Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

A year of sickness, unrest — and sparks of hope

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO, STAFF REPORTER sesposito@ suntimes. com | @ slesposito SUN- TIMES FILES

At first, it felt like little more than a far- away rumble. Many of us watched the TV footage of Chinese doctors clad head to toe in protective gear treating intubated patients and thought: Oh, those poor people — so glad it isn’t here.

Then on Jan. 21, a coronaviru­s case was confirmed in Washington state. Three days later, a Chicago woman who’d recently returned from a trip to Wuhan, China, was confirmed to have the new pneumonia- like virus.

“This is a single travel- associated case, not a local emergency,” Chicago Public Health Commission­er Dr. Allison Arwady said at the time.

The woman’s husband caught it too, making it the first instance in the United States of person- to- person spread.

A quiet panic took hold, as we all wondered just how deadly and how disruptive this virus would be. Over the next 10 months, our lives would be upended in ways few of us could imagine. The city and state shut down. Most of us retreated to our homes, leaving only to stock up on groceries or to see a doctor when we thought there was no way to avoid it. We wore masks — although not always the right way — and stepped to the side when someone on the sidewalk approached from the opposite direction. We hid our deepest fears from our children, many of whom had to get used to seeing their teachers and classmates only on a computer screen.

We hailed the doctors, the nurses, the bus and train drivers, the grocery store workers — and everyone else who had no choice but to leave home for work.

And we listened day after day, as the grim tallies mounted, bringing Dr. Ngozi Ezike, the head of the Illinois Department of Public Health, to tears on at least one occasion.

But perhaps we also noticed things we’d not had time for in our pre- pandemic lives: a flamingo- pink sunset, a nest of baby sparrows under the eaves, a rotting windowsill in need of repair.

Then, remarkably, there was hope: Several vaccines were showing promising signs in clinical trials. Toward year’s end, a 90- year- old grandmothe­r in England became the world’s first person to get the just- approved Pfizer/ BioNTech shot. And on Dec. 15, emergency room physician Dr. Marina Del Rios became the first person in Chicago to be vaccinated for COVID- 19.

And we dared to hope that maybe, just maybe, 2021 would bring an end to our global nightmare.

Though it might have felt that way, the pandemic was not the only story in 2020. Here, in no particular order, is what else mattered to us at the Chicago Sun- Times: Public corruption

The year in public corruption began with former state Sen. Martin Sandoval admitting he took hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes, pleading guilty and agreeing to cooperate with federal prosecutor­s “in any matter in

which he is called upon.”

The year ended with Sandoval’s death from COVID- 19, which could now complicate the feds’ aggressive probe of Illinois politics.

In between, prosecutor­s filed charges against at least 17 other public corruption defendants, including former Cook County Commission­er Jeffrey Tobolski, state Sen. Terry Link — who then resigned — and Omar Maani, a former partner in the politicall­y connected red- light camera firm SafeSpeed.

But none of those roiled state politics like the bribery charge filed in July against ComEd, which implicated House Speaker Michael Madigan. The feds followed that up with an indictment in November against longtime Madigan confidant Michael McClain, ex- ComEd CEO Anne Pramaggior­e and two others.

Madigan has not been criminally charged and has repeatedly denied wrongdoing. But the allegation­s have left him fighting to hold on to the speaker’s gavel, which he’s held for decades.

George Floyd demonstrat­ions, looting

Protests erupted in cities across America in late May after the widespread viewing of a video that showed a white police officer kneeling on the neck of 46- year- old George Floyd outside a Minneapoli­s convenienc­e store. Floyd, who was African American, lost consciousn­ess and died.

Protesters turned out here in the thousands, with many demanding major reforms, despite this city’s police department already being under a federal consent decree aimed at doing just that. The protests at times turned violent, with windows smashed, police cars set on fire and stores looted downtown and beyond. The mayor expressed her “total disgust” at the actions of the few who came “armed for all- out battle.” She imposed a citywide curfew. Downtown was cordoned off.

Hammers echoed across the city, as shop owners — already weary from coronaviru­s- related restrictio­ns — hastily boarded up storefront­s. President Donald Trump chimed in, threatenin­g to send in the U. S. military to areas where the unrest continued. The protests died down, but the conversati­on about race in America continues.

Chicago violence

The year 2020 will be remembered in Chicago not only for the coronaviru­s pandemic but for an epidemic of fatal shootings on the city’s streets.

The toll is staggering: more than 730 people were killed through early December, and there were 18 slayings on just one day — May 31 — the most violent day in 60 years. There’s a small chance 2020 could be even deadlier for Chicago than 2016 when 781 people were killed by the end of that year, which was the city’s deadliest one since the mid- 1990s.

The coronaviru­s pandemic may be linked to Chicago’s rise in killings. Cops have made fewer arrests and traffic stops in 2020, partly out of fear of getting the virus. More than 1,200 officers have tested positive for COVID- 19, and four officers have died. Criminals, many of whom have worn masks that conceal their identities, have been less afraid of getting caught, emboldenin­g them to carry guns and use them, police say. They point to this fact: even though the total number of arrests in Chicago was down in 2020 compared with the previous year, gun arrests were up.

After George Floyd died in police custody in Minneapoli­s on May 25, protests and looting swept across America, including Chicago. Violent crime is up in 2020 not only in Chicago but in many other big cities, such as New York.

Columbus statues taken down

In July, violence flared again. This time, the target was the 15th- century Italian explorer Christophe­r Columbus — a symbol of hope for generation­s of Italian Americans but loathed by some who saw statues celebratin­g him as monuments to white supremacy.

The Grant Park Columbus statue had been a regular target of vandals after George Floyd’s death. But the situation escalated in July when hundreds of protesters converged at the park, with some trying to tear it down. Police in riot gear were dispatched to protect the statue and disperse the crowds. The scenes of baton- wielding cops and some protesters hurling water bottles and other objects at them were captured on videos that went viral.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot at first argued against taking down the statues, but then — citing concerns over demonstrat­ions becoming “unsafe for both protesters and police” — did exactly that and in the dark of night. All three of the city’s Columbus statues were eventually removed.

The statues were put in storage in an undisclose­d location. The mayor said it was only temporary and then appointed an advisory committee to talk about how the city should handle these and other monuments. At year’s end, there were no sightings of the famed explorer nor any public comments from the panel.

Blagojevic­h released from prison

Trump had long hinted he might commute the 14- year prison term of former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h, who was a contestant on the future president’s reality TV show “The Celebrity Apprentice.” A federal jury in 2011 found Blagojevic­h guilty of 18 counts, including allegation­s he tried to sell or trade President Barack Obama’s old U. S. Senate seat ( an appeals court later dismissed five of those counts).

Trump’s decision came down in midFebruar­y, eight years after Blagojevic­h began serving his sentence in a Colorado prison. A white SUV pulled up outside Blagojevic­h’s Ravenswood Manor home in the early- morning hours of Feb. 19, and he was instantly mobbed by reporters and supporters.

A few hours later, he stood before the microphone­s and said: “A lot’s changed in the nearly eight years [ since] I’ve been here.”

But it was vintage Blago, albeit now with a shock of silver hair and a few more wrinkles around his eyes. He quoted poetry. He called himself a “freed political prisoner.” He talked about how his devotion to his wife and his two daughters had kept him going as he lay in a tiny concrete cell. He gushed about his liberator.

“I’m a Trumpocrat,” he said, promising to vote for the president in the election.

It might have seemed, in the blizzard of coronaviru­s news, that Blagojevic­h had retreated into obscurity. But he’s remained busy. He has a podcast called “Lightning Rod,” He has stumped for Trump, as well as Chicago businessma­n Willie Wilson in his failed run to unseat U. S. Sen. Dick Durbin. And in early December, according to Politico, Blagojevic­h was preparing to donate the suits he wore as governor to a community group that mentors young men.

“Who knows, maybe one of these young men will go on to become governor someday,” Blagojevic­h said.

Chicago native chosen as first African American Catholic cardinal

Like so many things this year, the elevation in November of 13 men from across the globe to the highest rank other than pope in the Catholic Church felt a bit sterile. There were no parties, candidates wore masks and

were quarantine­d before the ceremony at the Vatican.

But the event was neverthele­ss a celebratio­n for American Catholics, and particular­ly for Black Catholics. Chicago native Wilton Gregory became the Roman Catholic Church’s first African American cardinal.

Before being elevated, Gregory told the Associated Press that he considers his appointmen­t “an affirmatio­n of Black Catholics in the United States, the heritage of faith and fidelity that we represent.”

“There is an awareness now of the need for racial reconcilia­tion, an awareness that I have not seen at this level and at this intensity before,” Gregory said.

Gregory served as an associate pastor at Our Lady of Perpetual Help in Glenview and was a faculty member at St. Mary of the Lake Seminary in Mundelein. After serving as a master of ceremonies to Cardinals John Cody and Joseph Bernardin, Gregory was named an auxiliary bishop in Chicago in 1983 and later was installed as the bishop of Belleville in 1994. A decade later, he was appointed archbishop of Atlanta before he was named archbishop of Washington in 2019.

Legal marijuana goes on sale

As it turned out, 2020 was a great year to legalize recreation­al weed.

Facing what seemed to be a daily dose of despair — and the constant reminder that disease, and even death, could be lurking around any corner — pretty much everyone needed a reprieve.

For many Illinoisan­s, that came in the form of a blunt or a bowl or a bong stuffed tightly with the state’s most promising new cash crop.

With pot shops deemed essential in the wake of the coronaviru­s outbreak, sales skyrockete­d, resulting in much- needed revenue for a state facing a virus- induced economic downturn. In Chicago, Mayor Lori Lightfoot even leaned on cannabis revenue to save the jobs of 350 city workers.

And while experts predict that combined sales of medical and recreation­al weed will hit the billion- dollar mark by year’s end, Illinois’ legalizati­on play has been far from perfect.

Most notably, the state’s push to diversify the overwhelmi­ngly white weed industry and prioritize new licenses to so- called social equity candidates has been stymied by delays and a series of lawsuits over the applicatio­n process.

As it stands, there’s not a single licensed marijuana business in the state with a majority owner who’s a person of color.

Kenosha protests; Antioch teen charged in killing of two

On Aug. 23, a white police officer shot Jacob Blake, a 29- year- old African American man, seven times in the back in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Police at the time were attempting to arrest Blake in connection with a domestic incident and he resisted, police have said.

The shooting left Blake, who grew up in Evanston, paralyzed from the waist down, and it left parts of downtown Kenosha in ruins after nights of protests. Trucks, cars and buildings were set on fire. Police, with tear gas and rubber bullets, repeatedly clashed with protesters. On Aug. 25, 17- yearold Kyle Rittenhous­e of Antioch was among those who’d come to Kenosha vowing to help protect the city from looters.

And in an incident that has almost overshadow­ed the event that sparked the protests, Rittenhous­e shot and killed two demonstrat­ors as well as wounding another. Videos posted on social media show Rittenhous­e roaming the streets of Kenosha armed with a rifle. He was arrested and charged with first- degree intentiona­l homicide, among other charges. His high- profile defense team has said he was acting in selfdefens­e, going so far as to call him an “American patriot.” While Rittenhous­e awaits trial, the state of Wisconsin has opened an investigat­ion into the Blake shooting.

Derecho slams into region, spawning rare Chicago tornado

If you were huddled in your basement, peering out of a window, you might have seen the whip- like crack of the power lines, sturdy trees bending like saplings. It wasn’t until people stepped outside and took a walk around that the devastatio­n became apparent.

The Aug. 10 derecho — a straight, fastmoving line of storms — tore off roofs, downed power lines and destroyed thousands upon thousands of trees just in the city alone.

At one point, some 900,000 ComEd customers were without power. And in Rogers Park, an EF- 1 tornado touched down before spinning out onto Lake Michigan and morphing into a waterspout. It was the first time since 1976 that a twister of comparable power had plowed through the city.

For days afterward, streets echoed with the sound of chain saws as cherished trees were pulled from atop homes, garages and cars.

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 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES ?? ABOVE: A Chicago Police Department SUV burns near State and Lake in the Loop on May 30 after protests over the killing of George Floyd devolved into riots.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES ABOVE: A Chicago Police Department SUV burns near State and Lake in the Loop on May 30 after protests over the killing of George Floyd devolved into riots.
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES ?? Nurse practition­er Capri Reese ( left) watches the monitor for a heart rhythm while respirator­y therapist Khafran Alshahin performs chest compressio­ns on an
80- year- old man suffering from COVID- 19. Respirator­y therapists Dennis Kelly and Malcolm Love ( right) also look at the monitor. The 80- year- old man was one of three patients to die of the coronaviru­s on April 28 at Roseland Community Hospital.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES Nurse practition­er Capri Reese ( left) watches the monitor for a heart rhythm while respirator­y therapist Khafran Alshahin performs chest compressio­ns on an 80- year- old man suffering from COVID- 19. Respirator­y therapists Dennis Kelly and Malcolm Love ( right) also look at the monitor. The 80- year- old man was one of three patients to die of the coronaviru­s on April 28 at Roseland Community Hospital.
 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/ SUN- TIMES ?? LEFT: Chicago police investigat­e after three people were shot Nov. 4 in the 3800 block of West Division Street in the Humboldt Park neighborho­od.
TYLER LARIVIERE/ SUN- TIMES LEFT: Chicago police investigat­e after three people were shot Nov. 4 in the 3800 block of West Division Street in the Humboldt Park neighborho­od.
 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/ SUN- TIMES ?? ABOVE: City workers remove the Christophe­r Columbus statue in Grant Park on July 24.
TYLER LARIVIERE/ SUN- TIMES ABOVE: City workers remove the Christophe­r Columbus statue in Grant Park on July 24.
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES ?? LEFT: Former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h celebrates his release from prison with wife, Patti, and daughters, Annie and Amy, outside the family’s Ravenswood Manor home on Feb. 19.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES LEFT: Former Gov. Rod Blagojevic­h celebrates his release from prison with wife, Patti, and daughters, Annie and Amy, outside the family’s Ravenswood Manor home on Feb. 19.
 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES ?? A customer shows a product he bought at Verilife marijuana dispensary in Romeoville on Jan. 1, the first day of legalized recreation­al cannabis in Illinois.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN- TIMES A customer shows a product he bought at Verilife marijuana dispensary in Romeoville on Jan. 1, the first day of legalized recreation­al cannabis in Illinois.
 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/ SUN- TIMES ?? ABOVE: Neighbors survey the damage to vehicles near Magnolia and Schubert avenues after a severe storm hit Chicago on Aug. 10.
TYLER LARIVIERE/ SUN- TIMES ABOVE: Neighbors survey the damage to vehicles near Magnolia and Schubert avenues after a severe storm hit Chicago on Aug. 10.
 ?? ADAM ROGAN/
THE JOURNAL TIMES VIA AP ?? RIGHT: Kyle Rittenhous­e ( left) walks in Kenosha, Wis., on Aug. 25 before he fatally shot two people protesting the police shooting of Jacob Blake.
ADAM ROGAN/ THE JOURNAL TIMES VIA AP RIGHT: Kyle Rittenhous­e ( left) walks in Kenosha, Wis., on Aug. 25 before he fatally shot two people protesting the police shooting of Jacob Blake.
 ?? FABIO FRUSTACI/ POOL VIA AP ?? Chicago native Wilton Gregory becomes the Roman Catholic Church’s first African American cardinal in a ceremony at the Vatican on Nov. 28.
FABIO FRUSTACI/ POOL VIA AP Chicago native Wilton Gregory becomes the Roman Catholic Church’s first African American cardinal in a ceremony at the Vatican on Nov. 28.

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