Illinois
Bet365 Illinois bonus code WEEK365: $150 launch week bonus for NBA, NCAAB
Apply the bet365 Illinois bonus code WEEK365 to claim a new welcome offer in time for the college basketball tournament and the first matchup of the MLB season. You’ll also have access to a bracket challenge that is awarding $10,000,000 in prizes.
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21 and present in Arizona, Colorado, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, New Jersey, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, or Virginia. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-Gambler. Deposit required. Bet Credits wager excluded from returns. T&Cs, time limits and exclusions apply.
BET $5, GET $150 BONUS BETS!
OR $1,000 FIRST BET SAFETY NET!
Sign up using our bet365 Illinois bonus code and start with a $5 bet. Win or lose, this will trigger a $150 bonus. The other option is a $1K first-bet safety net, which is better for those who want to make an aggressive wager on a certain game.
The Cubs will begin the MLB season on Tuesday morning against the Dodgers. Shota Imanaga and Yoshinobu Yamamoto will be on the mound for the MLB World Tour: Tokyo Series. All eyes will be on Shohei Ohtani has he looks to follow up a 54-home run season last year.
Register now to use our new bet365 Illinois bonus code WEEK365. Bet $5 on any game to release a $150 bonus or wager up to $1,000 with a safety net.
Bet365 Illinois Bonus Code: Bracket Challenge
The field of 64 will be set following the play-in games on Tuesday and Wednesday. Make your first bets on the tournament on North Carolina vs. San Diego State or Xavier vs. Texas.
Be sure to make all your picks in the bet365 Bracket Challenge before the first matchup on Thursday. The customer who accumulates the most points will win $100,000, and there are other prizes for those who finish in the top 5,000.
It’s also a great time to make a futures wager on who you think will make the trip to San Antonio. Auburn, Houston, Duke and Florida are among the favorites to win the title.
How to Use Our bet365 Illinois Bonus Code
All new customers in Illinois can take advantage of this welcome offer in time for college basketball. Take these steps to pick a welcome offer.
- Sign up at the top of this article to use our bet365 Illinois bonus code WEEK365.
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- Make a deposit of $10 or more with an accepted payment method, like a debit card, PayPal or online banking.
- Bet $5 for a $150 bonus or wager up to $1,000.
The outcome of your initial bet doesn’t matter when selecting the guaranteed bonus, but a loss with the safety net will cause a bonus refund.
Find New SGP Boosts Every Day for the NBA
There are new same-game parlay boosts available every day for the NBA. Below are just some of the bet365 parlays with enhanced odds for action on Monday night:
- Timberwolves win, Anthony Edwards scores 30+ points and Rudy Gobert records 10+ rebounds (+400)
- Cade Cunningham records 30+ points, 7+ assists and 7+ rebounds (+800)
- Coby White, Kevin Huerter and Matas Buzelis each make 3+ three-pointers (+1000)
- Desmond Bane, DeMar DeRozan and Malik Monk each score 20+ points (+500)
- Warriors win, Stephen Curry records 35+ points and 7+ made threes (+600)
- Suns win, Devin Booker records 30+ points and 7+ assists (+500)
Sign up above to use our bet365 Illinois bonus code WEEK365. Begin with a $5 bet to score a $150 bonus or wager up to $1,000 with a safety net.
21+ and present in participating states. Gambling problem? Call 1-800-Gambler.
Newsweek may earn an affiliate commission if you sign up through the links in this article. See the sportsbook operator’s terms and conditions for important details. Sports betting operators have no influence over newsroom coverage.
Illinois
Man found dead after apartment building fire in Cicero, Illinois
A man was found dead after an apartment building fire Monday night in west suburban Cicero.
Around 9:15 p.m., Cicero firefighters responded to a fire in the 1800 block of 51st Avenue, after reports of an explosion in the middle unit of a three-story apartment building, according to a town spokesperson.
The fire was extinguished by about 9:45 a.m. After the fire was put out, firefighters found a man dead in the apartment where the fire started. The victim’s name has not been released.
No one else was in the apartment at the time, and officials said foul play is not suspected.
The people living in the other apartments were displaced, but no one else was injured.
The cause of the fire was under investigation Tuesday morning.
Illinois
Gov. JB Pritzker mulling bill passed by lawmakers to make Illinois a ‘right-to-die’ state
Gov. JB Pritzker on Monday wouldn’t commit to signing legislation narrowly approved by the Illinois General Assembly that would allow terminally ill people to end their own lives with a doctor’s prescription, but he said he’s “deeply” affected by the plight of residents seeking end-of-life options.
The Illinois Senate passed the polarizing bill with a bare-minimum 30-27 majority last week during the waning overnight hours of the Legislature’s fall veto session, leaving Pritzker’s signature as the final hurdle toward granting patients access to life-ending medicine if they have six months or less to live.
Like many other Springfield observers, the Democratic governor said he was surprised to see the bill taken up five months after it passed the Illinois House with just three votes to spare.
“It was something that I didn’t expect and didn’t know was going to be voted on, so we’re examining it even now,” Pritzker said after an unrelated press conference Monday in Glen Ellyn.
“I know how terrible it is that someone who’s in the last six months of their life could be experiencing terrible pain and anguish, and I know people who’ve gone through that. I know people whose family members have gone through that, and so it hits me deeply and makes me wonder about how we can alleviate the pain that they’re going through,” Pritzker said.
Lawmakers in 11 other states and Washington D.C. have passed so-called “right-to-die” legislation, which is opposed by religious leaders including Chicago Cardinal Blase Cupich.
Illinois’ bill, championed by Democratic Aurora state Sen. Linda Holmes, would open the door for people 18 or older with a terminal diagnosis to be prescribed a fatal dose of medicine.
They would have to be assessed by a physician and a mental health professional as being “of sound mind,” and make a series of oral and written requests for the drug, with witnesses attesting.
Doctors would be required to explain other end-of-life care options such as hospice. If prescribed a life-ending drug, patients would administer it themselves. Health care providers wouldn’t be required to participate.
“This is a choice,” Holmes said during Senate floor debate. “If you are opposed to it, whether the reason is moral, religious, you just don’t like the idea — fine. I would never tell you you should choose this option. What I’m saying is, why? Why, if I am facing an illness where I am going to die in pain, do you think you should tell me I don’t have the option to alleviate that pain?”
Holmes, whose parents died of terminal cancer, urged colleagues to “let people make the decision on how their lives are going to end.”
State Sen. Chris Balkema, R-Channahon, denounced the effort “to introduce a culture of death into Illinois.”
“Assisted suicide forces doctors into a role that contradicts their professional ethics. Illinois’ values overall are at stake,” Balkema said. “Whether the Lord chooses to take somebody today or 50 years from now, it shouldn’t be our choice to walk down that slippery slope, only to come back later, to have a future general assembly, open the guardrails and allow more of this.”
Archdiocese leaders of the Catholic Conference of Illinois urged Pritzker “not only to veto this bill in totality, but also to address humanely the reasons why some view assisted suicide as their only option.”
“It defies common sense for our state to enact a 9-8-8 suicide hotline, increase funding for suicide prevention programs and then pass a law that, based on the experience of other jurisdictions, results in more suicide,” Catholic Conference leaders said in a statement.
Bill proponents from the ACLU of Illinois and the nonprofit Compassion & Choices hailed the legislation to ensure “everyone in Illinois has the ability to access all options at the end of life.”
“Our hearts are with the families and individuals who have courageously shared their stories in the effort to advance this legislation. Their honesty and openness will make life better for Illinoisans once the law is implemented,” supporters said in a statement.
Pritzker has two months to consider the bill.
Illinois
2 children among 5 injured in head-on crash in unincorporated Harvard, fire officials say
UNINCORPORATED HARVARD, Ill. (WLS) — Two children were among five people injured in a head-on crash in the north suburbs on Sunday afternoon, officials said.
The Harvard Fire Protection District said first responders were dispatched to the area of Route 14 and Lembcke Road in unincorporated Harvard just after 4 p.m.
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Crews found an SUV and a sedan, which were both heavily damaged, and debris scattered across the roadway.
Two children, who were in the SUV, suffered injuries, fire officials said. One child was airlifted from the scene in serious condition to a Level I trauma center. An ambulance took the other child, who suffered minor injuries, to a local hospital.
One of the injured children was reportedly ejected from their car seat.
Firefighters also worked to free sedan’s driver, who was trapped in his vehicle, officials said. An ambulance transported him to a local hospital in serious condition.
Officials said two other adults, who were in the SUV, suffered moderate injuries and were also taken to a local hospital.
The roadway was closed for nearly 90 minutes in both directions.
The McHenry County Sheriff’s Office is investigating.
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