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Bears blocked in Illinois

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

🔎 Below: The Illinois House ended its spring session early Monday without passing a bill to entice the Bears to stay in Illinois. Lawmakers did OK a nearly $56 billion state budget, property tax help for homeowners and a ban on cellphones in schools. Our journalists pulled an all-nighter to bring you the news.

🗞️ Plus: Remembering Spencer Leak Jr. of Leak and Sons Funeral Homes, three “Broadview Six” defendants sit down for an interview with the Sun-Times, and more news you need to know.

📝 Keeping scoreThe Cubs fell to the Cardinals, 5-1; the White Sox beat the Tigers, 2-1; the Stars lost to the Wave, 2-0.

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⏱️: An 8-minute read


TODAY’S WEATHER ⛅

Mostly cloudy with a chance of showers and a high near 73.


TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔎

The Illinois Senate debates a revised Bears’ stadium proposal into the wee hours Monday in Springfield.

Mitchell Armentrout/Sun-Times

Bears blocked in Illinois: House spikes late-session play for new stadium bill

By Mitchell Armentrout and Matt Trunfio

No deal: Members of the Illinois House ran out the clock on their legislative session before sunrise Monday without passing a bill to entice the Bears to build a new dome in their home state rather than cross the border to the east, denying the property tax certainty that the team’s owners have insisted will decide the destination of the Bears’ new dome.

Desperation heave: Illinois senators passed a bill that would authorize Cook County municipalities with populations of at least 70,000 to create their own financing authorities for publicly owned stadiums, which would eliminate the Bears’ potential property tax bills. But their House colleagues didn’t take up the measure for a vote, leaving the stadium saga in limbo.

What’s next: After the House adjourned, Illinois House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch ruled out calling a special legislative session to deal with the unfinished Bears business. The measure could be taken up later this year by the Illinois House — if the team waits that long to decide their next home.

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MORE SPRINGFIELD ACTION 🏛️


SPENCER LEAK JR. 1969-2026 ✶

Spencer Leak Jr. greets mourners outside the Rainbow PUSH Coalition after Rev. Jesse Jackson died in February.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times file

Spencer Leak Jr. of Leak and Sons Funeral Homes dies at 56

By Violet Miller and Mariah Rush

Community staple mourned: Spencer Leak Jr., a leader of the Chicago funeral titan Leak and Sons, has died at 56, his family confirmed Sunday. Mr. Leak Jr. — one of three sons of Spencer Leak Sr. — helped run the family funeral homes for more than 45 years as they grew and remained a staple of the South Side’s Black community. The family has been in the funeral business since 1933.

‘Family man’ remembered: Mr. Leak Jr.’s family described his passing as “sudden,” but didn’t immediately share the cause of his death. They praised him as a “family man, champion of Chicago’s businesses, and a generous mentor to entrepreneurs across our city.”

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COURTS ⚖️

The “Broadview Six” includes Brian Straw, Kat Abughazaleh and Michael Rabbitt.

Anthony Vazquez/Sun-Times

‘Broadview 6′ defendants reflect on case doomed by feds’ apparent misconduct

By Jon Seidel

Some of the ‘Six’: They include the “boring suburban dad,” whose children told him to stand up for what’s right. The son of an immigrant whose family already knew the sting of a federal prosecution. A rising political disrupter who says her progressive campaign was weighed down by bogus criminal charges — and the campaign worker she calls her friend and a “literal hero.”

Key context: Former congressional candidate Kat Abughazaleh, Oak Park village trustee Brian Straw, 45th Ward Democratic committeeperson Michael Rabbitt and onetime Abughazaleh aide Andre Martin are the four members of the “Broadview Six” who nearly faced trial this spring  — until the case against them collapsed amid claims of prosecutorial misconduct. The revelations created a credibility crisis for Chicago U.S. Attorney Andrew Boutros and sent shockwaves across the country.

In their words: Finally free of the charges they faced for seven months, three agreed to speak with the Sun-Times after the case fell apart. They discussed the allegations against them, legal theories and the price they paid for another troubled prosecution of protesters in Chicago.

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MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Hyde Park Academy students including Zaynah Soyebo, center, protest the removal of two community organizations.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times


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FROM THE PRESS BOX 🏒

The 1937-38 Blackhawks won the franchise’s second Stanley Cup.

Sun-Times file photo

Blackhawks’ 100 years of drama and dramatics

By Ben Pope

Century of hockey: Compared to other NHL organizations, the highs and lows of the Blackhawks’ 100-year history uniquely correlate with the passage of their ownership through different hands.

Hawks spotlight: Although hockey fans take pride in the intensity of the spotlight on players and the relative lack of a spotlight on owners — the Stanley Cup is the only one of the Big Four trophies handed first to the team captain — it has been a bit different in Chicago. There was chaos under Frederic McLaughlin, success under Arthur Wirtz, ineptitude under Bill Wirtz and glory under Rocky Wirtz.

Looking back: Huntington Hardwick received initial ownership of the NHL’s Chicago franchise 100 years ago, on May 15, 1926. As the franchise enters its second century, we look back at its first.

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CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 6D: Coveted rush hour train spot

PLAY NOW


BRIGHT ONE 🔆

Laurel Parks, left, who advertised looking for a porch to sit on, shares a laugh with Stephanie Vasconcellos, who offered up hers.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times

Lake View couple comes to aid of porchless neighbor

By Neil Steinberg

This is the story of how Laurel Parks ended up sitting on the front porch of Stephanie and Matt Vasconcellos.

“I’ve honestly been thinking about it for a couple of years,” Parks said. “My plan last year was to put handwritten notes in the mailboxes of people whose porches I like. In West Lake View there are a lot of nice porches.”

But there’s not one on the “great apartment” where she has lived for 13 years.

Parks an office manager at an investment firm and an executive assistant who moved to Chicago from California in 2009, decided to try something novel. She asked neighbors in a “What’s Happening in Lakeview” Facebook group if she could use their porch “for low stakes activities such as: reading fairy smut, staring at my phone, people watching.”

And it worked. Seventy people responded, most positively. She got 15-20 offers and chose a porch nearest to her belonging to Stephanie Vasconcellos and her husband, Matt. They have a brand new front porch overlooking North Clifton Avenue. 

“When I saw Laurel’s post, I thought, ‘Why wouldn’t you share it?’ This is something we can’t use all the time, so why not let someone get joy out of it?” Stephanie Vasconcellos said.

Parks has been back about 10 times or so, telling the Sun-Times that it turned out to be a good thing to allow strangers on your porch. “It’s so wholesome and it’s so Chicago,” she said.

“Not strangers,” Vasconcellos corrected. “Friends.”

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YOUR DAILY QUESTION ☕️

What does Pride Month mean to you?

Respond here with your answer (please include your first and last name). We may run your answer in a future newsletter or story.


 

PICTURE CHICAGO 📸

Third-time Windy City Hot Dog Fest champion Frank “the Tank” Wach, 72, takes the top prize at the Portage Park festival Saturday after eating 8 1/2 hot dogs. “I do it for the fun of it and just to show that I’m not that old,” he said.

Giacomo Cain/Sun-Times


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Written and curated by: Matt Moore
Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia



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