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Chicagoan rebuilds life after deportation

Good morning, Chicago. ✶

Below: One longtime Little Village resident tries to rebuild, after being deported, in a hometown that he hasn’t seen in decades.

Plus: A Colorado program for people with mental illness draws interest in Illinois for both its successes and low price tag, Richard Roeper is back with Oscars predictions, and more.

Keeping score: Bulls fall to Kings, 126-110; Fire and Crew draw; Canucks trip up Blackhawks, 6-3.

🕛: A 9-minute read


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TODAY’S TOP STORY 🔍

Francisco Gonzalez-Jasso shows on his cell phone the moment federal agents arrested him in Chicago. Torreon, Coahuila, Mexico. Wedneday, Feb. 25, 2026.

Duilio Rodriguez

Labeled a gang member and deported, longtime Chicagoan tries to restart in Mexican hometown

By Adriana Cardona-Maguigad | WBEZ

End of the line: Francisco Gonzalez-Jasso, a longtime Little Village resident, didn’t know exactly how to make his way back to his childhood home in Torreón, a city in Mexico’s northern state Coahuila. He hadn’t been there in 33 years. “I kept asking people on the bus, ‘Is Torreón next?'” Gonzalez-Jasso says in Spanish.

What happened next: Gonzalez-Jasso, 55, is trying to rebuild his life in Mexico after he was arrested by U.S. Border Patrol agents in October in Little Village, in front of friends and neighbors. He was deported a few days later. WBEZ has been keeping up with Gonzalez-Jasso after visiting him in Mexico in December, not long after he arrived.

Rejects accusation: Gonzalez-Jasso is among hundreds of people swept up during Operation Midway Blitz, the Trump administration’s deportation campaign aimed at clearing “violent criminals” off Chicago-area streets. He’s also among those who say they were wrongly accused of being criminals or having ties to gangs. “It’s humiliating for me,” Gonzalez-Jasso says. “I’m not a criminal. I never harmed anyone.”

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EDUCATION 📚

Aspira Charter School students speak during a school board meeting at Chicago Public Schools in Chicago on Thursday, Feb. 26, 2026.

Talia Sprague/Chicago Sun-Times

Aspira will soon have no teachers or money while CPS struggles to close it

By Sarah Karp | WBEZ

Classroom quagmire: Chicago Public Schools is trying to transfer some 545 students out of a charter school network that has refused to officially close, even though it will run out of money next month. Advocates and officials are now debating the adequacy of charter schools’ funding and raising questions about their accountability.

Education in limbo: CPS officials made it clear they think students should abandon Aspira. They sent letters to families saying students will be offered seats at a nearby school for the remainder of the year. Still, officials noted that Aspira’s charter is not being revoked “at this time.”

‘Very fine line’: CPS interim CEO and Superintendent Macquline King said the school district was in a tricky position. “[Aspira has] to elect to self-close or CPS will be in violation of their contract,” she said. “We are walking a very fine line to respond in a way that is humane and acceptable … while honoring the contract.”

Network pushback: “Stability matters right now,” officials from the Illinois Network of Charter Schools said in a statement. “Keeping both [Aspira] campuses open through the end of the academic year … would avoid the obvious negative consequences of moving high schoolers to an unfamiliar school just weeks ahead of graduation.”

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THE WATCHDOGS 🔍

Lottie Elliott, who says she has benefited from the Bridges of Colorado program, stands near the spot where she spent her first night homeless in Monument Valley Park in Colorado Springs, Monday, Feb. 23, 2026.

Kevin Mohatt/For the Sun-Times

Illinois lawmakers look to Colorado program that, for $6, a day helps mentally ill people

By Stephanie Zimmermann and Frank Main

A way out: Decades of undiagnosed mental illness beginning when Lottie Elliott was 15 led her to homelessness, her children being taken away and repeated arrests. In 2022, Elliott was offered a way to stop that damaging cycle through Bridges of Colorado, which places mental health liaisons in courtrooms across the state to help defendants whose persistent mental illness has contributed to repeated arrests.

Results: Elliott says people from the Bridges program worked with her in jail until she was found to be competent to face criminal charges. The liaisons helped get her into a residential sober-living program with intensive therapy under the monitoring of a judge, who granted her probation. She’s now in her own apartment, has reunited with her son, is taking regular mental health medication and is helping others as a peer counselor.

Key context: An Illinois task force of legislators, law enforcement, judiciary officials and mental health professionals is looking at Bridges of Colorado as a potential model for Illinois. They’ve been working to figure out how to improve the handling of criminal defendants with severe, persistent mental illness.

Chance to thrive: “My life is incredibly humbling,” Elliott says. “I want to share with people who were like me, who believed there was no hope and it was not possible. It is. We can recover.”

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MORE NEWS YOU NEED 🗞️

Lake Michigan is seen from the eighth floor of the Obama Presidential Center, pictured Nov. 5 while under construction in the Jackson Park neighborhood.

Candace Dane Chambers/Sun-Times


FROM THE PRESS BOX 🏀🏈⚾️


CHICAGO MINI CROSSWORD 🌭

Today’s clue: 
The Flintstones pet


BRIGHT ONE 🔆

This image released by Warner Bros. Pictures shows director-writer-producer Ryan Coogler, left, and cinematographer Autumn Durald Arkapaw on the set of “Sinners.”

Eli Adé/AP Photos

Richard Roeper’s 2026 Oscars predictions are here

By Richard Roeper

The 98th annual Academy Awards are a week away, so let’s look at some of the pressing questions about this year’s ceremony — and my picks in the four acting categories plus best picture.

I expect to see “One Battle After Another” and “Sinners” split the evening with five total wins apiece, “Frankenstein” taking home as many as four Oscars in four craft categories, “KPop Demon Hunters” winning for best animated feature and original song, and nine other films/performances winning one Academy Award.

That so many of the major categories are still up for grabs this late should make for one of the most entertaining and unpredictable Oscars in recent years.

Here are my predictions for who will win — and opinions on who should win — in five major categories. (After clicking below, scroll to the bottom of the story for a complete, downloadable 2026 Oscars ballot, with Roeper’s picks in bold.)

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PICTURE CHICAGO 📸

Thousands gather for the funeral service honoring Rev. Jesse Jackson at House of Hope on the Far South Side, Friday, March 6, 2026.

Ashlee Rezin/Sun-Times


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Editor: Eydie Cubarrubia


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