Illinois
Illinois conversion therapy ban at risk after Supreme Court ruling
ILLINOIS – The U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that a Colorado law banning conversion therapy for minors may violate the First Amendment, a decision that could affect future legal challenges to similar laws in Illinois and across the country.
In an 8-1 decision, the court sided with a Colorado Springs counselor who argued the state cannot restrict what she says to clients during therapy sessions. The justices sent the case back to a lower court to decide if the law can hold up under a tougher legal test.
Why this matters in Illinois:
Illinois has banned conversion therapy for minors since 2015 under the Youth Mental Health Protection Act.
That law remains in place today.
What changes is how courts look at it. Judges now have to use a higher legal standard when reviewing laws like this, which could make them easier to challenge.
Scott Bertani, who works in LGBTQ health policy, said the ruling shifts how therapy is viewed under the law.
He said the decision blurs the line between medical care and speech.
“So by framing this law as a restriction on speech instead of what it really is is a regulation of professional conduct… the majority starts to collapse that line between what a licensed therapist practice and just ordinary expression is,” Bertani said.
Different views:
Some legal voices say the ruling could have broad implications.
Chicago attorney John Mauck, who previously challenged Illinois’ law as it applied to pastors, said the decision strengthens free speech protections for counselors.
“Today’s High Court decision effectively rules that the Illinois law banning counseling for licensed counselors is invalid as a violation of free speech rights,” Mauck said in a statement. “The state has no business telling counselors, ‘You can help people go gay, but you can’t help them go straight.’”
Mauck pointed to a 2017 federal case involving Illinois pastors, where a court found the state’s ban did not apply to clergy.
What the court said:
Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote that the Colorado law may “censor speech based on viewpoint,” which raises concerns under the First Amendment.
The case centers on Kaley Chiles, a licensed counselor who said clients seek her out because of shared beliefs.
“I want what is best for my clients, and often they seek me out because we have a shared faith,” Chiles said in earlier filings.
Her attorney argued the law blocks certain conversations based on the direction of counseling.
“This law tells them that if they’re seeking help in one direction that licensed mental health professionals and counselors are not available to them,” the attorney said.
Health concerns and risks:
Conversion therapy refers to counseling practices aimed at changing a young person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.
Major medical groups, including the American Medical Association and the American Psychological Association, have said the practice is ineffective and linked to increased risks of depression, anxiety, and suicidal thoughts.
Bertani said those risks are central to how health experts view the issue.
“Because conversion therapy is not neutral talk. It’s discredited practice,” he said. “And every major medical and mental health body has said that it doesn’t work and that it’s tied to increased risks of depression, anxiety, and suicide, ideation among LGBTQ+ individuals.”
What’s next:
The case now returns to a lower court, which will decide whether Colorado’s law can meet that tougher legal test.
That decision could shape how similar laws are challenged and defended nationwide, including in Illinois, where lawmakers may need to revisit how the ban is written and upheld.
The Source: The information in this article was reported by FOX Chicago’s Terrence Lee.
Illinois
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Missing man’s body found in retention pond in Elk Grove Village, police say
ELK GROVE VILLAGE, Ill. (WLS) — The body of a missing man was found in a retention pond Thursday in the northwest suburbs, police said.
Chopper 7 was over the scene at a retention pond at Higgins and Innovation Drive in Elk Grove Village, in front of a number of warehouses in the area.
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There was a large police presence there for multiple hours, surrounding the water.
Chopper 7 witnessed dive teams go in and out of the water, and there were paramedics on scene.
Elk Grove Police confirmed a male body was found in the water in the 700 block of Innovation Drive. The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office responded to the scene.
Police identified the body as a missing 26-year-old man named Alexis Ramirez.
Ramirez had been missing since March 10. Elk Grove Police were searching the same area after Ramirez went missing after he was the sole occupant of a single-vehicle crash near Higgins and Brennan Boulevard, which is right by the pond he was found in on Thursday.
Police believe he walked away from that scene before officers arrived. At that time, the police search led to no one being found.
ABC7 spoke to the family of Ramirez on the scene Thursday, and they appeared very emotional.
Police say there is no evidence of foul play at this time as they send out their condolences to the family.
No further information was immediately available.
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Illinois
Giant Illinois interstate sign collapses after truck strike, ‘major delays’ expected
A busy stretch of I-64 in Illinois near St. Louis remains closed after a truck hit an overhead sign Wednesday night, with shocking photos showing beams of metal collapsed on the roadway.
The Illinois Department of Transportation posted about the closure, in St. Clair County, just before 8 a.m. Thursday.
“Heads up, Metro East travelers! Westbound I-64 approaching I-255 is currently closed due to a truck that hit a sign trust overnight,” IDOT said in a Facebook post. “Our crews are on it, working hard to get things cleared up and the road reopened ASAP. Expect major delays this morning, so if you can, try to steer clear of the area.”
According to the Illinois State Police, about 10:50 p.m., truck tractor semi trailer was in the construction zone on I-64 near Washington Park when it failed to lower its dump bed and struck the overhead road sign.
The structure holding the sign then failed and fell onto the roadway, ISP said. No injuries were reported.
Photos shared by IDOT showed the damage, with two giant green road signs over the interstate nearly touching the road, with the metal structure crushed and folded.
As of Thursday morning, all four westbound lanes remained closed due to the damage. Cleanup was expected to last for hours, with traffic diverted to IL 157, ISP said.
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