Governor J.B. Pritzker is reportedly considering legislation that would allow illegal immigrants with temporary driver’s licenses to work as certified driving instructors in Illinois, a proposal critics say could violate federal law.
High taxes and crime have been driving Illinois residents, especially in Chicago, to move out of state. Now a Wirepoints study shows that Illinois is losing young people faster than any other state.
Robert Smith, who was convicted in 1988 of murdering his wife’s mother and grandmother, is set to receive a settlement in his federal wrongful conviction lawsuit filed in 2021, according to a recent court filing.
A new abortion clinic in Chicago’s Uptown neighborhood is advertising “all trimester abortions,” a development that some pro-life advocates say confirms warnings they issued when Illinois passed the Reproductive Health Act in 2019.
Chicago taxpayers have paid more than $1.1 billion in police-related lawsuit settlements and verdicts since 2008, a financial burden that former mayoral candidate Paul Vallas warns could worsen as hundreds of cases remain unresolved.
By the end of this calendar year, Illinois will have spent over $2.5 billion over the past five years on health care and housing for migrants, many of whom are here illegally, a recent report by the Illinois Policy Institute (IPI) shows. The amount is far greater than originally anticipated.
President Trump’s commutation of Gangster Disciple founder Larry Hoover shocked police and prosecutors, crime writer and former Chicago cop Maritn Preib recently told former gubernatorial candidate Jeanne Ives on her podcast, The Real Story.
Jon Loevy, founder of the Chicago plaintiffs’ law firm of Loevy & Loevy, is on the receiving end of lawsuit alleging that he and his cousin, Michael Kanovitz, defrauded Advanced Flower Capital Inc. (AFC), a Florida-based institutional lender that specializes in financing cannabis businesses.
Violent crime is declining in Chicago, but Mayor Brandon Johnson is unlikely to receive credit for the trend, according to a recent analysis by Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner of Wirepoints, who argue that his policies—particularly those perceived as anti-police—may contribute to increased crime.
Two plaintiffs in a wrongful conviction lawsuit surrounding the 1993 murder of ten-year-old Rodney Collins are trying to block former Assistant State’s Attorneys (ASAs) named in the lawsuit from subpoenaing Illinois Department of Correction (IDOC) records to show the relationship between the two and three others convicted of the murder.
A former Cook County State’s Attorney and the county itself will soon be off the hook as defendants in a wrongful conviction case brought by Robert Bouto, convicted of the 1993 murder of Salvador Ruvalcaba.