By Steve Rhodes
“The judge overseeing the murder case against Chicago police Officer Jason Van Dyke grilled a city lawyer Thursday over whether her request to keep some 240,000 e-mails from public view violated Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s pledge to be more transparent,” the Tribune reports.
“The sharply worded questions from Judge Vincent Gaughan led Lisette Mojica, an assistant corporation counsel, to finally admit that as far as she knew, Emanuel hadn’t been consulted.
“As is his practice, Gaughan then went into his chambers for closed-door discussions with lawyers in the hot-button case that lasted nearly 50 minutes.
“After returning to court, Gaughan said a tentative arrangement had been reached over the disputed e-mails, but he said he was not going to reveal the details because it had not been finalized.”
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The city is asking a judge for secrecy for 240K emails in the #LaquanMcDonald case. Here’s Judge Gaughan’s response https://t.co/S4LfOtZ4l5 pic.twitter.com/vxonqO10QK
— WBEZ (@WBEZ) December 8, 2016
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“For the second time in a week, the Chicago Tribune has sued the Chicago Police Department, this time saying the department has failed to produce public records regarding complaints against officers and disciplinary actions taken in response,” the paper also reports.
“In a lawsuit filed on Friday, the Tribune said its reporters have filed three Freedom of Information Act requests that the department has failed to act upon. The first was filed on June 27 by Tribune reporter Jodi S. Cohen as part of an investigation into officer discipline at the department, according to the lawsuit.”
Please assign this case to Judge Gaughan!
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“A Cook County judge on Friday ordered the city and Mayor Rahm Emanuel to produce an index of certain e-mails and text messages that the mayor sent and received on personal devices, as the Chicago Tribune and the city continue to battle over the mayor’s electronic communications,” the paper also reports.
“Judge Kathleen Pantle made the ruling in the Tribune’s September 2015 lawsuit, which alleged that Emanuel had violated state open records laws by refusing to release communications about city business that he had conducted through e-mails and texts on personal devices.”
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I was going to discuss a Sun-Times story here, but it’s wreaking too much havoc with my browser. How many dollars do they leave on the table by having such a shitty website?
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“Two Chicago police officers have resigned in the face of their firing over the off-duty beating of a restaurant patron on the Northwest Side more than a decade ago,” the Tribune reports.
That lead is a little confusing; they weren’t fired more than a decade ago, they beat up a dude at a Taco Burrito King more than a decade ago, in 2006. They were fired in 2011, because that’s how long it can take to fire cops, but stayed on the force until now because, well, that’s how hard it is to fire cops.
Especially when there’s no video.
Oh.
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Beachwood Photo Booth: Air
Cold, winter air.
Kevin Trudeau Officially Still A Fraud
U.S. Supreme Court says so.
Trump Prepares To Violate Constitution
Meet the Emoluments Clause.
Hypocrisy Of Corporate Welfare Bigger Than Trump
The “bribe” for Carrier is barely a rounding error in the tens of billions of dollars in public money and tax breaks lavished upon corporations each and every day by Republicans and Democrats alike.
The Week In Chicago Rock
Featuring: Davina and the Vagabonds, Avant, Wilson, Spa Moans, Steve Summers, Whitney, The King Khan & BBQ Show, The Pretenders, Marisa Anderson, and Ultimate Painting.
The Beachwood Radio Sports Hour #131: Rebuild City
The Hot Stove League is scorching. Including: White Sox Ditch Drake LaRoche Fan Club; Cubs Always Closing; Dusty Maddon; John Fox Is Officially A Clown; Hoiberg vs. Thibodeau vs. Popovich; and Marian Hossa, MVP.
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The Sound Opinions Weekend Listening Report: “If you’re a music fanatic, the end of the year means one thing: best-of lists! Jim and Greg reveal their favorite albums of the year. And Sound Opinions listeners weigh-in with their favorites of 2016.”
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Weekend BeachBook
Disabled In Puerto Rico Live On The Edge After Decades Of Neglect By U.S.
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Why The Rule 5 Draft Is So Awesome.
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Bias On The Bench.
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Nordstrom Selling Rock In Pouch.
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Trying To Keep The Internet Safe From Warrantless NSA Surveillance.
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Weekend TweetWood
If only we had been warned the cull of whistleblowers could result in voters lacking access to vital information. https://t.co/BLTQqf0AYo
— Edward Snowden (@Snowden) December 10, 2016
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Texas Write-In Voters Had A Lot To Say: https://t.co/VH1yUpMxqt pic.twitter.com/w4HfbwWqXE
— Beachwood Reporter (@BeachwoodReport) December 10, 2016
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Anti-Clinton fake news from 1999: pic.twitter.com/onbtbA47l8
— Beachwood Reporter (@BeachwoodReport) December 10, 2016
RLTs: Don’t underestimate the role of evangelicals then and now in purveying anti-Clinton fake news – and Trump’s nurturing of such.
— Beachwood Reporter (@BeachwoodReport) December 10, 2016
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NYT 1999: Quietly, Lawyers Kept Paula Jones Case Alive https://t.co/76pCVeX78a Ft. Peter Smith, Kellyanne Conway’s husband, Chicago lawyers
— Beachwood Reporter (@BeachwoodReport) December 10, 2016
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Just sayin’ . . .
So fake news is digital and real news is print? https://t.co/l73mtLOThm
— Beachwood Reporter (@BeachwoodReport) December 9, 2016
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To all who sneer at idea that Comey letter was game changer, @GlennThrush reports *both* campaigns believe this:https://t.co/4HIn9JgIEV pic.twitter.com/m9NgYyOZzw
— Greg Sargent (@ThePlumLineGS) December 9, 2016
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Boeing pledges $1 million for Donald Trump’s inaugural events https://t.co/T21NBx9Zwj via @usatoday
— Beachwood Reporter (@BeachwoodReport) December 9, 2016
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The Beachwood Tronc Line: Pledge your allegiance.
Posted on December 10, 2016

