Illinois
Transfer portal big man commits to the Illinois basketball program
The Illinois basketball team received a massive boost from the transfer portal on Tuesday night.
Through nearly a month of the offseason, the transfer portal has been a wild ride for the Illini. The festivities started with Dain Dainja transferring out. Since then, two more Illinois players – Sencire Harris and Amani Hansberry – have also departed.
Brad Underwood has done a great job combating the outgoing players. Entering the week, the Illini had secured commitments from Tre White, Jake Davis, and Kylan Boswell. That group got a little bit bigger in the past 24 hours too.
On Tuesday night, Carey Booth took to social media to announce that he was committing to Illinois. We needed some serious frontcourt help, and the answer is in the form of a former top-70 recruit.
Coming out of Brewster Academy in New Hampshire, the 6-foot-10, 203-pound forward was a four-star recruit who was ranked as the No. 55 player in the class of 2023. He was also the No. 13 power forward in the country and the No. 2 player coming out of New Hampshire.
Despite a lot of big-time programs pursuing Booth, he decided to commit to Notre Dame. In the lone season in South Bend, Booth averaged 6.4 points and 4.3 rebounds per contest. After playing in 33 games and averaging 19.9 minutes per game, Booth decided to find greener pastures. He is now in Champaign.
First off, I love the size that Booth brings to the table. Illinois is a fairly small team, and Booth will step in as the tallest player on the roster from day one.
Booth has a willingness to shoot from all levels of the floor too. He isn’t just a paint player. This kid can stretch a floor and pull the opposing big man out of the paint. That is going to be an asset to slashers like White.
The athletic ability and movement are going to be nice to see in the Illinois lineup. Booth can fly around the court and get to the rim with his size and athletic ability. He doesn’t stand around either. Booth is always on the move, which gets him open looks.
When I look at Booth, I see a ton of potential. He isn’t one of these players who hasn’t gotten his career off the ground, so he is looking for a new home. This kid has the potential to not only be a good player, but I think he could blossom into a first-round NBA Draft pick.
Illinois
GOP Rep. Ryan Spain opposes Illinois redistricting changes
Enter your email and we’ll send a secure one-click link to sign in.
CIProud.com is provided by Nexstar Media Group, Inc., and uses the My Nexstar sign-in, which works across our media network.
Learn more at nexstar.tv/privacy-policy.
CIProud.com is provided by Nexstar Media Group, Inc., and uses the My Nexstar sign-in, which works across our media network.
Nexstar Media Group, Inc. is a leading, diversified media company that produces and distributes engaging local and national news, sports, and entertainment content across its television and digital platforms. The My Nexstar sign-in works across the Nexstar network—including The CW, NewsNation, The Hill, and more. Learn more at nexstar.tv/privacy-policy.
Illinois
‘Millionaires tax’ would hike rate 61% on 22K Illinois small businesses
Combined state and federal taxes would take more than 50% of the top-end income for 22,000 Illinois small businesses.
Proposals in the Illinois General Assembly could slam massive tax hikes onto small businesses, the state’s primary job creator historically and in the recovery from the COVID-19 downturn.
One measure would punish 22,020 Illinois small businesses with a huge increase in their marginal state income tax rate and create a top tax rate of nearly 50.3% for them, once all state and federal income taxes are factored in.
S-corporations and partnerships, which “pass-through” their business income to their owners, who pay taxes as individuals, would see their top marginal state income tax rate jump from 4.95% to 7.95%, a 61% hike.
That would happen because the legislation, House Joint Resolution Constitutional Amendment 21, adds a 3% income tax on income above $1 million. It is scheduled for a hearing April 23 at which it could pass out of committee and go to a potential full House vote.
Research has shown that an increase in the top marginal tax rate is associated with a decrease in entrepreneurs’ hiring activity and lower wages for their employees.
Illinois has one of the highest unemployment rates in the nation and among the slowest wage growth. These are exacerbated by some of the highest state and local tax burdens in the nation, including the second-highest property taxes and eighth-highest sales taxes.
In 2017 Illinois residents endured the largest permanent income tax hike in state history, when lawmakers increased the rate by 32%, from 3.75% to 4.95%.
Illinois already pushes out more businesses than virtually any other state. The “millionaire’s tax” could make the situation even worse. Illinoisans should reject this call for higher taxes on the state’s vital small business community.
Contact your state representative to stop the small business tax hike here.
Illinois
Illinois teen stabbing case returns to court this week
SYCAMORE, Ill. – A Sycamore mother said she is still waiting for justice more than two years after her teenage son was stabbed to death.
The case is back in court this week, where a judge will consider a key request that could change how the case moves forward.
What we know:
A mother said her son’s life was cut short during a confrontation that turned deadly.
Heather Gerken said her 17-year-old son, Kaleb McCall, was stabbed during an incident in September 2023. She said Kaleb agreed to meet another teen for what he believed would be a fist fight while sticking up for a friend.
According to Gerken, the other teen, who was 15 at the time, pulled a knife and stabbed Kaleb in the chest. Kaleb later died from his injuries.
Gerken said a jury later found that teen guilty of second-degree murder after the defense argued he acted in self-defense.
Dig deeper:
The case is not over.
Gerken says the defendant’s attorneys are now trying to move the case out of adult court and into juvenile court. That decision could impact how the teen is ultimately sentenced.
What they’re saying:
Gerken said the legal process has been long and frustrating.
She said the case has stretched on for more than two and a half years and that ongoing court proceedings have made it difficult for her to grieve her son.
“He was everybody’s big brother,” Gerken said. “He had the biggest smile and the sweetest personality. He enjoyed fishing and being outside, and he was the best gift giver. He always got me flowers for every little holiday. Just a very thoughtful boy.”
Gerken also said the possibility of the case moving to juvenile court is especially upsetting, as she continues to push for what she believes is justice for her son.
“I don’t want anybody else’s child to die the way that my son died,” Gerken said. “Caleb is my whole world. I gave birth to him at 17 and he changed my life completely. He made me a better person. He taught me what real love truly is…And I just miss him so much more every day. And just knowing that he died the way he did. It makes me sick.”
What’s next:
The case returns to court Thursday morning.
A judge is expected to determine whether the case remains in adult court or is moved to juvenile court, a decision that could shape what happens next in the case.
The Source: The information in this article was reported by FOX Chicago’s Lauren Scafidi.
-
San Diego, CA23 seconds agoJoseph Allen Oviatt – San Diego Union-Tribune
-
Milwaukee, WI6 minutes agoMilwaukee Brewers overpower Detroit Tigers to win 12-4
-
Atlanta, GA12 minutes agoWhat this food hall could mean for a south Atlanta neighborhood
-
Minneapolis, MN18 minutes agoEllison, Minneapolis, St. Paul update lawsuit against Operation Metro Surge with new data
-
Indianapolis, IN24 minutes ago
Indianapolis, Carmel area fails air pollution measures in new report
-
Pittsburg, PA30 minutes agoCallie DiSabato: Unregulated short-term rentals hurt Pittsburgh
-
Augusta, GA36 minutes ago
Attention, shoppers: Augusta-area Walmarts to be remodeled in 2026
-
Washington, D.C42 minutes ago11 hurt after work vehicle collides with Silver Line train at Metro Center