Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Health. Show all posts

Ex-Maine West player outlines alleged hazing attack









A young man who has sued Maine Township High School District 207 over his claims that fellow members of a Maine West High School soccer team sexually abused him during a hazing ritual said he hopes the suit will prevent further incidents.

“Nobody needs to go through what I went through, because it’s not good,” he said in an interview with WGN. “It’s not a way of life.”






The former Maine West High soccer player — only identified as John Doe C — described the abuse he suffered while on the team. The Tribune does not identify victims of alleged sexual abuse.

The lawsuit also names the school’s principal and former soccer coach as defendants in the case.

During the summer of 2007, the man was an incoming freshman attending a summer camp with his soccer teammates when he was promoted to the varsity team.

According to the man and the lawsuit, filed last month in Cook County Circuit Court, he was participating in a group run when older members of the team tackled him to the ground, pushed his face into the grass, held him down and players then sodomized him with their fingers and foreign objects.

“They never really said much, they just kind of did it,” he said. “They did it like nothing happened.”

Several weeks later, he claims, a similar incident occurred again. This time, he said he decided to quit the team.

“There was something behind the scenes there. In my situation, before campus runs I would see my coach wink either before or after it happened,” he said. He later added: “Definitely, the coach was in on it.”

He said he was too embarrassed and ashamed to tell anyone else.

“Who was I going to tell?” he said. “If I was gonna tell my own peers, they were just gonna look at me and laugh at me in a way.”

The man’s lawyer, Antonio Romanucci, is also representing at least three other current or former Maine West students who claim they were the victims of hazing that included sexual or physical abuse.

The first to sue were the parents of a 14-year-old Maine West freshman who claims the boy was attacked in a similar fashion by a group of fellow soccer players last September.
 
Since the lawsuit was filed, others have come forward with additional counts of abuse, said Romanucci.

Last month, the school board passed a resolution suspending varsity soccer coach Michael Divincenzo, alleging he witnessed varsity soccer players haze younger players.

Six Maine West soccer players also have been petitioned to juvenile court on charges of misdemeanor battery and hazing.

Other school districts have re-evaluated their hazing policies in the wake of Maine West High School controversy.

“I won’t be satisfied until I know everybody at the top who knew about or should have known about this" has been disciplined, said Romanucci.

In additional to taking steps to terminate the coach, District 207 officials have discussed the hiring of an outside attorney to conduct an independent investigation into the alleged hazing and its handling.

In a statement released Thursday, the district also pointed out that the plaintiff who spoke to WGN today acknowledged that he never reported the alleged incidents to any school authority. The statement also “reiterate(d) our absolute commitment to eliminating any practices and traditions that might lead to hazing incidents.”

Tribune reporter Jonathan Bullington contributed.

nnix@tribune.com
Twitter: @nsnix87



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Mayoral run costs ex-Bear Steve 'Mongo' McMichael his radio gig









Former Chicago Bear Steve "Mongo" McMichael’s decision to run for mayor of Romeoville has cost him his spot on a Bears pregame show on Chicago’s ESPN radio affiliate.


McMichael, a member of the 1985 Super Bowl champion Bears and a longtime analyst for a pregame show on WMVP-AM 1000, filed paperwork Dec. 26 to get on the ballot for the April 9 election.


Two days later, an election law attorney representing one of McMichael’s opponents, Romeoville Mayor John Noak, sent a letter to the station stating that Noak was reserving the right to request equal air time, said the lawyer, John Fogarty.





McMichael said an official at the station called him Saturday and told him he would not be allowed on the air the next day for the show before the Bears’ season finale against the Detroit Lions.


“I was ready to go on and talk football,” McMichael said. “I by no means used that pregame show as a political platform this year. But if that’s the law, it’s the law, and I have to accept it. I even told ESPN I’m sorry I got them into this.”


ESPN released a one-sentence statement today saying, “Once Steve officially filed to run for mayor we decided it was appropriate to not have him appear on our air.”


Fogarty said his letter to the station didn’t request that McMichael be kept off the air.


“I was simply alerting them to the fact that he had run and we were reserving our right as a candidate to request equal time,” Fogarty said. “But any decision (about McMichael) was solely the station’s.”


Federal law requires that a radio station that provides air time to a candidate for public office “shall afford equal opportunities” to other candidates for the same office. The law has exceptions for news programs or news coverage of political events involving candidates.


Fogarty declined to provide the Tribune with a copy of the letter but said it put the station on notice that Noak would request equal air time.


“How that ultimately would have played out, I don’t know,” Fogarty said.


McMichael also said he doesn’t have a copy of the letter, but he said the letter shows that Noak is taking his candidacy seriously.


“What he’s doing by doing this is telling everybody that yes, I am a viable candidate, and he’s worried I’m going to beat him,” McMichael said.


McMichael also said he plans to speak with an attorney specializing in election law to evaluate his options.


“It’s not right to all the Bear fans who enjoy listening to me talk about what’s coming up for the game, but rules are rules,” he said.


rhaggerty@tribune.com


Twitter @RyanTHaggerty






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Northwestern ends bowl drought









JACKSONVILLE, Fla. — They handed out Gator Bowl baseball caps that said "CHAMPIONS," and Northwestern players threw them on and sprinted toward the purple mob at a corner of EverBank Field.


Jerry Brown, NU's longest-tenured coach and a link to Wildcat teams from the late 1960s, bear-hugged Pat Fitzgerald's wife, Stacy.


"This is so special," said Brown, NU's defensive backs coach and a former all-Big Ten player. "I'm speechless."





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  • Gator Bowl Photos: NU 34, Mississippi State 20





    Photos: NU 34, Mississippi State 20






































  • Video: NU's Nwabuisi on ending bowl losing streak




    Video: Nwabuisi on ending bowl losing streak







































  • Outback Bowl: South Carolina tops Michigan 33-28




    Outback: South Carolina tops Michigan 33-28







































  • Purdue buried by Oklahoma State




    Purdue buried by Oklahoma State







































  • Capital One Bowl: Georgia rallies to beat Nebraska 45-31




    Capital One Bowl: Georgia rallies to beat Nebraska 45-31















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  • Gator Bowl Boulevard, Jacksonville, FL 32202, USA














  • Ryan Field, 1501 Central Street, Evanston, IL 60201, USA














  • EverBank Field, 1 EverBank Field Drive, Jacksonville, FL 32202, USA












Asked how he would celebrate the Wildcats' 34-20 victory over Mississippi State, Brown replied, "We'll probably have a few sodas," and then he erupted in laughter.


The Streak is over.


"The last negative we needed to erase," as Fitzgerald called it — a run of nine bowl losses spanning 64 seasons — is history.


And the Wildcats (10-3) have the stuffed monkey to prove it.


Northwestern President Morton Schapiro and athletic director Jim Phillips wanted to leave the symbol of NU's futility in Evanston. But Fitzgerald had Curtis Shaner, NU's longtime equipment manager, hide it during the team's trip to Jacksonville.


After the game, according to an observer, former All-American kicker Sam Valenzisi brought the monkey into NU's locker room, hiding it. Fitzgerald took it and told the room: "Have fun tearing the bejeezus out of it!"


He tossed it in the air, and the players rushed in, leaving the head intact. Fitzgerald brought that furry trophy with him to the postgame news conference, saying: "Chicago's Big Ten team is going to come (home) as Chicago's Big Ten champions."


And then he couldn't resist a pitch: "Season tickets went on sale today. Let's get to work."


Northwestern went to work early in Tuesday's game. On the third play from scrimmage, Mississippi State's Tyler Russell gave Northwestern a gift. Defensive lineman Quentin Williams caught his attempt at a screen pass and returned it 29 yards for a score.


Russell entered the Gator Bowl having thrown one interception for every 61 attempts on the season. Northwestern picked him off four times on 28 throws.


"These are young kids, not pro athletes," Bulldogs coach Dan Mullen said. "When he started the game poorly, I think he was shaken."


The fourth takeaway was huge. After Northwestern entered "uh-oh" territory with a double-digit fourth quarter lead — the kind they blew against Penn State and Nebraska this fall — Mississippi State (8-5) scored to make it 27-20.


But facing pressure on a third-and-5, Russell chucked one up for cornerback Nick VanHoose, who returned the ball 39 yards to the 5. Venric Mark took it home for a two-touchdown lead, and NU's defense went into shutdown mode to seal the victory.


"The defense covered our butts," quarterback Trevor Siemian said.


Siemian was no slouch himself. He revived an offense that had a five-drive stretch of interception, punt, punt, punt, interception. Kain Colter threw both picks, but Siemian added his own later on a third-down fling that acted as a defacto punt.


Both quarterbacks shined on NU's final touchdown series. Colter scrambled for 31 yards and the semi-mobile Siemian stunned Mississippi's defense by faking an option handoff to Mike Trumpy and ambling home for the score from 4 yards out.


"Probably the first 'pull' I had on that play all year," Siemian said.


"Of your career?" Fitzgerald joked.


"I surprised myself a little bit actually," Siemian said. "They never thought I was going to pull it. Neither did I. I snuck in there."


Good enough to allow Fitzgerald, his voice in tatters, to say after the game: "We tell our guys: Act like you've been there before. Well, we haven't been there before. As (linebacker) David Nwabuisi just said: 'We're here now.' And we're here to stay!"


tgreenstein@tribune.com


Twitter @TeddyGreenstein





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Congress unlikely to meet midnight deadline on 'fiscal cliff'









Agonizingly close to a New Year's Eve compromise, the White House and congressional Republicans agreed Monday to block across-the-board tax increases set for midnight, but held up a final deal as they haggled away the final hours of 2012 in a dispute over spending cuts.


"It appears that an agreement to prevent this New Year's tax hike is within sight," President Barack Obama said in an early-afternoon status report on negotiations. "But it's not done," he added of legislation that redeems his campaign pledge to raise taxes on the wealthy while sparing the middle class.


Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell — shepherding final talks with Vice President Joe Biden — agreed with Obama that an overall deal was near. In remarks on the Senate floor, he suggested Congress move quickly to pass tax legislation and "continue to work on finding smarter ways to cut spending" next year.











The White House and Democrats initially declined the offer, preferring to prevent the cuts from kicking in at the Pentagon and domestic agencies alike. Officials said they might yet reconsider, although there was also talk of a short-term delay in the reductions.


Even if agreement could be reached to have a Senate vote before the midnight deadline, Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) was unlikely to call a vote in the House until Tuesday.


While the deadline to prevent tax increases and spending cuts was technically midnight, passage of legislation by the time a new Congress takes office at noon on Jan. 3, 2013 — the likely timetable — would eliminate or minimize any inconvenience for taxpayers.


The scene at both ends of historic Pennsylvania Avenue was remarkable, even for a government grown accustomed to gridlock. As darkness fell on the last day of the year, Obama, Biden and their aides were at work in the White House, while the lights burned in the House and Senate.


For now, more than the embarrassment of a gridlocked Congress working through New Year's Eve in the Capitol was at stake.


Economists in and out of government have warned that a combination of tax hikes and spending cuts could trigger a new recession, and the White House and Congress have spent the seven seeks since the Nov. 6 elections struggling for a compromise to protect the economy.


Even now, with time running out, partisan agendas were evident.


Obama used his appearance to chastise Congress, and to lay down a marker for the next round of negotiations early in 2013 when Republicans intend to seek spending cuts in exchange for letting the Treasury to borrow above the current debt limit of $16.4 trillion.


"Now, if Republicans think that I will finish the job of deficit reduction through spending cuts alone — and you hear that sometimes coming from them ... then they've got another think coming. ... That's not how it's going to work at least as long as I'm president," he said.


"And I'm going to be president for the next four years, I think," he added.


Officials in both parties said agreement had been reached to prevent tax increases on most Americans, while letting rates rise on individual income over $400,000 and household earnings over $450,000 to a maximum of 39.6 percent from the current 35 percent. That marked a victory for Obama, who campaigned successfully for re-election on a platform of requiring the wealthy to pay more.


Any agreement would also raise taxes on the value of estates exceeding $5 million to 40 percent, as well as extend expiring jobless benefits for two million unemployed, prevent a 27 percent cut in fees for doctors who treat Medicare patients and likely avoid a near-doubling of milk prices.


Much or all of the revenue to be raised through higher taxes on the wealthy would help hold down the amount paid to the Internal Revenue Service by the middle class.


In addition to preventing higher rates for most, any agreement would retain existing breaks for families with children, for low-earning taxpayers and for those with a child in college.


In addition, the two sides agreed to prevent the Alternative Minimum Tax from expanding to affect an estimated 28 million households for the first time in 2013, with an average increase of more than $3,000. The law was originally designed to make sure millionaires did not escape taxes, but inflation has gradually exposed more and more households with lower earnings to its impact.


To help businesses, the two sides also agreed to extend an existing research and development tax credit as well as other breaks designed to boost renewable energy production. Details on those provisions were sketchy.


Obama's remarks irritated some Republicans.





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Bears stay alive by beating Lions, need help from Packers

Jay Glazer looks ahead to coaching decisions.









The Chicago Bears did their part Sunday, beating the Detroit Lions 26-24, but were ousted from the playoff picture when the Minnesota Vikings beat the Green Bay Packers 37-34.

Blair Walsh's 29-yard field goal as time expired gave the Vikings (10-6) the victory. They will have a first-round rematch with the Packers next weekend in Green Bay.



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    VOTE: Will Lovie Smith be fired?






































  • Week 17 photos: Bears 26, Lions 24





    Week 17 photos: Bears 26, Lions 24






































  • Vikings beat Packers to eliminate Bears




    Vikings beat Packers to eliminate Bears







































  • 2012 Chicago Bears results




    2012 Chicago Bears results







































  • <font color="#e84517">Bears-Lions: Box, stats, play-by-play and more</font>





    Bears-Lions: Box, stats, play-by-play and more





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  • Ford Field, 2000 Brush Street #200, Detroit, MI 48226, USA














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Coach Lovie Smith had said the Bears (10-6) would be monitoring the Packers-Vikings game closely as they made their way back to Chicago.

"We'll just keep our fingers crossed and 'go, Pack, go,'" Smith said.

But luck ran out for Smith's team and put his coaching future in doubt. The Vikings earned the playoff spot over the Bears based on a better record within the division.

Earlier, Jay Cutler hit 18 of 31 passes for 257 yards and a touchdown, Matt Forte rushed for 103 yards on 24 carries and the Bears' defense and special teams forced four turnovers to help tame the Lions.

"We're getting turnovers again; we have to limit our turnovers and we did that today," Cutler said.

Earl Bennett led the offense with five receptions for 109 yards, including a 60-yard touchdown on a swing pass, and Alshon Jeffery made four catches for 76 yards. Brandon Marshall had five catches for 42 yards even though he was targeted 14 times.

"It was good," Cutler said. "It was good to see. Brandon, he’s a little banged up. It’s been a long season for him, lot of catches, lot of opportunities. You could see how I was trying to get that one early, kind of get him going. Earl (Bennett) came back and had a nice run and then big conversion on the sideline. So, getting those guys going, I thought the offensive line blocked well. Matt Forte ran the ball bard. Kahlil (Bell) came in, spelled him a little bit, ran the ball well. Some good things to take away from that game. Obviously, red zone is something we need to improve on though."

Lions receiver Calvin Johnson, who came in needing 108 yards to reach 2,000 on the season, was held to 72 on five catches.

"It's hard to shut down Calvin Johnson completely," Smith said. "We wanted to get a lot of people on him, roll the coverage up, double-team him as often as we could. So we did a pretty good job of not letting him get the big one."

The victory didn't come easily. The Lions cut the Bears' lead to 26-24 on a 9-yard Matthew Stafford pass to Brian Robiskie with 6:55 to play in the game. The nine-play, 80-yard drive was kept alive by an unnecessary roughness penalty on linebacker Lance Briggs for a hit on a sliding Stafford.

Olindo Mare's fourth field goal -- this one from 20 yards out -- boosted the Bears' lead to 26-17 with 10:47 left. It capped an 11-play, 59-yard drive that took 4:25 off the clock.

Mare's 28-yard field goal increased the Bears' lead to 23-17 with 1:50 left in the third quarter. The score was set up when safety Major Wright came up with the Lions' fourth turnover of the day, recovering a Mikel Leshoure fumble at the Detroit 13.

Detroit fought back and trimmed the Bears' once-commanding lead to 20-17 with a 10-yard TD pass from Matthew Stafford to Will Heller at the 6:35 mark of the third quarter.

The Lions cut the Bears' lead to 20-10 just before halftime, as Stafford hit Kris Durham on a 25-yard TD pass with 12 seconds to play before intermission.

Mare's 40-yard field goal extended the Bears' lead to 20-3 with 1:49 to play.

Tim Jennings made his league-high ninth interception with 2:38 left in the half to put the Bears' offense back in business inside Lions territory.

Forte's 1-yard touchdown run -- after a pass-interference call against Detroit drawn by Marshall -- gave the Bears a 17-3 lead with 3:26 to go in the first half.

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Obama: Fiscal talks 'good and constructive'










WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama and congressional leaders agreed on Friday to make a final effort to prevent the United States from going over the "fiscal cliff," setting off intense bargaining over Americans' tax rates as a New Year deadline looms.

The focus now turns to the Senate, where Harry Reid, the Democratic majority leader, and Mitch McConnell, who heads the Republican minority, will try to come up with a deal that can then be approved in the Republican-controlled House of Representatives before the end of the year.

Obama said he was "modestly optimistic" that an agreement could be found that would prevent taxes going up for almost all working Americans.

If things cannot be worked out in the Senate, Obama said he wanted both chambers in Congress to vote on a plan of his that would increase taxes only for households earning more than $250,000 a year.

The plan would also extend unemployment insurance for about 2 million Americans and set up a framework for a larger deficit reduction deal next year.

"The hour for immediate action is here. It is now. We're now at the point where in just four days, every American's tax rates are scheduled to go up by law. Every American's paycheck will get considerably smaller. And that would be the wrong thing to do," Obama told reporters.

He was speaking after an hour-long meeting in the White House with the two Senate leaders plus their counterparts in the House, Republican Speaker John Boehner and Democratic Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi.

A total of $600 billion in tax hikes and cuts to government spending will start kicking in on Tuesday if politicians cannot reach a deal, which could push the U.S. economy into a recession.

To prevent that, the two Senate leaders will plunge into talks on Saturday that will focus mainly on the threshold for raising income taxes on households with upper-level earnings.

They will also discuss whether the estate tax should be kept at current low levels or allowed to rise, a Democratic aide said.

The chances of success were unclear. Earlier talks between Obama and Boehner collapsed last week when several dozen anti-tax Republicans defied their leader and rejected a plan to raise rates for those earning $1 million and above.

The Democratic aide said Boehner stuck mainly to "talking points" in Friday's White House meeting, with the message that the House had acted on the budget and it was now time for the Senate to move. A core of fiscal conservatives in Boehner's caucus opposes any tax hikes at all, and House Republicans also want to see Obama commit to major spending cuts.

Pessimism about the fiscal cliff helped push U.S. stocks down on Friday for a fifth straight day. The Dow Jones industrial average dropped 158.20 points, or 1.21 percent.

(Additional reporting by David Lawder, Thomas Ferraro and Rachelle Younglai; Writing by Alistair Bell; Editing by Peter Cooney)

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Melton among 5 Bears earning Pro Bowl honors









Henry Melton said last week he was as good as any 4-3 defensive tackle in the NFL than himself last week and now he’s been recognized as one of the best.

Melton was selected to the Pro Bowl for the first time, one of five Chicago Bears to be named to the NFC’s team Wednesday. Cornerback Tim Jennings, who leads the league with eight interceptions, also was a first-time honoree, joining fellow cornerback Charles Tillman, defensive end Julius Peppers and wide receiver Brandon Marshall as all-star selections.

Weak-side linebacker Lance Briggs, the team leader with 118 tackles, was not selected after being named to seven consecutive Pro Bowls. Briggs could be added later as an alternate.

Melton, who has not played in the last two games because of a clavicle injury, has six sacks and has improved greatly as a two-way player against the run this season. The Pro Bowl bid can only help him in his drive for a new contract as he will be a free agent after the season.

“It’s an amazing feeling. It’s been a long journey from playing running back and defensive end and now being a Pro Bowl defensive tackle,” Melton said. “It’s an amazing feeling. There are a lot of people who had a hand in helping me, and I just appreciate it.”

Melton was a fourth-round pick in 2009, and defensive coordinator Rod Marinelli quickly got the idea to move him from end to tackle. He started to take off last season, giving the Bears a pass-rushing presence on the inside that had been missing.

“He’s a great guy, a great coach,” Melton said. “We spend a lot of hours together working, working extremely hard trying to mold me into a better man and definitely a better football player. I’ve got a lot of love for him and hopefully we can keep it going.

“I just wanted to help the defense any way I could, and when he said I had the stuff that he looks for in a premier defensive tackle, I listened to him and just got to work. If he said that he saw me as an elite defensive tackle, he’s seen everybody -- (Warren) Sapp and a lot of guys that had come before me, and for him to say that I believed in what he was saying.”

When Melton got the news, he turned to Peppers, who was selected to his eighth Pro Bowl, and said, “We’re going to be roommates?”

Not exactly. But they can have fun in Hawaii during the week of the game -- one Jennings made clear he will be playing in.

“That's the most exciting thing really, playing really,” Jennings said. “Getting voted in and I'm actually going to play. They're not going to vote you in and you're not going to play. That's not the way it's going to work. Just being over there with all the guys, all the future Hall of Famers, just taking that in. I'm going to live for the moment and just kind of soak it all in right now. But I'm excited to just see what it's really about.”

Jennings, who was benched in Week 16 last season, re-signed with the Bears during free agency on a two-year deal. He started making plays and wound up leading all cornerbacks in the NFL in fan voting. At 5-8, he hopes he serves as an inspiration for undersized kids playing sports.

“Hopefully a lot of kids that's in my situation, that's gone through my situation, can take it all in and understand that it doesn't matter what people may think about you or you think you're not good enough,” Jennings said. “If you really want it and you enjoy doing it just kind of go out there and have fun and just try to be the best that you can be and everything can take care of itself.

“I think I've been doubted a lot. To put me where I am today, I took it all in stride. I enjoyed playing sports and I enjoyed playing football and I got a whole bunch of opportunities and blessings from God. And I just wanted to make the best of it and kind of just enjoy it and make the best of it while I still can because I know it's not going to last forever. So I just want to enjoy it while I can and make the best of every opportunity I get.”

Peppers had three sacks in Sunday’s victory at Arizona to give him 11 ½ for the season. He’s the first player opposing offenses prepare for and based on how the defense has played, even in the recent struggles for the team, it’s not a surprise he was selected. Tillman gets his second consecutive Pro Bowl selection. He had 10 forced fumbles, tying him for the most in a single season since 1991. He scored his third touchdown of the season in the victory over the Cardinals with an interception.

Marshall trails only the Lions’ Calvin Johnson in receiving yards with 1,466. He also is second with 113 receptions, both numbers Bears’ single-season records. Marshall, who was the MVP of the Pro Bowl last year playing for the Miami Dolphins, also had 11 touchdown receptions.

bmbiggs@tribune.com

Twitter @BradBiggs



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NY man who shot firefighters: Killing 'what I like doing best'










NEW YORK (Reuters) - A gunman who killed two volunteer firefighters and wounded two others in a Christmas Eve ambush in upstate New York left a typewritten note saying he planned to burn down his neighborhood and start "killing people," authorities said on Tuesday.

The gunman, William Spengler, 62, opened fire on volunteer firefighters who responded to a house fire he deliberately set early on Monday morning in Webster, New York, a suburb of Rochester, authorities said.






Spengler shot and killed himself in an ensuing gunfight with police. He had spent 17 years in prison for beating his 92-year-old grandmother to death with a hammer in 1981, authorities said.

Police said Spengler set the fire, laying a trap for the firefighters, and began shooting when they arrived.

He left a typewritten note describing his intent, Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering said at a televised news conference.

"I still have to get ready to see how much of the neighborhood I can burn down and do what I like doing best, killing people," Pickering read from the gunman's statement.

Investigators had found human remains in Spengler's burned-out house, where he lived with his sister, Cheryl Spengler, 67, Pickering said. The remains are assumed to be the sister's and a medical examiner will determine the cause of death.

"A CLEAR AMBUSH"

Spengler started shooting at the arriving firefighters before they got out of their fire truck, Pickering said. He shot out the truck's windshield as they tried to drive away, he said.

"This was a clear ambush on first responders," Pickering said. Police fired back at the gunman, he said. "It was a combat condition. They were shooting at muzzle flash," Pickering said.

Spengler was in a natural depression in an embankment near a tree when he opened fire, he said.

His motive for attacking firefighters remained unknown, Pickering said. It may have been related to contributions his mother had made to the local fire department, he said.

Pickering said he was not sure what the victims were shot with, but said Spengler had an "arsenal of ammunition" and three weapons - a Smith & Wesson .38 caliber revolver, a pump-action Mossberg shotgun, and a .223 Bushmaster rifle with a flash suppressor.

The same model Bushmaster rifle was used in the killing of 20 students and six teachers in Newtown, Connecticut, on December 14.

Authorities with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives were checking on the origin of the weapons, he said.

As a convicted felon, Spengler could not legally own guns. Pickering said authorities were examining potential links between the weapons and thefts of guns in the county.

The firefighters killed in the attack were Lieutenant Michael Chiapperini and Tomasz Kaczowka, authorities said.

The injured firefighters were identified as Joseph Hofsetter and Theodore Scardino. Both men were listed in guarded condition at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester.

An off-duty police officer was wounded by shrapnel as he drove past the scene. The officer was treated at a hospital and released.

Seven homes in the neighborhood were destroyed by the fire, and two were uninhabitable, Pickering said.

(Reporting by Ian Simpson; Editing by Ellen Wulfhorst, Dan Grebler, Steve Orlofsky and Leslie Gevirtz)

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Actor Jack Klugman of 'The Odd Couple,' dies at 90









LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Emmy-winning actor Jack Klugman, a versatile, raspy-voiced mainstay of U.S. television during the 1970s and early '80s through his starring roles in "The Odd Couple" and "Quincy, M.E.," died on Monday at the age of 90.


Klugman, whose pairing with Tony Randall on "The Odd Couple" created one of television's most memorable duos, died at his home in the Woodland Hills section of Los Angeles following a period of declining health, according to his son, Adam Klugman.


"He went very suddenly and peacefully ... he was there one minute and gone the next," the actor's son told Reuters, adding that the elder Klugman had "been in convalescent mode for awhile."





He said his father had lost his ability to walk and spent much of his time in bed. His wife of four and a half years, Peggy Crosby Klugman, former daughter-in-law of the late singer Bing Crosby, was with him when he died, his son said.


In addition to his TV fame, Klugman enjoyed a healthy career on the stage as well as in movies and made successful forays into horse breeding and political activism. Not even the loss of a vocal cord to cancer in 1989 could silence him for long.


Klugman gained fame for playing slovenly sports writer Oscar Madison in the sitcom "The Odd Couple," - a role he also had played on Broadway - and then as a crusading coroner in the crime drama "Quincy, M.E."


"The Odd Couple," based on Neil Simon's play about two disparate divorced men forced to share an apartment, ran for five years, starting in 1970, but was never a hit during that time. Only through reruns did Klugman and co-star Randall, who played neat-freak Felix Unger, leave their mark as one of U.S. television's great sitcom teams.


Randall died in 2004.


In Hollywood, Klugman had notable supporting roles in such films as "12 Angry Men" (1957), "Days of Wine and Roses" (1962) and "Goodbye, Columbus" (1969).


He won the first of three Emmys in 1964 for an appearance on the legal drama "The Defenders." Klugman and Randall each received Emmy nominations for each of the "Odd Couple" seasons, with Klugman winning in 1971 and 1973 and Randall in 1975.


Klugman also earned four Emmy nominations for NBC's "Quincy, M.E." His character, who stepped out of his role as medical examiner to solve murders that flummoxed the Los Angeles police, never had a first name.


(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; additional reporting and writing by Dean Goodman; Editing by Steve Gorman and Paul Simao)






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Alderman calls fire that claimed the lives of 2 children 'senseless'

A 3-year-old boy and 2-year-old girl died this morning after they and two other children were left home alone in the Englewood neighborhood, officials say. (Posted Dec. 22nd, 2012)









Hours before a fire swept through their bedroom, killing their younger sister and cousin, Darnell and Marquis were watching Batman cartoons as their mother and aunt were dressing for a night out, the boys said in an interview.

But in the middle of the night, before the two adults returned home to check on the four children, a hot plate being used to heat the room fell onto some clothes, igniting a fire, the boys and authorities said.

Darnell, 7, and Marquis, 4, managed to run out a back door with the help of their aunt to escape the fire in their West Englewood home, they said.

But a 2-year-old boy, identified at the Cook County medical examiner’s office as Javaris Meakens, and a 3-year-old girl, Jariyah Meakens, perished in the blaze that was contained in a bedroom of the house.

“When the fire started, everything shut off,” said Darnell, who said it was his sister and cousin who were left in the house. “Auntie came to get us.
“When (she) saw the fire, she called all our names. When I opened the door, she told me, ‘Come on, the fire’s getting closer.’”

On Saturday, the children’s mothers were being questioned by Chicago police, but no charges had been filed. The two surviving children told authorities they were left alone in the house when the fire broke out.

The children were interviewed as they sat with four adult women, but they did not want to use their last names. Because their parents have not been charged, police would not release the names of the children’s mothers.

The fire occurred about 3:30 a.m. in the 6400 block of South Paulina Street, officials said.

When firefighters arrived, there were flames shooting out of the middle bedroom, and smoke throughout the first floor apartment, said James Mungovan, the Deputy District Chief for District 5 with the Chicago Fire Department.

At first, firemen concentrated on getting water to the blaze, Mungovan said. Once the fire was extinguished, they learned the two children did not survive, he said.

“We got here in a timely matter. We got water on the fire and we made our searches, which revealed two deceased people,” he said. “The fire had advanced to the stage where it was open, free-burning.”

The cause of the fire is still under investigation, Mungovan said.

But authorities are looking closely at the hot plate that was found in the bedroom, said Larry Langford, a spokesman for the Fire Department.
 
“There is no official cause yet,” Langford said. “We did not find one working smoke detector in that building.”
 
On Saturday morning, a crew of firemen went door to door on the block offering free smoke detectors to neighbors and talking to them about fire safety.

Ald. Toni Foulkes, 15th, said she arrived to the house about an hour after the fire was reported.

Officials from the Fire Department told her the blaze apparently was started by a hot plate that was being used to heat a bedroom, she said.

“This was senseless,” Foulkes said, shaking her head as she stood outside the two-story grey-stone building. “The oldest (boy), he was just terrified. It bothers me.”

Earlier that morning, as firefighters battled the blaze, neighbors Michelle Washington and Tiffany Williams saw the two boys standing outside without coats and shoes, they said.

They invited the boys into their home to keep warm.

Darnell and Marquis told the women their mother and aunt went to a party at the “haunted house” and told them to go to sleep, Washington said. When the boys woke up, they saw the fire and smoke.

“They looked shaken and scared,” Washington said.

It was at Washington's home that investigators from the Bomb and Arson unit and the Office of Fire Investigations interviewed the boys, the women said.

The children were later taken into protective custody by the Department of Children and Family Services.

News of the younger children’s deaths shook up the West Englewood block and riled up neighbors, who said they often saw Darnell walking home alone from school.

Some neighbors said there was no gas service at the house, which is why the family was using the hot plate to keep warm.

The family had lived on the block for about a year and a half, said neighbor Ken Allison. Neighbors often saw the women with their children, he said, but they were not well known.

“There’s no way they should have left those kids alone,” he said, his voice rising with indignation. “There’s no room to half-step as a parent. There’s too much going on.”

When firefighters arrived around 3:30 a.m., they weren't able to get into the home because of intense heat and fire, a Chicago Fire Department official said. Fire was heavy throughout the basement and first floor, he said.


Firefighters cut through burglar bars on the windows, he said.


Firefighters eventually found the two children cuddled up in a bed, fire officials said at a news conference.








The basement windows were all shattered. A white Christmas tree, smudged with smoke, stood near front room window.


A neighbor told an investigator that the second-floor tenants recently moved out of the brick and stone two-flat.


pnickeas@tribune.com


Twitter: @PeterNickeas


lbowean@tribune.com
Twitter: @lollybowean





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Witnesses: 'Big boom,' then arrest of prison escapee

The parents of the man who owned the townhouse where prison escapee Joseph Banks was found talk to the Tribune. (Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune)









After a brazen escape and three days on the run, Joseph “Jose” Banks was quiet and respectful in court today as he made his initial appearance following his capture overnight on the North Side.

Banks, who was shackled at his wrists and ankles, answered questions from U.S. Magistrate Judge Sidney Schenkier politely – a sharp contrast to his defiant behavior during his trial last week on bank robbery charges in the same Dirksen U.S. Courthouse.

A lawyer did not fight Banks’ detention, knowing that would be futile for a convicted bank robber who had just made a daring escape early Tuesday from a federal jail in the South Loop, scaling down from some 15 stories with a rope fashioned from bedsheets.


Attorney Beau Brindley, who formerly represented Banks on the bank robbery charges and stood with him in court today, called his client a “mild-mannered” individual whose statements at trial were misconstrued as threats toward the court system.

“This is not a violent person,” Brindley told reporters after Banks’ court appearance. “He’s a talented artist and clothing designer.”

Brindley said the news media had misreported Banks’ comment when he told U.S. District Judge Rebecca Pallmeyer after his conviction: “You’ll hear from me.”
 
Brindley said that was a reference to post-trial motions Banks intended to file.
 
“That statement was taken totally out of context,” Brindley said.

Banks faces one count of escaping federal custody that carries a sentence of up to 5 years in prison on conviction. He also faces sentencing in March for his conviction last week on two bank robberies and two attempted holdups.


Banks was taken into custody by FBI agents and Chicago police around 11:30 p.m. Thursday in the 2300 block of North Bosworth Avenue, according to the FBI.








A neighbor, the Rev. Baggett Collier, said she heard a loud bang and looked out her window.


"We heard a big boom first," she said. "We thought a transformer burst or there was a traffic accident. Later, my daughter called and said police were out there. I went out and I saw him. He was cuffed. His head was down. I didn't hear him say anything. They got him into the wagon peacefully. The police were pretty calm bringing him out.


"He was just normal," Collier added. "There were so many police there."

She said agents also took into custody a man who was living in the townhouse where Banks was found. He also was in handcuffs and placed in another squadrol. "A really good guy, well-disciplined, somebody a mother would be proud of."

The man and his two teen-aged sons live in the townhouse with a woman and her two younger sons, Collier said. "Very humble people, they take very good care of their children."

Collier said she saw the woman last evening at a neighborhood store. "She seemed nervous and upset," she said. "Looking back, it's like she wanted to tell me something but was afraid to say anything. She had gotten what she wanted and just stood there. I said, 'How you doing?' She said, 'OK.' But you know when something doesn't seem right. I believe she might have been afraid."

Collier said she was shocked by the arrest. "I had talked to my daughter yesterday. I told her, 'I don't want you walking in the neighborhood because those robbers are out there.' "


Hezekiah Harper-Bey, 19, was watching television in his bedroom when he noticed a man outside wearing a white T-shirt and blue shorts. He heard a “loud boom” and looked outside to see the FBI with their guns pointed at the man, who turned out to be Banks.

“Then I saw him run past a little field and into a house,” he said. Harper-Bey said he walked outside and saw Banks in handcuffs.

“He had a white T-shirt with blue shorts. I saw him but I didn’t pay him no mind,” he said. “I just started to watch TV. That's when I heard the loud boom and that’s when I looked, then I put two and two together. I’m like, that was the bank robber. I never knew I could get the $60,000 (reward). I watched the news so I seen his face, so I knew it was him when I saw him.”

Banks was using a cell phone about 20 minutes before the arrest, Harper-Bey said. “I thought he was a regular person who lived around here,” he said. “Then I saw the FBI with their guns pointed out and they said he ran into a house. Then I went downstairs before he got into the wagon. That's when I saw him.

"It was like 30, 20 of them (FBI agents). There was a lot of them," Harper-Bey said. "He was in handcuffs, tied to the back. There were like three cops with him.


"Before he came out, they (FBI agents) came out with a shoebox and I’m thinking it’s the money. Two seconds later, he came out," Harper-Bey said. "He didn’t put up a fight."


He said he had not noticed Banks in the neighborhood before. Harper-Bey said he believes Banks had stayed inside the townhouse for days and no one in the neighborhood suspected he was there.


Another witness, Colm Marron, said he stepped out of a bar on Fullerton Avenue and saw about a half-dozen unmarked police cars gathering in the Walgreens parking lot around the corner from the building.


“They flew out, just down there,” he said, motioning from inside the bar toward Bosworth Avenue. Seconds later he heard a “huge bang.”


“I was surprised how loud the bang was. It wasn’t like any thunder I’ve ever heard,” he said. “There wasn’t any echo to it, just that loud, off the bat.”


A few minutes later, a handful of marked Chicago police cars arrived, he said.


Banks and his cellmate, Kenneth Conley, both convicted bank robbers awaiting sentencing, were last accounted for at 10 p.m. Monday during a routine bed check at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, authorities said.

About 7 a.m. Tuesday, jail employees arriving for work saw ropes made from bedsheets dangling from a hole in the wall near the 15th floor. The two had put clothing and sheets under blankets in their beds to throw off guards making nighttime checks, authorities said.


Cameras mounted to the side of the 28-story federal jail captured Banks and Conley sliding down the building shortly after 2:30 a.m. Tuesday, according to an employee who wished to remain anonymous.


The men left view briefly, but it was believed they landed on the roof of a garage below. Moments later, footage from a different camera showed them hopping a black fence marking the perimeter of the property, the employee said.


The FBI said a surveillance camera a few blocks from the jail showed the men, wearing light-colored clothing, hailing a taxi at Congress Parkway and Michigan Avenue. They also appeared to be wearing backpacks, according to the FBI.


The manhunt for the inmates included several high-profile raids Tuesday in the southwest suburbs of Tinley Park and New Lenox, where Conley's family and associates lived. Conley is still unaccounted for as of Friday morning.


A $50,000 reward for information leading to the capture of the two fugitives was announced by the FBI.





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