Category: News
Introducing the 2025 Beacon-News/Courier-News Girls Volleyball All-Area Team
Four standout players from dominant St. Charles North highlight the first and second teams.
First Team
Camryn Boyd, South Elgin, freshman, outside hitter: Had team-leading 291 kills with 178 digs, 35 aces and 24 blocks. Honorable mention all-state. All-conference.
Haley Burgdorf, St. Charles North, senior, outside hitter: Had 435 kills, 198 digs, 52 aces and 23 blocks. Under Armor All-American. First team all-state. Two-time DuKane Conference Player of the Year. Committed to Penn State.
Rylie Carlson, Newark, sophomore, outside hitter: Had 262 kills, 214 digs and 25 blocks. First team all-state. All-conference.
Paige Genke, South Elgin, senior, setter: Had 579 assists. Finished with 1,536 career assists. Team MVP. Two-time all-conference. Committed to D’Youville.
Hannah Herrick, Oswego, junior, outside hitter: Had 326 kills, 256 digs, 41 aces and 21 blocks. Second team all-state. Team MVP. All-conference. Committed to Dayton.
Elizabeth King, Hampshire, junior, outside hitter: Had 313 kills, 150 digs, 67 aces and 37 blocks. Went over 1,000 career kills. Three-time all-conference.
Ella Maxwell, West Aurora, senior, setter: Had 561 assists, 137 digs, 44 kills, 27 aces and 24 blocks. Upstate Eight West’s player of the year. Committed to Michigan Tech.
Mia McCall, St. Charles North, senior, setter: Had 767 assists, 167 digs, 54 kills, 30 aces and 23 blocks. Honorable mention all-state. All-conference. Committed to Valparaiso.
Kaylee McInnis, St. Charles East, senior, outside hitter: Had 340 kills, 229 digs, 38 aces and 19 blocks. All-conference.
Emma Peterson, Geneva, sophomore, outside hitter: Had 378 kills, 231 digs, 32 aces and 22 blocks. Team co-MVP. All-conference.
Morgan Raiser, Batavia, junior, setter/right side hitter: Had 193 kills, 187 assists, 120 digs and 41 aces as a setter and attacker. All-conference.
Sidney Wright, St. Charles North, senior, middle hitter: Had 222 kills, 55 digs, 43 blocks and 41 aces. Second team all-state. All-conference. Committed to Illinois State.
West Aurora’s Ella Maxwell (3) puts up a set against Oswego during a nonconference match in Oswego on Wednesday, Oct. 1, 2025. (Sean King / The Beacon-News)
Second Team
Ashlyn Aseltine, Aurora Christian, senior, libero: Had 372 digs to go over 1,000 for her career. Added 50 aces. Conference co-MVP. Committed to Oral Roberts.
Tori Brents, Dundee-Crown, sophomore, setter: Had 434 assists, 171 digs and 75 aces. Team MVP. All-conference.
Sam Buss, Bartlett, senior, outside hitter: Had 202 kills and 47 aces. Team MVP. All-conference. Committed to Wisconsin-Whitewater.
Amber Czerniak, St. Charles North, senior, outside hitter: Had 193 digs, 163 kills, 26 aces and 22 blocks. All-conference.
Taylor Jeffers, Newark, junior, setter: Had 444 assists and 142 digs. Second team all-state. Two-time all-conference.
Kylie Lambert, Hampshire, senior, setter: Had 428 assists despite being three-rotation setter. Added 177 digs, 63 kills and 57 aces. Team MVP. Two-time all-conference.
Tessa Liaromatis, Yorkville, senior, libero: Had a program-record 451 digs. All-conference.
Hailee Pietryk, Waubonsie Valley, senior, libero: Had 491 digs and 42 aces. Team MVP. All-conference.
Samantha Pogorzelski, St. Edward, senior, setter: Had 218 digs, 97 kills and 84 aces. Two-time team MVP. Two-time all-conference.
Haidyn Schatz, Burlington Central, senior, outside hitter: Led Rockets with 245 digs, 205 kills and 41 aces. All-conference.
Ally Stevenson, Geneva, junior, setter: Had 864 assists and 282 digs. Team co-MVP. All-conference.
Hope Wagner, Aurora Christian, senior, outside hitter: Had 379 kills, 209 digs and 18 blocks. All-conference. Committed to Milwaukee.
Geneva’s Ally Stevenson (1) goes up at the net for a point against St. Charles East during a DuKane Conference match in Geneva on Tuesday, Oct. 21, 2025. (Mark Black / The Beacon-News)
Honorable Mention
Erin Bruce, Dundee-Crown, sophomore, outside hitter.
Zoey Carlson, Newark, freshman, outside hitter.
Chloe Gollaher, Waubonsie Valley, senior, outside hitter.
Breanna Hard, Aurora Christian, senior, setter.
Camila Nunez, Plano, junior, setter/right side.
Grace Remsen, Kaneland, senior, middle hitter.
Gracyn Sanders, Jacobs, senior, middle hitter.
Olivia Stewart, Metea Valley, senior, middle hitter.
Sydney Wagner, West Aurora, senior, outside hitter.
Ashley Ward, Metea Valley, senior, setter.
Ainsley Wilson, Burlington Central, junior, middle hitter.
Peyton Wurtz, Burlington Central, senior, libero.
Paul Johnson is a freelance reporter for The Beacon-News.
Venezuela Says Trump Has Designated ‘Non-Existent’ Drug Cartel As Terrorist Org; US Covert Ops Believed ‘Imminent’
Venezuela Says Trump Has Designated ‘Non-Existent’ Drug Cartel As Terrorist Org; US Covert Ops Believed ‘Imminent’
With talk of anti-Caracas US covert operations set to begin imminently, President Trump’s labelling of the so-called “Cartel de los Soles” as a foreign terrorist organization has become official, and taken effect Monday.
However, Venezuela has hit back, rejecting the label and going so far as to call the group, which translates to “Cartel of the Suns, as “non-existent”.
“Venezuela categorically, firmly, and absolutely rejects the new and ridiculous fabrication by the Secretary of the U.S. Department of State, Marco Rubio, which designates the non-existent Cartel de los Soles as a terrorist organization,” said Venezuelan Foreign Minister Yvan Gil on his Telegram account. Caracas is dismissing it as an ‘absurd’ lie.
Gil claimed that this revives “an infamous and vile lie to justify an illegitimate and illegal intervention against Venezuela, under the classic U.S. regime-change format. This new maneuver will meet the same fate as previous and recurring aggressions against our country: failure.”
Indeed the Trump administration has admitted that regime change targeting President Maduro is an option which is on the table, amid the unprecedented military build-up in the Caribbean.
Reuters has said that Trump held several meetings with senior advisers last week to explore options for a possible military strike on Venezuela.
But then later the commander-in-chief said, “I can’t tell you what it would be, but I’ve kind of made up my mind” while aboard Air Force One.
President Maduro has lately compared the situation to the US invasion of Iraq, well-known to have been launched on false claims about weapons of mass destruction. He accused Washington crafting “a bizarre narrative” since it cannot accuse Venezuela of hiding chemical or biological weapons.
The US has lately linked Fentanyl trafficking with “chemical weapons” – given the substance is technically classified as dangerous chemical substance.
Meanwhile, on Monday Fox News has issued the following headline: Venezuela ‘covert actions’ could begin soon, reports say.
U.S. MILITARY SURGE TO PUSH RUSSIA, CHINA AND IRAN OUT OF THE AMERICAS
Fox News is reporting that the sweeping U.S. buildup in our own hemisphere shows this is about far more than Maduro.
“It’s about getting Russia, China and Iran OUT of the western hemisphere.”
“Should… pic.twitter.com/NiwCKqddT1
— Open Source Intel (@Osint613) November 24, 2025
But at this point, nothing about any of this seems so “covert” after all. There’s a possibility that power grid disruptions could ensue, or also missile or drone strikes could begin targeting cartel locations by land.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 11/24/2025 – 17:20
Justice Department renews bid to unseal Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell grand jury materials
NEW YORK — The Justice Department on Monday renewed its request to unseal grand jury transcripts from Jeffrey Epstein and Ghislaine Maxwell’s sex trafficking cases, arguing they should be made public under a new law requiring the government to open its files on the late financier and his longtime confidante.
U.S. Attorney Jay Clayton cited the Epstein Files Transparency Act — passed by Congress last week and signed into law by President Donald Trump — in court filings asking Manhattan federal Judges Richard Berman and Paul A. Engelmayer to reconsider their prior decisions to keep the material sealed.
The Justice Department interprets the transparency act “as requiring it to publish the grand jury and discovery materials in this case,” said the eight-page filings, which also bear the names of Attorney General Pam Bondi and her second-in-command, Deputy Attorney General Todd Blanche.
The filings are among the first public indications that the Justice Department is working to comply with the transparency act, which requires that it make Epstein-related files public in a searchable and downloadable format within 30 days of Trump signing it into law. That means no later than Dec. 19.
The Justice Department asked Berman and Engelmayer for expedited rulings allowing the release of the grand jury materials, which contains testimony from law enforcement witnesses but no victims, arguing that the new law supersedes existing court orders and judicial policies that “would otherwise prevent public disclosure.”
In its filing Monday, the Justice Department said any materials made public could be partially redacted to prevent the disclosure of things like victims’ personal identifying information.
The transparency act compels the Justice Department, the FBI and federal prosecutors to release the vast troves of material they’ve amassed during investigations into Epstein’s decades-long sexual abuse of young women and girls. The law mandates the release of all unclassified documents and investigative materials, including files relating to immunity deals and internal Justice Department communications about whom to charge or investigate.
Berman has previously said that the grand jury transcripts in Epstein’s case amount to about 70 pages, along with a PowerPoint slideshow and call log. The only witness to testify was an FBI agent who “had no direct knowledge of the facts of the case,” Berman noted in his prior ruling.
The FBI agent testified on June 18, 2019, and July 2, 2019. The July 2 session ended with grand jurors voting to indict Epstein. He was arrested on July 6, 2019 and found dead in his jail cell on Aug. 10, 2019.
The same FBI agent testified before the Maxwell grand jury, which met in June and July 2020 and March 2021, the Justice Department has said. The only other witness was a New York City police detective.
The Justice Department first asked Berman to unseal the grand jury material in July, doing so at Trump’s direction as the president sought to quell a firestorm after he reneged on a campaign promise to open up the government’s so-called Epstein files.
Engelmayer, who presided over Maxwell’s 2021 sex trafficking trial, ruled first.
In an Aug. 11 decision, he wrote that federal law almost never allows for the release of grand jury materials and that casually making the documents public was a bad idea. And he suggested that the Trump administration’s real motive for wanting the records unsealed was to fool the public with an “illusion” of transparency.
Engelmayer wrote that after privately reviewing the grand jury transcripts that anyone familiar with the evidence would “learn next to nothing new” and “would come away feeling disappointed and misled.”
“The materials do not identify any person other than Epstein and Maxwell as having had sexual contact with a minor. They do not discuss or identify any client of Epstein’s or Maxwell’s. They do not reveal any heretofore unknown means or methods of Epstein’s or Maxwell’s crimes,” the judge said.
Berman, who presided over Epstein’s 2019 case, ruled about a week later. He concluded that a “significant and compelling reason” to deny the Justice Department’s request to unseal the Epstein grand jury transcripts was that information contained in them “pales in comparison” to investigative information and materials already in the Justice Department’s possession.
Berman wrote in his Aug. 20 ruling that the government’s 100,000 pages of Epstein-related files “dwarf” the grand jury transcripts, which he said were “merely a hearsay snippet of Jeffrey Epstein’s alleged conduct.”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/24/jeffrey-epstein-ghislaine-maxwell-grand-jury/
Owners of Kee Firearms and Kee Construction found not guilty
A Will County judge ruled Monday that two New Lenox business owners are not guilty of fraud charges filed by the Will County state’s attorney’s office in 2023, bringing part of a more than two-year battle to a close.
Will County Judge Amy Bertani-Tomczak acquitted Jeffery Regnier, owner of Kee Firearms and Training, and Greta Keranen, of Kee Construction, of forgery, and Keranen of loan and wire fraud connected to the purchase of two vehicles. The defendants moved directly to closing arguments without calling any witnesses of their own.
But the New Lenox couple still face another round of charges, including money laundering and filing a fraudulent Illinois sales and use tax return, first filed in 2023. These charges are scheduled for trial on March 2, with a pretrial hearing on Feb. 2.
Prosecutors claimed that Regnier initiated a false claim that Kee Construction earned $400,000 a month on forms used to buy two Ford Broncos in 2023. The state also argued that Keranen later reinforced the lie by signing the paperwork.
The state dropped these charges in July after Bertani-Tomczak denied the prosecutors’ request to reschedule the trial, but refiled them in August. The state also dropped charges of theft by deception and burglary Nov. 17.
The Will County state’s attorney’s office declined to comment Monday on the judge’s ruling.
Defense attorney Lawrence Beaumont said throughout the case the alleged false information on the business credit application was created by the auto dealership and not the defendants. The defendants also claimed the bank that approved the loan did so automatically within seconds and did not rely on the disputed estimate of Kee Construction’s gross monthly profit.
Beaumont said Monday the defendants decided not to call witnesses because the state did not present enough evidence.
“In my opinion, it was clear from the evidence from the state, that they failed to prove their argument beyond a reasonable doubt,” Beaumont said.
The dispute between the business owners and the state also involves several civil forfeiture cases.
The state seized the Ford Broncos they alleged the owners fraudulently purchased, along with investment accounts the defendants said are valued at about $5.5 million, and raided the couples’ house and businesses in 2023 while investigating them for money laundering.
Regnier and Keranen won a case July 16 to recover the seized property and securities under the Eighth Amendment’s protection against excessive fines, but the case was temporarily removed from the court’s active hearing schedule.
The state tried to get the Illinois Supreme Court to hear the case at the end of October, but the high court refused.
The forfeiture case involving the Broncos is set to resume on Dec. 17. Regnier said the defense plans to ask the court to dismiss the civil forfeiture case on Dec. 3.
“We remain confident in the process and in the truth,” Regnier said. “Our goal is simple: to finish every remaining case, clear our names completely and move forward with our lives.”
Kee Firearms closed after the initial charges were brought in 2023. The once popular gun shop was also a source of training for area gun owners.
Keranen and Regnier both expressed gratitude and relief for the ruling Monday, but said it was a difficult journey to the decision.
“While I’m grateful for the verdict, the past 33 months have shown how much damage can happen when the process goes off track — families disrupted, property seized, and lives upended long before anything is proven,” Keranen said Monday.
Regnier said the case demonstrated the danger “when prosecutors pursue charges against law-abiding citizens without evidence of wrongdoing.”
“When that happens, it blurs the line between the good and the bad, and ordinary people pay the price while those responsible face no accountability,” Regnier said. “We hope no other family has to endure what we went through, and we look forward to moving on with our lives.”
The couple was first charged with several felonies for fraud and theft of COVID-19 pandemic relief funds in 2023. Federal officials raided their home and businesses that year while investigating them for money laundering.
Regnier said the investigation began due to a $750,000 cash deposit made to his bank, which he says came from a large spike in gun sales at his store, Kee Firearms and Training in New Lenox, during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The business owners filed a federal lawsuit Jan. 9 claiming Will County authorities and the U.S. Secret Service targeted them and others with “frivolous” civil forfeiture cases.
Defendants in the lawsuit are the Will County sheriff’s office, a U.S. Secret Service agent and unknown members of the Will County sheriff’s office and U.S. Secret Service.
awright@chicagotribune.com
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/24/kee-firearms-owners-not-guilty/
Investigation continues into pair of downtown shootings, including one that took the life of ‘vibrant’ teen Friday night
Chicago Police continue to investigate a pair of shootings that unfolded in the Loop Friday night, leaving a 14-year-old boy dead and eight other teens wounded in the latest “teen takeover” that marred the city’s start of the holiday season.
Scores of teens were among the crowd that gathered downtown for the city’s annual tree-lighting ceremony in Millennium Park Friday.
Many were still in the area hours later, making it the latest instance of an unsanctioned downtown gathering, advertised on social media, to end in a shooting.
Shortly before 10 p.m., CPD officers heard gunfire erupt on State Street outside the Chicago Theatre. Seven teens— all 13 to 17 years old — were wounded. Minutes later and a few blocks south, police officers found a 14-year-old boy and 18-year-old man both shot. The 14-year-old, identified as Armani Floyd, was shot several times and later pronounced dead at Northwestern Memorial Hospital.
The boy’s family did not immediately comment when reached by the Tribune. A GoFundMe has since been established to pay for funeral services and a vigil for him was planned for Monday evening.
Floyd was a member of a weekly South Shore basketball league, “Project sWISH,” and had dreams of playing professionally. He was “high energy, super funny, with a very vibrant personality,” said McKinley Nelson, who founded the nonprofit to address street violence.
The 14-year-old was fast and aggressive on the court and liked to challenge Nelson to one-on-one games.
“He would say, ‘Yo, if I beat you this time, then you owe me a pair of shoes,’” Nelson said. “He never got around to beating me, but I told him, ‘I’ll still give you a pair of shoes for Christmas.’”
When the league meets again next week, the players will skip basketball and instead meet with therapists on the court, according to Nelson. He said that Floyd was a freshman at Baker College Preparatory High School, a charter school in South Chicago.
After the shooting, Mayor Brandon Johnson said CPD had assigned an additional 700 officers to the downtown area to monitor festivities but added, “what we put in place did not do enough” to prevent the shootings. A CPD spokesperson told the Tribune Monday that the department was aware of the “teen takeover” via “open source” information on social media.
The large-scale gatherings and the violence that often follows have vexed city leaders for more than a decade.
Mayors and police superintendents have for years struggled with how to appease wealthier, mostly white residents who feel unsafe while ensuring the downtown area is accessible to all city residents, especially the city’s Black youth who mostly live in poorer neighborhoods on the South and West sides.
The meet-ups, organized on social media days in advance, have led to several other shootings downtown in recent years. Last March, a 15-year-old boy was shot during a “teen takeover” in Streeterville. Weeks later, a 14-year-old boy was charged in the shooting, according to police.
During summer 2024, a pair of fatal shootings at 31st Street Beach prompted the park district to scale back operating hours and install more strict security measures. In summer 2022, a fight near The Bean in Millennium Park ended in a shooting that left a 16-year-old dead. Another teen was charged as an adult in that shooting.
Though not tied to a teen gathering, the last shooting with such a high number of victims in the center of the city was at drill rapper Mello Buckzz’s album release party in the River North neighborhood in July. Four people were killed and 14 wounded in the drive-by rifle shooting.
Shortly after last weekend’s violence, Mayor Brandon Johnson called the downtown violence a “setback” that was a reminder of “the long road that we have to build the city that we all want to live in.”
CPD statistics show violent crime is down sharply across Chicago — including downtown — this year compared to 2024. Through mid-November, the city has seen 28% and 36% decreases in murders and total shooting incidents, respectively. Moreover, the city remains on course to meet Johnson’s goal of keeping the city’s annual killing total under 500 for the first time since 2019. Since Floyd’s killing Friday night, the city has recorded at least four more homicides, records show.
Johnson said young people “need to understand that they should not attend these unauthorized events that have been advertised on social media” and called on parents to accompany their children at large events like the tree lighting. Police made 18 arrests, he said, and recovered five guns while responding to the shootings.
He said the city had sent a communication through Chicago Public Schools telling students not to participate in the gathering, and that 700 additional CPD officers were deployed downtown Friday night.
“But clearly, what we put in place did not do enough to prevent what we were concerned about from actually manifesting,” Johnson said.
Over the last 10 years, CPD has overseen countless protest marches in and around the downtown area. Those sanctioned events rarely, if ever, descend into chaos despite the relatively giant crowds because CPD officials and march organizers, as a matter of practice, coordinate marching routes ahead of time.
The teen gatherings, though, are a different challenge. There is no hierarchy to the group, there’s no “route” and many of the teens have negative perceptions of police officers. Arguments or insults among smaller groups can turn into fistfights, and those skirmishes often result in shootings.
Mayor Brandon Johnson acknowledges colleagues during a turkey giveaway by an organization named Zakat Chicago in the 8600 block of South Chicago Avenue, Nov. 22, 2025, in Chicago. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)
Johnson did not comment Saturday on his decision to block an ordinance that would have given the city’s police superintendent the power to implement “snap” curfews to break up the so-called “teen takeover” events.
Aldermen voted 27-22 in June to pass the curfew ordinance before Johnson issued a rare mayoral veto to shut it down. Downtown Alds. Brian Hopkins, 2nd; Bill Conway, 34th; and Brendan Reilly, 42nd, criticized the mayor’s veto decision Saturday.
“This is a textbook example of how the curfew could have been used effectively,” Hopkins told the Tribune.
But on Sunday, Johnson pointed to the “political heat” he took for vetoing the curfew Sunday during an appearance at Lakeview’s Second Unitarian Church of Chicago. The tree-lighting was a “joyous occasion” before the shooting, he said.
“The knee jerk reaction always is to find a system that would punish that behavior versus create a society in which that behavior no longer needs to exist,” he said.
The mayor argued the curfew ordinance would have given too much power to one person: Chicago’s police superintendent. He likened the “absolute authority” it would have created to President Donald Trump’s consolidation of power.
“What I’ve called for is, of course you want accountability, but accountability is a shared responsibility to make sure that all needs are met,” Johnson told the congregation. “I believe that when all needs are met, it creates a society that works for everyone.
Johnson ally Ald. William Hall shared a new ordinance Monday aimed at curbing the spread of the social media posts that spark the youth gatherings. In Hall’s ordinance, the city would be able to sue companies for costs like police deployment and property damage if the companies leave invite posts up after the city flags them. The ordinance also allows the city to fine the companies as much as $50,000 for not quickly responding to notices sent by the city flagging invites.
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School board member Che “Rhymefest” Smith, District 10, said violence and trauma in schools is a “national emergency.” Smith, whose district covers Baker College Prep, called for the creation of a Chicago Public Schools task force to more proactively address the issue on and off campus — including strengthening student support systems.
“As a human being and as a community member, I grieve,” Smith said. “I have a responsibility to be proactive … I am going to consider this, not incident by incident, but how do we address an emergency?”
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/24/investigation-downtown-shootings-armani-floyd/
One of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre’s last survivors, Viola Ford Fletcher, dies age 111
DALLAS — Viola Ford Fletcher, who as one of the last survivors of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre in Oklahoma spent her later years seeking justice for the deadly attack by a white mob on the thriving Black community where she lived as a child, has died. She was 111.
Her grandson Ike Howard said Monday that she died surrounded by family at a Tulsa hospital. Sustained by a strong faith, she raised three children, worked as a welder in a shipyard during World War II and spent decades caring for families as a housekeeper.
Tulsa Mayor Monroe Nichols said the city was mourning her loss. “Mother Fletcher endured more than anyone should, yet she spent her life lighting a path forward with purpose,” he said in a statement.
She was 7 years old when the two-day attack began on Tulsa’s Greenwood district on May 31, 1921, after a local newspaper published a sensationalized report about a Black man accused of assaulting a white woman. As a white mob grew outside the courthouse, Black Tulsans with guns who hoped to prevent the man’s lynching began showing up. White residents responded with overwhelming force. Hundreds of people were killed and homes were burned and looted, leaving over 30 city blocks decimated in the prosperous community known as Black Wall Street.
“I could never forget the charred remains of our once-thriving community, the smoke billowing in the air, and the terror-stricken faces of my neighbors,” she wrote in her 2023 memoir, “Don’t Let Them Bury My Story.”
As her family left in a horse-drawn buggy, her eyes burned from the smoke and ash, she wrote. She described seeing piles of bodies in the streets and watching as a white man shot a Black man in the head, then fired toward her family.
She told The Associated Press in an interview the year her memoir was published that fear of reprisals influenced her years of near-silence about the massacre. She wrote the book with Howard, her grandson, who said he had to persuade her to tell her story.
“We don’t want history to repeat itself so we do need to educate people about what happened and try to get people to understand why you need to be made whole, why you need to be repaired,” Howard told the AP in 2024. “The generational wealth that was lost, the home, all the belongings, everything was lost in one night.”
The attack went largely unremembered for decades. In Oklahoma, wider discussions began when the state formed a commission in 1997 to investigate the violence.
Fletcher, who in 2021 testified before Congress about what she went through, joined her younger brother, Hughes Van Ellis, and another massacre survivor, Lessie Benningfield Randle, in a lawsuit seeking reparations. The Oklahoma Supreme Court dismissed it in June 2024, saying their grievances did not fall within the scope of the state’s public nuisance statute.
“For as long as we remain in this lifetime, we will continue to shine a light on one of the darkest days in American history,” Fletcher and Randle said in a statement at the time. Van Ellis had died a year earlier, at the age of 102.
A Justice Department review, launched under the Emmett Till Unsolved Civil Rights Crime Act and released in January 2024, outlined the massacre’s scope and impact. It concluded that federal prosecution may have been possible a century ago, but there was no longer an avenue to bring a criminal case.
The city has been looking for ways to help descendants of the massacre’s victims without giving direct cash payments. Some of the last living survivors, including Fletcher, received donations from groups but have not received any payments from the city or state.
Fletcher, born in Oklahoma on May 10, 1914, spent most of her early years in Greenwood. It was an oasis for Black people during segregation, she wrote in her memoir. Her family had a nice home, she said, and the community had everything from doctors to grocery stores to restaurants and banks.
Forced to flee during the massacre, her family became nomadic, living out of a tent as they worked in the fields as sharecroppers. She didn’t finish school beyond the fourth grade.
At the age of 16, she returned to Tulsa, where she got a job cleaning and creating window displays in a department store, she wrote in her memoir. She then met Robert Fletcher, and they married and moved to California. During World War II, she worked in a Los Angeles shipyard as a welder, she wrote.
She eventually left her husband, who was physically abusive, and gave birth to their son, Robert Ford Fletcher, she wrote. Longing to be closer to her family, she returned to Oklahoma and settled north of Tulsa in Bartlesville.
Fletcher wrote that her faith and the close-knit Black community gave her the support she needed to raise her children. She had another son, James Edward Ford, and a daughter, Debra Stein Ford, from other relationships.
She worked for decades as a housekeeper, doing everything in those homes from cooking to cleaning to caring for children, Howard said. She worked until she was 85.
She eventually returned to Tulsa to live. Howard said his grandmother hoped the move would help in her fight for justice.
Howard said the reaction his grandmother got when she started speaking out was therapeutic for her.
“This whole process has been helpful,” Howard said.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/24/tulsa-race-massacre-survivor-dies/
Introducing the 2025 Daily Southtown Girls Volleyball All-Area Team
Players from state champ Marist, plus third-place finishers Lockport and Providence, lead first and second teams.
First Team
Elayna Davidson, Marist, senior, libero: Defensive wizard delivered 401 digs, 125 assists and 38 aces. First team all-state. Illinois Volleyball Coaches Association state finals MVP. All-conference. Committed to Maryland.
Haven Enselman, Marist, freshman, setter: Collected 938 assists, 205 digs, 50 blocks, 32 kills and 25 aces. Finalist for MaxPreps National Freshman of the Year. All-conference.
Bridget Ferriter, Lockport, senior, outside hitter: Had 351 kills and hit .313 as Porters took third in Class 4A. Added 195 digs, 38 aces, 18 blocks. First team all-state. State all-tournament team. All-conference.
Quinn Grevengoed, Chicago Christian, junior, outside hitter: Rang up 403 kills, putting her atop program’s all-time career list. Added 299 digs, 63 aces. 31 blocks. First team all-state. All-conference.
Neve Hayes, Evergreen Park, senior, setter: Had 633 assists and 143 kills with .273 hitting percentage. Added 213 digs, 46 aces, 22 blocks. Second team all-state. Four-time all-conference.
Maryam Hussein, Oak Lawn, senior, outside hitter: Set program record with 460 kills. Had .265 hitting percentage and 219 digs. Second team all-state. South Suburban Red’s player of the year.
Abbey Knight, Providence, senior, outside hitter: Led team that took third in Class 3A with 470 kills and .300 hitting percentage. Added 218 digs, 64 aces and 34 blocks. GCAC White’s player of the year. First team all-state. State all-tournament team. Committed to Wright State.
Lucy Maloney, Mother McAuley, senior, libero: Came through with 627 digs, 75 assists and 26 aces. First team all-state. All-conference. Committed to Clemson.
Aubrey Martinez, St. Laurence, junior, outside hitter: Produced 422 kills with 230 digs and 22 blocks. First team all-state. All-conference. Committed to Ball State.
Cayla Prohaska, Mother McAuley, senior, outside hitter: Had 290 kills, 276 digs and team-high 34 aces. First team all-state. GCAC Red’s player of the year. Committed to Campbell.
Kolby Ross, Lincoln-Way East, sophomore, outside hitter: Missed seven matches but still tallied 316 kills, 153 digs, 34 aces and 20 blocks. Second team all-state. SouthWest Suburban Conference’s player of the year.
Savanah Weathers, Marist, senior, right-side hitter: Finished with team-high 262 kills. Added 235 digs, 87 blocks, 26 aces. First team all-state. All-conference. All-American nominee. Committed to Davenport.
Lockport’s Natalie Bochantin (10) set the ball against Benet in a Class 4A state semifinal match at CEFCU Arena in Normal on Friday, Nov. 14, 2025. (Rob Dicker / Daily Southtown)
Second Team
Taylor Berg, Marist, junior, outside hitter: Had 225 kills, 281 digs and 28 blocks for Class 4A state champions. State all-tournament team. Committed to Western Michigan.
Natalie Bochantin, Lockport, junior, setter: Finished with 751 assists, 241 digs, 65 aces and 48 kills. Honorable mention all-state. All-conference.
Cassidy Cage, Marist, senior, middle hitter: Came up with 239 kills and 96 blocks for Class 4A state champions. Second team all-state. All-conference. Committed to Mississippi State.
Demi Carbone, Providence, senior, setter/right-side hitter: Finished with 484 assists, 200 digs, 169 kills, 62 aces and 21 blocks. All-conference. Committed to Colby.
Peyton Heatherly, Mother McAuley, junior, setter: Stockpiled 676 assists, 157 digs, 75 kills and 22 aces. Second team all-state. All-conference. Committed to Coastal Carolina.
Klarke Mosby, Lincoln-Way East, junior, right-side hitter: Had 249 kills, 89 digs and 36 blocks. First team all-state. Committed to Eastern Michigan.
Olivia Sarno, Lemont, senior, setter: Totaled 684 assists, 127 digs, 42 aces, 37 kills and 29 blocks. Second team all-state. South Suburban Blue’s player of the year.
Kymora Scott, Homewood-Flossmoor, senior, right-side hitter: Had 288 kills, 135 digs, 25 blocks and 23 aces. All-conference. Committed to Wisconsin.
Maggie Simon, Lincoln-Way East, senior, setter: Recorded 547 assists, passing 2,000-assist milestone for career. Added 177 digs and 27 aces. Honorable mention all-state. All-conference. Committed to Missouri-St. Louis.
Cali Tierney, Providence, senior, outside hitter: Finished with 207 kills, 221 digs, 78 aces and 11 blocks. All-conference. Committed to Canisius.
Hutsyn Timosciek, Lockport, junior, right-side hitter: Had 360 kills and .317 hitting percentage. Added 116 digs, 16 blocks and 15 aces. Honorable mention all-state. All-conference.
L’Rae White, Chicago Christian, senior, outside hitter: Finished with 350 kills, 228 digs, 44 aces and 24 blocks. Honorable mention all-state. All-conference.
Marist’s Cassidy Cage (23) watches her swing go for a kill against Normal Community during the Class 4A Bradley-Bourbonnais Supersectional match on Monday, Nov. 10, 2025. (Vincent D. Johnson / Daily Southtown)
Honorable Mention
Morgan Begley, Sandburg, senior, libero.
Parker Crims, Shepard, senior, middle hitter.
Ella Godeaux, Joliet Catholic, junior, libero.
Lily Goyer, Lincoln-Way West, senior, middle hitter.
Mikayla Frazer, Marian Catholic, sophomore, outside hitter.
Chyla Jukes, Mother McAuley, freshman, middle hitter.
Lucinda Joyce, Crete-Monee, sophomore, outside hitter.
Amelia Kadamus, Stagg, junior, middle hitter.
Maggie Kurpeikis, Marist, junior, outside hitter.
Elena Kvasnicka, Beecher, senior, outside hitter.
Bella Maras, Sandburg, junior, outside hitter.
Keira McQuillan, Mother McAuley, sophomore, outside hitter.
Nora Miller, Lemont, senior, libero.
Claire Murphy, Lincoln-Way West, senior, setter.
Ihuoma Ozoh, Homewood-Flossmoor, senior, middle hitter.
Betty Redican, Oak Forest, junior, setter.
Brooklyn Ritter, Lincoln-Way East, senior, setter.
Leah Romano, St. Laurence, junior, libero.
Sophia Rozga, Lincoln-Way West, senior, libero.
Layla Smith, T.F. South, sophomore, outside hitter.
Ella Thompson, Lincoln-Way Central, junior middle hitter.
Sophie Wieczorek, Crete-Monee, sophomore, setter/right-side hitter.
Tiara Williams, Morgan Park Academy, junior, outside hitter.
Kaitlyn Wilson, Lemont, junior, outside hitter.
Jeff Vorva is a freelance reporter for the Daily Southtown.
Vindman Brothers, Who Helped Impeach Trump In 2020, Are Now Under Investigation
Vindman Brothers, Who Helped Impeach Trump In 2020, Are Now Under Investigation
Authored by Ken Silva via Headline USA,
Rep. Eugene Vindman, D-Va., and his twin brother Alexander are reportedly under investigation for illegally acting as “paid brokers” for U.S. defense firms seeking business in Ukraine.
“Pentagon General Counsel Earl Matthews alleges that Vindman and his twin brother Alex did not have approval from the U.S. government before seeking to act as ‘paid brokers’ for American defense firms pursuing contracts with Ukraine after Russia’s 2022 full-scale invasion,” the Washington Post revealed over the weekend, citing a Nov. 19 letter for War Secretary Pete Hegseth.
“The letter does not explicitly allege the Vindmans received money from the Ukrainian government, arguing only that they “did not insulate themselves from the requirements of federal law,” the Post added.
Eugene Vindman confirmed the investigation Friday on Twitter/X. He claimed it’s politically motivated in response to his calls for the White house to release the transcript of a recent call between President Donald Trump and Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.
Donald Trump and Pete Hegseth just launched a sham investigation into me for my support for Ukraine, all because I demanded Trump’s call transcripts with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman be released.
Instead of transparency, I was met with retaliation.
— Eugene Vindman (@YVindman) November 22, 2025
“Instead of transparency, I was met with retaliation,” Vindman claimed.
However, the Trump administration has signaled that it may investigate since before Trump took office. Last November, billionaire Elon Musk accused Alexander Vindman of treason.
“Vindman is on the payroll of Ukrainian oligarchs and has committed treason against the United States, for which he will pay the appropriate penalty,” Musk said in November on his platform, Twitter/X.
Vindman could be in real trouble and I’m OK with that https://t.co/LlKeQrMe6Z pic.twitter.com/Fz95l6XnMg
— Ken Silva (@JD_Cashless) January 20, 2025
Politico revealed in 2023 that that Alex Vindman is heading a group called Trident Support, which wants to send American military contractors to Ukraine. According to the documents, Vindman, who is of Ukrainian origin, is seeking $12 million for his project—$2 million for “initial operating capability” and another $10 million for “full operating.”
While such a scheme may not be illegal, it demonstrates that the Vindman brothers are war profiteers who benefit from an escalation in Ukraine.
Before President Joe Biden left office, Alexander’s wife vented about the administration not pardoning her husband.
“Whatever happens to my family, know this: No pardons were offered or discussed,” said the wife, Rachel Vindman, in January. “I cannot begin to describe the level of betrayal and hurt I feel.”
Views expressed in this article are opinions of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ZeroHedge.
Tyler Durden
Mon, 11/24/2025 – 17:00
Braves y Joel Payamps acuerdan contrato tras retener a Raisel Iglesias como cerrador
Associated Press
ATLANTA (AP) — Los Bravos de Atlanta y el lanzador derecho Joel Payamps acordaron un contrato de un año por 2,25 millones el lunes, en otro movimiento para retener a un miembro veterano del bullpen del equipo.
Los Bravos firmaron a Payamps de waivers de los Cerveceros de Milwaukee a finales de la temporada pasada. Payamps, de 31 años, permitió una carrera en dos 2/3 entradas con Atlanta y terminó la temporada con una efectividad de 6.84 en 30 juegos.
Payamps tiene una efectividad de 3.41 con diez salvamentos en siete temporadas. Estableció un récord personal con seis salvamentos para Milwaukee en 2024.
El acuerdo con Payamps es el segundo movimiento de Atlanta en menos de una semana para mantener a un relevista derecho veterano. Los Bravos volvieron a firmar al cerrador cubano Raisel Iglesias con un contrato de un año por 16 millones, anunciado el miércoles.
Atlanta ha tenido un comienzo de temporada baja muy activo. El equipo también adquirió el miércoles a Mauricio Dubón de los Astros de Houston a cambio de Nick Allen.
___
Deportes en español AP: https://apnews.com/hub/deportes
Column: U.S. responding to perceived threat posed by Venezuela
The administration of President Donald Trump continues to emphasize an alleged threat posed by Venezuela.
The aircraft carrier USS Gerald R. Ford has now been deployed to the region. U.S. forces have destroyed small boats allegedly used to transport drugs.
Secretary of State Marco Rubio has announced the U.S. Department of State is designating the Cartel de los Soles, based in Venezuela and led by President Nicolas Maduro and associates, formally as a foreign terrorist organization. The organization is allegedly a criminal network.
On cue, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that this permits new military options against the left-wing regime of that beleaguered nation. In August, Attorney General Pam Bondi announced a $50 million reward for information leading to the arrest of Maduro.
Trump last month declared that the Central Intelligence Agency, at his direction, is launching covert operations in Venezuela. By definition, “covert” means secret. For a president to announce them publicly is bizarre.
Trump has also referred to criminals and drug traffickers from Venezuela. U.S. efforts to destabilize the economy, one heavily dependent on oil, have been successful, displacing and dispersing enormous numbers of people throughout the Americas in search of employment.
Given the turmoil, literal and rhetorical, context is important. A basic fact of life is that the U.S. does not willingly tolerate hostile regimes in the Americas. The Monroe Doctrine stated this concern early.
Instructive history is the ill-fated regime of Emperor Maximilian of Mexico. During our Civil War, the government of France seized the opportunity to establish a puppet regime in the former colony of Spain. In 1864, the Austrian Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian was put in place.
After the defeat of the Confederacy, the U.S. government turned its attention to the new French colony. The U.S. Army was one of the largest and most battle-tested in the world. Under intense pressure, the French withdrew. Hapless Maximilian was overthrown and executed in 1867.
In 1898, the U.S. secured the Spanish colony of Cuba as well as the Philippines as a result of the Spanish-American War.
Coincident with current developments, the valuable National Security Archives at George Washington University on Nov. 20 publicized information on the Senate Church Committee Report, issued 50 years ago. The special committee chaired by Senator Frank Church, D-Idaho, examined in detail the evidence of CIA excesses.
Operations removed various leaders, including President Juan Jacobo Arbenz of Guatemala, former Prime Minister Patrice Lumumba of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Prime Minister Mohammed Mossadegh of Iran, President Ngo Dinh Diem of South Vietnam, General Rene Schneider of Chile and General Rafael Trujillo of the Dominican Republic.
A special assassination target was Prime Minister/President Fidel Castro of Cuba.
CIA Director William Colby and the President Gerald Ford White House exerted great pressure to prevent publication of committee findings, with partial success. However, the assassination information was published.
Ford subsequently signed an executive order forbidding assassination. President Ronald Reagan expanded that order.
Following the devastating terrorist attacks on the U.S. on Sept. 11, 2001, armed drones began to be used to kill targeted individuals. The first acknowledged employment of this weapon was against individuals in Afghanistan the following year. The administration of President George W. Bush and each successor has continued to use drone strikes.
The Trump administration so far has been rhetorically aggressive and has carried out limited military strikes, but has avoided sustained ground combat.
Arthur I. Cyr is the author of “After the Cold War – American Foreign Policy, Europe and Asia,” NYU Press and Palgrave/Macmillan, along with other books and articles.
Contact acyr@carthage.edu
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/24/arthur-i-cyr-column-venezuela/













