Connect with us

Midwest

Protesters gather outside Pritzker mansion to disrupt Noem presser, only to find she was never actually there

Published

on

Protesters gather outside Pritzker mansion to disrupt Noem presser, only to find she was never actually there

Protesters gathered outside Illinois governor JB Pritzker’s mansion on Wednesday thinking that Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem was holding a presser around the property. 

Secretary Noem did hold a press conference in Illinois on Wednesday, but it was more than half a mile away from the governor’s mansion, leaving the protesters “screaming” into the wind. 

“While we aren’t entirely sure what the protesters were protesting (we aren’t sure they know either), or why they were screaming in front of their governor’s mansion, we stand with every victim of illegal immigrant crime,” DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Fox News Digital.

BLUE STATE GOVERNOR VOWS ‘RESISTANCE’ AS TRUMP ADMIN TARGETS SANCTUARY POLICIES

Secretary of Homeland Security Kristi Noem hosted a press conference on immigration near Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s home in Springfield, Illinois. (AP/Getty)

Advertisement

“Secretary Noem went to Springfield, Illinois to join Angel families to call for the end of dangerous sanctuary city policies under J.B. Pritzker and bring attention to an at-large illegal alien murderer who has been evading justice for two years for the stabbing of Emma Shafer.” 

As protesters shouted outside Pritzker’s mansion, Noem’s presser was held at the site where Emma Shafer, 24, was stabbed to death by Grabriel Calixto Pichardo, 25, an illegal migrant who is wanted on three first-degree murder charges and an aggravated domestic battery charge. Pichardo was reportedly dating Shafer at the time of the murder. 

Noem was also joined by the “Angel families” of Denny McCann and Jimmy Walden, who both lost their lives to illegal migrant crime. 

DHS UNLEASHES POSSIBLE MONEY-SAVING MEASURE FOR ILLEGAL ALIENS TO SELF-DEPORT: ‘SAFEST OPTION’

McCann was crossing the street on foot when he was hit, killed, and dragged down the road by Saul Chavez, an illegal immigrant who was drunk driving. Chavez was arrested and charged with reckless homicide and aggravated DUI, but disappeared for 11 years after being released on bond. He wasn’t apprehended until 2022.  

Advertisement

Gov. JB Pritzker, D-Ill., speaks to late-night host Jimmy Kimmel slams President Donald Trump during a recent interview. (Screenshot/ABC)

Walden was killed when an illegal alien, who had previously been deported twice, crashed into Walden’s motorcycle in Maryland. His father lives in Illinois. 

ILLINOIS FATHER SLAMS DEM GOVERNOR OVER SANCTUARY POLICIES

The purpose of the presser was to spotlight the sanctuary status of the state, and to call on the potential presidential candidate to “abandon these dangerous sanctuary policies.”

Pritzker responded to the presser with a statement on Wednesday.

Advertisement

“Unlike Donald Trump and Kristi Noem, Illinois follows the law,” the Illinois governor explained. “The Trump Administration is violating the United States Constitution, denying people due process, and disappearing law-abiding neighbors – including children who are U.S. citizens. Yet, they are taking no real action to promote public safety and deport violent criminals within the clear and defined legal process.”

“Illinoisans are sending a clear message to Trump’s lackeys that we will not let you mess with us without a resistance,” Pritzker concluded.

The governor’s office alleged that Secretary Noem changed her schedule to dodge protesters. Matt Hill, Deputy Chief of Staff for Communications, told Fox News Digital in an exclusive statement that “despite being in Illinois today and falsely accusing the state of not following the law, Secretary Noem and her team does not communicate with the State of Illinois about enforcing immigration laws.”

“As the Governor’s office oversees the Governor’s Mansion, we know the Secretary originally planned her publicity stunt at the Governor’s home but decided to relocate,” Hill said. “We would have hoped she wouldn’t be scared to speak with Illinoisans exercising their Constitutional rights but are not surprised given her lack of ability to follow the Constitution.”

Pritzker’s office also sent a statement from Cathy Schwartz and John Shafer, Emma Shafer’s parents, to Fox News Digital which addressed Noem holding the presser at the site their daughter was killed.

Advertisement

“To see her used by Secretary Noem and others to advance a cruel and heartless political agenda is not just deeply painful to us – it is an insult to her memory. Noem’s words are in direct conflict with who Emma was as a person,” the parents’ statement via the governor’s office read. “No parent should have to experience the loss of a child. But every time her name is brought into these conversations – conversations she would have wanted nothing to do with – we have to relive the pain of her death.”

Schwartz and Shafer were unavailable to speak with Fox News Digital at the time of publication. 

The young woman’s parents spoke out in a statement provided to the governor’s office. (Carlos A. Moreno/Anadolu Agency via Getty Images, left, ALEX BRANDON/POOL/AFP via Getty Images, right.)

DHS Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin told Fox News Digital in an earlier statement that “the Trump Administration will bring illegal immigrants who perpetrate crimes to justice.”

Advertisement

Preston Mizell is a writer with Fox News Digital covering breaking news. Story tips can be sent to Preston.Mizell@fox.com and on X @MizellPreston

Read the full article from Here

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Detroit, MI

What’s New at Newlab Detroit?

Published

on

What’s New at Newlab Detroit?


What is Newlab?

Originally founded in Brooklyn, Newlab provides tech startups with a place to develop their products and expand their manufacturing capabilities. Located in the Albert Khan-designed former Detroit Public Schools Book Depository building in Corktown, Newlab Detroit is the venture platform’s second development center. The 270,000-squarefoot facility opened in 2023 and is situated within the 30-acre Michigan Central Innovation District. Newlab Detroit attracts global and local startups like metro Detroit’s Sharrow Marine, which makes advanced propellers.

“Detroit is still the best place in the world to make anything,” says Greg Sharrow, founder and CEO of Sharrow Marine. “It’s incredible that Michigan Central and Newlab exist here and that inventors are able to take advantage of those resources.”

How can a business become a member at Newlab Detroit?

More than 100 companies apply for Newlab Detroit residency every year, making membership an exclusive commodity. While membership is not restricted to hard-tech startups, the space is primarily designed to accommodate them. If an application is accepted, the monthly membership cost is $250.

What does Newlab Detroit provide members?

In addition to a fl oating desk, one of the biggest advantages Newlab o  ers is access to the workshop. There, members can learn how to use state-ofthe- art technology that would otherwise be too costly for a startup to purchase. Other perks include access to Newlab’s manufacturing network and community of investors.

Advertisement

How many startups operate out of Newlab Detroit?

Currently, a blend of more than 100 local, national, and global companies operate out of Newlab Detroit. International startups currently make up roughly 15% of the community.

What kinds of products come out of Newlab Detroit?

The products developed at Newlab are as diverse as the people who create them. Technologies range from body temperature-reactive heating and cooling tiles to underwater robots designed to prevent water main breaks.


This story originally appeared in the June 2026 issue of Hour Detroit magazine. To read more, pick up a copy of Hour Detroit at a local retail outlet. Click here to get our digital edition





Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Milwaukee, WI

How Koren Dennison is building an intergenerational third space in Milwaukee

Published

on

How Koren Dennison is building an intergenerational third space in Milwaukee


As a daughter of Milwaukee, Koren Dennison has always been passionate about her community. 

Looking out for others is the way she was raised. 

But it wasn’t until she lost her job last November that she sat and started to think about what her role in the city was. That’s when she formed My Kousin’s House. 

Advertisement

My Kousin’s House is an intergenerational community space, out of her Metcalfe Park home, focused on family literacy building. The community space is activated through a series of events meant to be fun, community-building and thought-provoking. 

“I want people to leave My Kousin’s House having had a good time, their thoughts provoked and having some new community,” she said. 

A person sits on the edge of a raised garden bed holding a chicken. Garden plants grow in the bed, with buckets, tools and stacked chairs beside a building in the background.
Koren Dennison, founder and director of My Kousin’s House, poses for a portrait with her pet chicken on June 3, 2026. (Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)

‘Made of Milwaukee’

Long before Dennison, 28, was hosting community spelling bees and movie discussions in her living room, she was learning what it meant to be surrounded by people who poured into her.

“Koren is a witty, bubbly, very enthusiastic, down-to-earth kind of girl,” said Domani Wose, a friend of Dennison’s. “She’s for the people.” 

A storyteller, dancer, educator, evaluator, landlord and self-described “weirdo nerd,” Dennison traces the roots of her newest venture, My Kousin’s House, back to the people and neighborhoods that shaped her.

“I am made of Milwaukee,” she said.

Advertisement

Raised by a single mother in Hillside Terrace, Dennison said she grew up immersed in Black community, Black excellence and a belief that success was not something to hoard but something to share.

She attended Young Leaders Academy, later graduating from Milwaukee High School of the Arts, where dance became both a creative outlet and a lesson in defiance.

“Koren is defiant,” Dennison said. “Not in a cause of harm kind of way, but the kind that refuses to accept limitations placed on Black girls from working-class neighborhoods.” 

That determination carried her to Marquette University, where she earned both a bachelor’s and master’s degree in corporate communication. And as college expanded her opportunities, it also deepened her understanding of herself.

“My baseline is Black,” Dennison said. “Going to a predominantly white institution challenged me in ways I didn’t expect.”

Advertisement

The experience sharpened her sense of identity and reinforced her commitment to community. 

After graduation, she worked in youth programming at Highland Community School before moving into research and evaluation work, spending more than three years helping organizations measure impact and communicate results.

By many standards she had achieved what she once envisioned: the professional career, the office, the stability.

Before eventually leaving her job, Dennison began to build a different kind of foundation. She purchased her first duplex in 2021 and another in 2023, creating a measure of financial stability through real estate. Those investments would later give her the freedom to take a risk on herself.

When her position was eliminated in late 2025, Dennison spent months grieving, recalibrating and considering her next move. She applied for jobs and was rejected multiple times. 

Advertisement

Eventually, she stopped seeing those rejections as setbacks and started viewing them as redirection.

“I’ve never felt so free,” she said. “I’ve never felt so autonomous. I’ve never felt so grounded.”

My Kousin’s House

A desk holds a globe and plants with notes and images on a bulletin board  on one wall and a sign reading “Welcome to My Kousin’s Community Clubhouse House” on another wall. A balloon above the globe reads “Happy Birthday.”
My Kousin’s House is activated through a series of events. (Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)

Out of uncertainty came My Kousin’s House.

Part community gathering space, part learning hub and part social experiment. Dennison describes it as an “intergenerational third space focused on full-family literacy.”

The concept grew from observations she had made throughout her life.

She said she noticed how children often miss opportunities to learn from elders. She also noticed how adults frequently stop learning altogether and how conversations in modern life often stay on the surface.

Advertisement

Most importantly, she recognized her own role as a bridge.

At 28, childless, but deeply connected to both younger and older generations, Dennison often found herself translating between worlds.

“There is a bridge that is absolutely needed between young people and elders,” she said.

She wants My Kousin’s House to become that bridge.

“It’s an intergenerational space where there’s gonna be joy, fun and some type of education,” said Melody McCurtis, who attended an event. “So, whether that’s learning about animals, urban farming or like hydroponics or political education, we learn from these events about how we show up, not only as individuals, but how we interact with each other.” 

Advertisement

McCurtis is the deputy director of Metcalfe Park Community Bridges, a group that serves Metcalfe Park residents through a series of events, services and campaigns. 

Events blend entertainment with meaningful conversation. So far, participants have gathered for a “Grey’s Anatomy”-themed trivia night, a community spelling bee and a discussion and dance party inspired by “Black Is King,” a film by Beyonce. 

Future events will explore topics ranging from natural hair care and gardening to Black history and food justice, she said.

“I don’t want to talk about the weather,” Dennison said. “I want to talk about how you carry grief.”

Wose has attended every event. He said each one was a fun learning experience that helped him meet new people. 

Advertisement

He said the spelling bee had good vibes and a lot of laughter. 

“I can’t spell that well, I add or miss a letter here and there, but it helped me see that everybody’s still learning because I wasn’t the only person who was messing up. But all adults, right?” Wose said.  

Dennison’s vision extends beyond children. She believes that literacy and lifelong learning must include entire families, especially in a city where educational disparities have persisted for generations.

“If the babies can’t read, there are already adults outside the scope of the solutions,” she said. “How do we invite parents into those conversations without shame?”

The answer, she believes, is community.

Advertisement

“In a neighborhood like Metcalfe Park where we are seeing so many changes, it’s a great space to have,” said McCurtis.

Rejecting narratives about Milwaukee

While Dennison acknowledges many of the city’s challenges, she said she rejects narratives that paint Milwaukee solely through the lens of struggle. Instead, she sees a city filled with people who invested in her success and taught her the importance of returning the favor.

“I was raised on lift as we climb,” she said. “Each one teach one.”

It is not simply a series of events. It is an attempt to create the kind of community Dennison believes many people are searching for: a place where learning feels joyful, where generations learn from one another and where meaningful conversation becomes a form of care.

“It’s an inviting space with good vibes and great banana bread,” Wose said. 

Advertisement

The project remains young. Attendance varies. Funding is pieced together through donations, side jobs, tutoring, dance coaching, evaluation contracts and even homemade banana bread sales.

Still, Dennison keeps going.

Every event, every conversation, every gathering feels like proof that people are hungry for connection.

“When I think about isolation or loneliness or individualism and safeguardness, those are all the things that intergenerational third spaces are combating,” McCurtis said. “It allows us to communicate and allow things to land in a way that feels safe and like home.” 

Despite the positive feedback Dennison’s gotten about her efforts, fear remains, she admits. So does the uncertainty.

Advertisement

But so does the conviction.

“I just decided,” Dennison said. “Nobody gave me permission. Nobody handed me anything. I just decided.”


To learn more about My Kousin’s House, you can follow Dennison’s personal account or My Kousin’s House on Instagram.


Jonathan Aguilar is a visual journalist at Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service who is supported through a partnership between CatchLight Local and Report for America.

This <a target=”_blank” href=”https://wisconsinwatch.org/2026/06/milwaukee-wisconsin-koren-dennison-intergenerational-third-space-my-kousins-house/”>article</a> first appeared on <a target=”_blank” href=”https://wisconsinwatch.org”>Wisconsin Watch</a> and is republished here under a <a target=”_blank” href=”https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/”>Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src=”https://i0.wp.com/wisconsinwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/02/cropped-WCIJ_IconOnly_FullColor_RGB-1.png?fit=150%2C150&amp;quality=100&amp;ssl=1″ style=”width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;”>

Advertisement

<img id=”republication-tracker-tool-source” src=”https://wisconsinwatch.org/?republication-pixel=true&post=1318039&amp;ga4=G-D2S69Y9TDB” style=”width:1px;height:1px;”><script> PARSELY = { autotrack: false, onload: function() { PARSELY.beacon.trackPageView({ url: “https://wisconsinwatch.org/2026/06/milwaukee-wisconsin-koren-dennison-intergenerational-third-space-my-kousins-house/”, urlref: window.location.href }); } } </script> <script id=”parsely-cfg” src=”//cdn.parsely.com/keys/wisconsinwatch.org/p.js”></script>





Source link

Continue Reading

Minneapolis, MN

Minneapolis data center pause heads back to City Council

Published

on

Minneapolis data center pause heads back to City Council


The Business, Housing and Zoning Committee heard from the public for more than an hour Tuesday before voting 5-1 to recommend the moratorium. Supporters said it will give the city time to draft new regulations on data center construction and expansion.



Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending