled for Jan. 20.
The Source: Information in this report is from the Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office and Wisconsin Circuit Court.
Minneapolis, MN
Fishers vigil honors woman shot by ICE in Minneapolis
Fishers vigil attendees gather to remember Renee Nicole Good
Renee Nicole Good, 37, was shot and killed by an ICE officer in Minneapolis on Jan. 7, 2026.
Hundreds of people gathered for a candlelight vigil in Roy G Holland Memorial Park in Fishers to honor a woman killed by a federal immigration officer.
The crowd, bundled in coats, scarves and hats, chanted between singing songs and listening to speakers.
The vigil, hosted Jan. 11 by the local group Fishers Resist, is one of more than 1,000 protests and events that happened nationwide this weekend after an Immigration and Customs Enforcement officer shot and killed Renee Nicole Good, 37, in Minneapolis on Jan. 7.
Good joins at least nine other people who have been shot by ICE in the past four months. Federal officials have said Good struck ICE officer Jonathan Ross with her vehicle, prompting Ross to fire in self-defense. Local officials have called that narrative “propaganda,” and video analyses conducted by media outlets have failed to reach a consensus on what happened.
Ross, 43, once served in the Indiana National Guard from 2002 to 2008.
Organizers at the vigil estimated the crowd was at least 150 — that’s how many glow sticks were handed out — and potentially as many as 500.
One attendee, Lorena Lane from Carmel, donned a black dress with a red, white and blue “liberty” sash. Her hat, black and feathered, was adorned with an Indiana cardinal.”I’m here to personify the concept of liberty,” Lane said through tears, “which is at risk right now in our country.”
Many attendees shared a sense that American principles were at risk, something they felt was demonstrated by Good’s death. Paintings, photos and signs with her name were sprinkled throughout the crowd.
“We have to take a stance against the harm that’s coming into our cities from ICE,” Melinda Humbert, who attended the vigil with her husband and daughter, said.
The Fishers event followed a brief anti-ICE protest along East 86th Street in Indianapolis that took place the day before. It’s part of a growing backlash against President Donald Trump’s promise to conduct the largest mass deportation campaign in the country’s history, where Indiana has been a key player.
Since Trump took office and Gov. Mike Braun issued an executive order urging law enforcement agencies comply with ICE, the state’s partnership with ICE has grown. Indiana has expanded its capacity for detainees, including at the controversy-plagued Miami Correctional Facility. Indianapolis, along with cities in Texas and Florida, is now a major hub for ICE arrests at jails and prisons.
Contact breaking politics reporter Marissa Meador at mmeador@gannett.com or find her on X at @marissa_meador.
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