Illinois
Bond set at $50K for father of Highland Park, Illinois, July 4 shooting suspect
CHICAGO — A decide on Saturday set bond at $50,000 for the daddy of an Illinois man charged with killing seven folks at a July 4 parade who’s accused of serving to his son get a gun license years earlier than the taking pictures on a suburban Chicago primary avenue.
Robert Crimo Jr., 58, regarded somber and drained in his first look earlier than a decide since voluntarily surrendering to police Friday. His lawyer, George M. Gomez, informed the decide Saturday that the daddy of three would have the ability to pay the required bond quantity for his launch.
Crimo, a uncommon case of a mum or dad charged after a toddler is accused in a mass taking pictures, faces seven felony counts of reckless conduct — one rely for every particular person fatally shot through the summertime parade. Every rely carries a most six-year jail time period.
At a short 10-minute listening to, carried out through video hyperlink, Lake County Choose Jacquelyn Melius mentioned she accepted an settlement between Crimo’s lawyer and prosecutors that bond be set at $50,000, which was decrease than the $500,000 bond that might have been imposed.
Gomez informed the decide earlier than she set bond that his consumer had been a enterprise proprietor for over 30 years and had lifelong ties to the group of Highland Park, the place the mass taking pictures occurred over the summer time. Prosecutors didn’t oppose Crimo’s launch on bond.
“Mr. Crimo will not be a hazard to the group. He isn’t a flight threat,” Gomez mentioned, including that Crimo had cooperated totally with authorities because the taking pictures.
Among the many circumstances of his launch, the decide informed Crimo, was that he flip in any gun licenses, in addition to any weapons at his residence, inside 24 hours of the listening to. Crimo presently lives in Highwood, a metropolis that borders Highland Park.
Requested by the decide if he may hear the proceedings by way of his video hyperlink, Crimo mentioned that he may — however he in any other case made no statements to the court docket.
Choose Melius set his subsequent listening to for Jan. 12.
Lake County State’s Legal professional Eric Rinehart mentioned Friday that costs towards the daddy have been based mostly on Crimo sponsoring his son’s utility for a gun license in December 2019. His son was 19 years outdated on the time.
“Dad and mom and guardians are in one of the best place to determine whether or not their youngsters ought to have a weapon,” Rinehart mentioned. “On this case, the system failed when Robert Crimo Jr. sponsored his son. He knew what he knew and he signed the shape anyway.”
Authorities have beforehand mentioned the accused shooter, Robert Crimo III, tried suicide by machete in April 2019 and in September 2019 was accused by a member of the family of creating threats to “kill everybody.”
These reviews got here months earlier than Crimo Jr. sponsored his son’s utility.
Gomez, the Chicago-area lawyer, known as the costs towards the daddy “baseless and unprecedented” in a written assertion on Friday.
“This determination ought to alarm each single mum or dad in the USA of America who in response to the Lake County State’s Legal professional is aware of precisely what’s going on with their 19-year-old grownup kids and may be held criminally accountable for actions taken practically three years later,” Gomez mentioned.
Gomez mentioned his consumer “continues to sympathize and really feel horrible for the people and households who have been injured and misplaced family members.” However the lawyer known as the costs “politically motivated and a distraction from the actual change that should occur on this nation.”
A grand jury in July indicted Robert Crimo III on 21 first-degree homicide counts, 48 counts of tried homicide and 48 counts of aggravated battery, representing the seven folks killed and dozens wounded within the assault on a beloved vacation occasion in Highland Park.
Authorized specialists have mentioned it is uncommon for an accused shooter’s mum or dad or guardian to face costs — partially as a result of it is troublesome to show such costs.
In a single notable exception, a Michigan prosecutor final 12 months filed involuntary manslaughter costs towards the mother and father of a teen accused of fatally taking pictures 4 college students at his highschool. A January trial date in that case has been delayed whereas the state appeals court docket considers an enchantment by the mother and father.
Authorities have beforehand mentioned that Illinois State Police reviewed Crimo III’s December 2019 gun license utility and located no cause to disclaim it as a result of he had no arrests, no felony report, no severe psychological well being issues, no orders of safety and no different habits that might disqualify him.
However following the parade taking pictures, public information confirmed that Crimo III tried suicide by machete in April 2019, in response to a police report obtained by The Related Press that famous a “historical past of makes an attempt.”
In September 2019, police acquired a report from a member of the family that Crimo III had a set of knives and had threatened to “kill everybody.”
Each Crimo III and his mom disputed the specter of violence on the time. Police have mentioned father Robert Crimo Jr. later informed investigators the knives belonged to him, and authorities returned them.
Robert Crimo Jr. has proven up at a number of pretrial hearings for his son this 12 months, nodding in greeting when his son entered the courtroom shackled and flanked by guards. The daddy has been a well-recognized face round Highland Park, the place he was as soon as a mayoral candidate and was well-known for working comfort shops.
In media interviews after the taking pictures, Robert Crimo Jr. had mentioned he didn’t anticipate to face costs and didn’t imagine he did something fallacious by serving to his son get a gun license by way of the state’s established course of.
Illinois
These Are The Best Middle Schools In IL: U.S. News Ranking
CHICAGO — Six of the top 10 best middle schools in Illinois are part of Chicago Public Schools, according to a new analysis by U.S. News & World Report.
The 2025 best middle schools rankings includes more than 2,500 in Illinois and scores them based on state assessment scores and publicly available data from the U.S. Department of Education.
Scores were analyzed in the context of socioeconomic demographics, and student-teacher ratios were used as a tiebreaker when schools scored equally.
Find out what’s happening in Wilmette-Kenilworthwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
LaMont Jones, U.S. News’ managing editor for education, said research shows that students’ academic performance in early grades can be major indication of their success at the secondary and postsecondary levels.
“The 2025 Best Elementary and Middle Schools rankings offer parents a way to evaluate how schools are providing a high-quality education and preparing students for future success,” Jones said in a release. “The data empowers families and communities to advocate for their children’s education.”
Find out what’s happening in Wilmette-Kenilworthwith free, real-time updates from Patch.
Top 10 Middle Schools In Illinois
1. Edison Elementary Regional Gifted Center – Chicago
Grades: K–8
Enrollment: 267
2. Young Magnet High School – Chicago
Grades: 7–12
Enrollment: 2,148
3. Lane Technical High School – Chicago
Grades: 7–12
Enrollment: 4,496
4. Decatur Classical Elementary School – Chicago
Grades: K–6
Enrollment: 323
5. Reservoir Gifted School – Peoria
Grades: 5–8
Enrollment: 277
6. Skinner North Elementary School – Chicago
Grades: K–8
Enrollment: 490
7. Thurgood Marshall School – Rockford
Grades: 5–8
Enrollment: 482
8. Taft High School – Chicago
Grades: 7–12
Enrollment: 4,464
9. Hickory Creek Middle School – Frankfort
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 910
10. Lena-Winslow Junior High School – Lena
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 165
Below is the list of the top 25 middle schools in Illinois located outside of Chicago (the top four are also listed above) with their grade levels and enrollment.
It includes 12 schools in Cook County, two each in DuPage, Lake, Peoria and Winnebago counties, and one each from Clinton, Effingham, Grundy, Stephenson and Tazewell counties.
Top 25 Illinois Middle Schools Outside Chicago
1. Reservoir Gifted School – Peoria
Grades: 5–8
Enrollment: 277
2. Thurgood Marshall School – Rockford
Grades: 5–8
Enrollment: 482
3. Hickory Creek Middle School – Frankfort
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 910
4. Lena-Winslow Junior High School – Lena
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 165
5. Northbrook Junior High School – Northbrook
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 631
6. Kennedy Junior High School – Lisle
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 931
7. Teutopolis Junior High School – Teutopolis
Grades: 7–8
Enrollment: 178
8. Highcrest Middle School – Wilmette
Grades: 5–6
Enrollment: 760
9. Daniel Wright Junior High School – Lincolnshire
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 764
10. Margaret Mead Junior High School – Elk Grove Village
Grades: 7–8
Enrollment: 671
11. Aviston Elementary School – Aviston
Grades: PK–8
Enrollment: 429
12. Park Junior High School – La Grange Park
Grades: 7–8
Enrollment: 694
13. Marie Murphy School – Wilmette
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 276
14. Willowbrook Middle School – South Beloit
Grades: 5–8
Enrollment: 296
15. Dunlap Middle School – Dunlap
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 544
16. Sunset Ridge Elementary School – Northfield
Grades: 4–8
Enrollment: 249
17. Westfield Middle School – Bloomingdale
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 484
18. Saratoga Elementary School – Morris
Grades: PK–8
Enrollment: 772
19. Field School – Northbrook
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 309
20. Central School – Glencoe
Grades: 5–8
Enrollment: 568
21. Wood Oaks Junior High School – Northbrook
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 475
22. McClure Junior High School – Western Springs
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 455
23. Highland Middle School – Libertyville
Grades: 6–8
Enrollment: 755
24. Morton Junior High School – Morton
Grades: 7–8
Enrollment: 485
25. The Joseph Sears School – Kenilworth
Grades: PK–8
Enrollment: 471
More information is available from U.S. News & World Report’s full list of the best Illinois middle schools
Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.
Illinois
Deadspin | No. 8 Alabama braces for stern challenge from No. 25 Illinois
Alabama was unsuccessful in last Friday’s fierce test against a Big Ten program, falling at Purdue to slide out of the top five in the polls.
The No. 8 Crimson Tide will see another ranked Big Ten squad on Wednesday when they battle No. 25 Illinois in the C.M. Newton Classic at Birmingham, Ala.
Alabama (3-1) was outclassed 87-78 in the showdown against the Boilermakers. But coach Nate Oats indicated there is a method behind the madness of playing a road game against a team that lost in last season’s NCAA title game.
“We schedule these games for a reason,” Oats told reporters. “We like to go against the best teams in the country and figure out what we have to work on, and we have plenty to work on because (the Boilermakers) are good. Braden Smith is one of the best guards in the country and he does not turn the ball over. As a team, they only had three turnovers.”
The Crimson Tide struggled defensively but received a solid offensive performance from freshman guard Labaron Philon, who scored 18 points on 7-of-10 shooting. Philon is averaging 12 points through four games.
“Labaron has been really good. Probably better than what we thought he was going to be,” Oats said. “I thought he had a pretty good game. But we got to keep developing our bench. We got to keep developing the young guys and they got to help us win a lot of games this year.”
Mark Sears had 15 points and six assists but made just 5 of 15 shots against Purdue. The first-team All-American is averaging a team-best 17.3 points but his high outing is just 20.
Last season, Sears scored 20 or more points on 26 occasions while setting a school record with 797 points.
Illinois (3-0) won its first two games by 45 and 32 points, respectively, before posting a 66-54 home win over Oakland on Wednesday.
Fighting Illini coach Brad Underwood said the Golden Grizzlies affected the speed of the game by their cautious approach and a zone defense that forced patience and perimeter shots.
The Illini didn’t respond well, committing 18 turnovers and making just 7 of 25 3-point attempts.
“The biggest, most important, takeaway for me is it’s not always fun and easy and free flowing,” Underwood said. “There’s going to be some grind-it-out games. I thought we handled that pretty well for the most part, but we’ve still got some things to work on.”
Tomislav Ivisic recorded 20 points, six rebounds and four steals to continue his strong start. He has a team-best five steals and also leads in rebounding at 9.0 per game in addition to being the squad’s second-leading scorer at 17.3.
The 7-foot-1 Croatian made 9 of 14 field-goal attempts while finding open creases in the Oakland defense.
“We were preparing for their zone the whole week,” Ivisic said. “The coach was asking for me to be in the middle spot. That I would have a lot of space there to help my teammates, assist them, or have open shots.”
Will Riley, who is averaging 17.7 points and 6.0 rebounds off the bench, had just eight points on 2-of-8 shooting against Oakland.
Alabama has won three of the four meetings between the schools. In the most recent contest, Alabama rolled to a 79-58 home win in the first round of the NIT.
–Field Level Media
Illinois
Illinois woman attacked man in Panera Bread for wearing Palestine sweatshirt, police say
Alexandra Szustakiewicz, 64, of Darien, Illinois, was charged with two counts of hate crime and one count of disorderly conduct, officials said.
Palestinian woman hopes next U.S. president will help end war
A displaced Palestinian has a ‘glimmer of hope’ the next U.S. President can help reach a ceasefire.
An Illinois woman was charged with hate crimes after she attacked a man for wearing a sweatshirt with the word “Palestine” written on it at a suburban Chicago Panera Bread, prosecutors and officials said.
Alexandra Szustakiewicz, 64, of Darien, Illinois, was charged with two counts of hate crime and one count of disorderly conduct, DuPage County State’s Attorney Robert Berlin and Downers Grove Chief of Police Michael DeVries announced in a statement Monday. The charges stem from an incident Saturday at a Panera Bread in Downers Grove, a village about 23 miles southwest of downtown Chicago.
Downers Grove police said Szustakiewicz was at Panera Bread shortly before noon, local time, on Saturday when she “confronted and yelled expletives at a man” who was wearing a sweatshirt with the word “Palestine” written on it. Szustakiewicz then allegedly attempted to hit a cell phone out of the hands of a woman who was with the man when the woman began recording the encounter.
According to the statement, officers responded to a report of a disturbance at the Panera Bread, and Szustakiewicz was taken into custody the following day without incident. A complaint filed against Szustakiewicz alleged that she “committed a hate crime by reason of perceived national origin” of the two victims.
During her first court appearance Monday morning, a judge granted prosecutors’ request that Szustakiewicz have no contact with the victims and that she may not enter the Panera Bread where the incident occurred, the statement said. Szustakiewicz is scheduled to appear in court on Dec. 16 for arraignment.
“Every member of society, regardless of race, religion, sexual orientation or any other individual characteristic, deserves to be treated with respect and civility,” Berlin said in a statement. “This type of behavior and the accompanying prejudice have no place in a civilized society and my office stands ready to file the appropriate charges in such cases.”
Civil rights organization: Victim shielded his wife from punches
The Chicago office of the Council on American-Islamic Relations (CAIR-Chicago), the nation’s largest Muslim civil rights and advocacy organization, condemned the incident on Monday. The organization called Szustakiewicz’s behavior “shameful and abusive.”
CAIR-Chicago said Szustakiewicz had verbally and physically attacked a couple, identified as Waseem and his pregnant wife, for wearing a Palestine hoodie. The organization added that Waseem “shielded his wife from several punching attempts” during the encounter.
The incident was captured on video, according to CAIR-Chicago, and shared on social media — including on X, where it garnered about 1.2 million views by Monday night.
In the video, a woman lunged at a person who recorded the incident with a cell phone. A man then attempted to stop the woman, pushing her back with his arm, asking: “What are you doing?”
The video then showed the woman trying to hit the man, with a beverage she held spilling onto the ground. The woman continued attempting to swipe at the victims while threatening to call the police.
Later, the man is heard telling the woman to stop. Footage then showed the woman approaching the cash register, asking an employee to call the police.
Moments later, the woman is captured on video trying to hit the person recording the incident, with the man stepping in between them. The man is heard telling the woman: “Get away from my wife.”
The man and the person recording the video are then seen walking away from the woman, while she appears to follow them. The video then shows the man pushing the woman back, prompting both to threaten to punch each other.
“I’m a born and raised American who took his wife out for lunch. I was not able to do that simply because I was Palestinian,” Waseem told CAIR-Chicago.
Latest incident amid surge in Islamophobia, hate crimes
CAIR-Chicago Executive Director Ahmed Rehab said Saturday’s incident along with other recent hate incidents across the U.S. “reflect a broader pattern of hostility and intolerance towards Palestinian Americans and the Muslim community at large.”
Between January and June 2024, CAIR documented nearly 5,000 incoming bias complaints nationwide — a 69% increase of recorded complaints from the same period in 2023. The organization also released a report earlier this year, which found that CAIR received the “highest number of complaints it has ever received in its 30-year history” last year.
The report documented more than 8,000 complaints regarding anti-Muslim hate and nearly half of those complaints were reported in the final three months of 2023. The report noted that the wave of Islamophobia and anti-Muslim incidents is primarily due to the escalation of violence in Gaza following Hamas’ attack on Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.
Numerous incidents have sparked fear among Muslim-American and Arab-American communities. About a week after the Oct. 7 attack, an Illinois man was charged with a hate crime after he fatally stabbed a 6-year-old and seriously injured the child’s mother in what authorities said was a violent response to the Israel-Hamas war.
In April, prosecutors said a New Jersey man was convicted of hate crimes after he attacked a Muslim man near a New York City food cart. A Texas woman was charged in June after authorities said she tried to drown a Muslim child at an apartment complex pool.
Last month, a New York City woman was indicted for an anti-Muslim attack after she pepper sprayed an Uber driver earlier this year, according to prosecutors.
-
News1 week ago
Herbert Smith Freehills to merge with US-based law firm Kramer Levin
-
Technology1 week ago
The next Nintendo Direct is all about Super Nintendo World’s Donkey Kong Country
-
Business6 days ago
Column: OpenAI just scored a huge victory in a copyright case … or did it?
-
Health6 days ago
Bird flu leaves teen in critical condition after country's first reported case
-
Business3 days ago
Column: Molly White's message for journalists going freelance — be ready for the pitfalls
-
Politics1 week ago
Editorial: Abortion was on ballots across the country in this election. The results are encouraging
-
World7 days ago
Sarah Palin, NY Times Have Explored Settlement, as Judge Sets Defamation Retrial
-
Politics2 days ago
Trump taps FCC member Brendan Carr to lead agency: 'Warrior for Free Speech'