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Chicago police arrested 13 people during first day of DNC; perimeter fence fortified after breach

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More fencing added around United Center after DNC protesters breached outer perimeter


More fencing added around United Center after DNC protesters breached outer perimeter

04:41

CHICAGO (CBS) — A total of 13 people were arrested during the first day of the Democratic National Convention in Chicago, police said, including about 10 people who were arrested after a small group of agitators breached the outer security perimeter fence outside the DNC during a much larger protest march.

Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling estimated 3,500 protesters marched from Union Park, a few blocks away from the United Center, to Park 578 just north of the arena, before returning to Union Park on Monday afternoon, and the vast majority of them remained peaceful.

The protest was a show of solidarity with Palestine, with activists calling for a ceasefire in Gaza, and an end to U.S. funding to Israel.

Snelling said a small group of agitators within the larger protest crowd removed locks from some of the outer fencing around the United Center, and knocked down part of the outer security fence around 4:30 p.m., and some people passed through a gap in the fence, and began trying to knock down a second layer of fencing, but police were able to stop them.

“It was a brief breach,” Snelling said.

Snelling said some of the people who got past the outer fence threw water bottles and other objects at police, and some in the crowd sprayed officers with pepper spray. The officers suffered only minor injuries.

“We’re not going to tolerate vandalism and violence in our city, and we’re ready, willing, and able to respond to those things. So we’re going to continue to protect the city,” Snelling said. “I couldn’t be more proud of how the Chicago Police Department responded under those circumstances. We put on display the training and the preparation that we’ve been engaged in for over a year now.”

A total of 13 people were arrested on Monday in connection to the DNC. Snelling said approximately 10 of those people were arrested in connection to breaching the security fence, and would face charges including trespassing, resisting and obstructing police, and aggravated battery of police officers.

“Our officers did not overreact. We were able to clear that area up really quickly,” Snelling said.

Snelling said the security perimeter around the United Center has since been fortified to make sure there aren’t any more breaches during the DNC. Crews were seen adding an extra layer of fencing to the security perimeter near the United Center on Tuesday morning.

U.S. Secret Service Democratic National Convention Coordinator Jeff Burnside declined to discuss details of any other changes that have been made along the security perimeter, but confirmed that other repairs have been made to the security fence.

“We take a multi-layered approach to all of our security measures, and we’re constantly working with our state, local, and federal partners to evaluate, make improvements, make adjustments, and that’s all we’re doing,” Burnside said. “Our plan was in place, our plan worked. We’re taking some lessons learned, and making the necessary adjustments.”

The Chicago chapter of the National Lawyers Guild said two of the people who were arrested on Monday were hospitalized, and claimed police assaulted them, but Snelling denied that, insisting the two were taken to the hospital to get medication they needed.

“Those police officers responded perfectly, and we’ve got body cam footage to prove it. They were not hospitalized for injuries. As a police department, anytime we take someone into custody, if they’re on medication or the need medication, we make sure they get that,” Snelling said.

Despite the breach of the fence, Snelling said there was no need for CPD to change its public safety strategy during the DNC.

“We can’t account for every situation that could happen, but if we respond to it, and we put an end to it before it turns bad, then we’ve done our jobs,” he said.

Snelling said, while the vast majority of the people involved in Monday’s protest march were peacefully exercising their First Amendment rights, a small group decided to stay behind after the protest began leaving the area and breached the fence.

“The people who decided that they wanted to commit crimes and vandalism stayed behind. We responded to that event with our officers who were properly trained to deal with the situation, and as a result of it there was no serious breach that could have been worse had we not been prepared for that,” he said.

Snelling said he believes the officers who responded to the breach of the fence showed proper restraint while making arrests.

“The officers could have used more force in situations yesterday than they actually did, and those officers showed great restraint. We’re always going to have opposition to our response. There are people out there who don’t believe we should even exist. So of course we’re going to have those who are going to say that we were too aggressive,” he said.

The superintendent said police would release body camera footage of Monday’s arrests as soon as possible after those who were arrested are formally charged.

Snelling dismissed claims from the National Lawyers Guild that two of the people who were arrested claimed they were simply in the wrong place at the wrong time.

“Sometimes being in the wrong place at the wrong time is indicative of the choices that you make to engage in criminal activity,” he said.



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Tennessee DA accused of firing multiple times at fugitive, hitting home with woman and her 3 children inside

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A district attorney in Tennessee is facing a reckless endangerment charge after shooting at a fugitive several times and hitting a home that had a woman and her three children inside.

The Tennessee Bureau of Investigation announced the grand jury charge Monday against District Attorney Chris Stanford. His district covers Van Buren and Warren counties.

The indictment says that as the incident unfolded in Smithville on Nov. 21, a bullet Stanford shot from his handgun went through a front porch patio chair, through an exterior wall and into the living room wall of the home. The woman and children weren’t hurt.

Smithville is about 60 miles southeast of Nashville.

The indictment says that Stanford fired the shot “unlawfully, intentionally and recklessly.” There was no immediate threat to him or others, he wasn’t aiming the handgun, and “just held it out and shot” without using the gun’s sights, the indictment adds.

Following his indictment, Stanford surrendered at the DeKalb County Jail and was released after posting a $10,000 bond, TBI said. A message left with Stanton’s office was not immediately returned Tuesday.

The Warren County Sheriff’s Office described the circumstances leading to the incident last month. In a social media post, it said authorities were pursuing suspects after finding three dead bodies at a house and at an adjacent building.

The suspects were sighted in DeKalb County, the sheriff’s office said. One of them was taken into custody without incident. Stanford and other law enforcement officials chased the other suspect, who was a passenger in a car, the office said.

While trying to help the suspect flee, the driver struck a homeland security officer with the car, the sheriff’s office said.

In a statement last month to CBS affiliate WTVF-TV, Stanford said he fired shots in response to the homeland security agent being hit. No one was shot when Stanford fired his gun. The homeland security officer was injured and taken to the hospital, according to a social media post by District Attorney Bryant Dunaway.

“The vehicle then drove toward me and others, accelerating quickly. I fired my service weapon in defense of myself and others at the scene. Based upon my training and the circumstances that presented themselves, I believe my actions were necessary and justified,” Stanford said.

Stanford also told the news station he has a state law enforcement certification to carry his weapon at all times.

The two suspects in the three deaths were taken into custody and charged with criminal homicide, while the driver, also taken into custody, faces felony evading arrest and aggravated assault charged, according to the sheriff’s office.

Stanford will make an appearance in court on Jan. 7, WTVF reported. Since he showed up at the scene and fired his weapon, he is now a witness and cannot prosecute the triple murder in his own county, the station reported.





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Accused mastermind of journalist’s murder wanted by Mexico — but U.S. has called him a “protected witness”

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Mexico has asked the United States to extradite the suspected mastermind behind the murder of journalist Javier Valdez after he was arrested on drug charges, the attorney general said.  

Damaso Lopez Serrano — who the Justice Department says is known as “Mini Lic” — is accused of ordering the 2017 killing of Valdez, an award-winning journalist and AFP contributor who covered the narcotics trade.

The alleged former high-ranking member of the Sinaloa Cartel was arrested on Friday in Virginia on charges of trafficking fentanyl. Lopez Serrano is the son of Damaso Lopez Nunez, who launched a struggle for control of the cartel following the arrest of its leader, Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman.

Mexico’s Attorney General Alejandro Gertz described Lopez Serrano as the “mastermind” behind Valdez’s murder.

“We have already prosecuted the rest of the perpetrators and they are in jail,” he told a news conference.

Valdez was shot and killed in his car on May 15, 2017 in the Sinaloa state capital of Culiacan near the offices of his weekly newspaper Riodoce.

Mexico Journalist Murders
In this June 28, 2017 file photo, a police officer stands outside the Riodoce office after the killing of the newspaper’s co-founder Javier Valdez in Culiacan, Sinaloa state, Mexico. 

Enric Marti / AP


Investigators believe Lopez Serrano ordered the hit because he was angry about information published by Valdez about the Sinaloa Cartel’s internal power struggles.

Mexico has made several extradition requests for Lopez Serrano, who surrendered to U.S. authorities in July 2017 for drug trafficking and cooperated in exchange for a reduced sentence. At the time, the U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration said Lopez Serrano was “believed to be the highest-ranking Mexican cartel leader ever to self-surrender in the United States.”

He was released from prison on parole in 2022.

Gertz said that Mexico had asked “on countless occasions” for Lopez Serrano to be handed over, but Washington declined because he had become a “protected witness” and “was giving them a lot of information.”

He voiced hope that with Lopez Serrano’s latest arrest “there are more than enough reasons” for the United States to finally grant Mexico’s request.

Mexico Media Murders
In this May 16, 2017 file photo, Maria Herrera, a mother who became active in the search for Mexico’s missing after four of her sons disappeared, weeps after speaking about murdered journalist Javier Valdez during a protest against the killing of reporters, in front of the Interior Ministry in Mexico City. 

Rebecca Blackwell / AP


Wracked by violence related to drug trafficking, Mexico is one of the world’s most dangerous countries for journalists, news advocacy groups say.

Reporters Without Borders says more than 150 newspeople have been killed in Mexico since 1994 — and 2022 was one of the deadliest years ever for journalists in Mexico, with at least 15 killed.

Media workers are regularly targeted in Mexico, often in direct reprisal for their work covering topics like corruption and the country’s notoriously violent drug traffickers.

Most recently, in October,  gunmen killed a journalist whose Facebook news page covered the violent western Mexico state of Michoacan. Then less than 24 hours later, an entertainment reporter in the western city of Colima was killed inside a restaurant she owned.



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2 sisters, 7 years apart in age, also receive heart transplants 7 years apart in Chicago

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2 sisters both receive heart transplants, 7 years apart


2 sisters both receive heart transplants, 7 years apart

02:18

CHICAGO (CBS) — Two sisters have grateful hearts after they both received heart transplants at the same age—seven years apart.

Younger sister Meredith Everhart and older sister Abbey Cannon are now bonded by a genetic condition and a second chance at life.

“What’s ironic is that when she needed a heart transplant, was exactly the same age I needed a heart transplant,” said Cannon. “Seven years apart in age, seven years apart within 30 days of transplant, and our birthdays are within 30 days.”

The sisters share a special bond of getting a second chance at life, which they both received at the age of 38 years old.

Both sisters suffer from hypertrophic cardiomyopathy—otherwise known as HCM.

The genetic condition is a form of heart disease that causes the heart muscle to thicken.

In 2012, Cannon had chest pain. She was misdiagnosed in Nashville, Tennessee, and got a second opinion at Northwestern Medicine in 2016.

“Within six months, I was inpatient on an aortic balloon pump waiting for a heart,” Cannon said. “I ended up getting my heart 32 days later, So my date is February 27, 2017.”

Just months after Cannon’s transplant, Everhart was diagnosed with HCM too. She tried medication and participated in clinical trials, but her condition kept getting worse.”

“For me, it was, she’s right—I was in denial for a long time,” said Everhart, “and I didn’t want to be sick. I was in my 20s. I was in my early 30’s. I was like, this is not happening. I saw how bad she suffered.”

In May 2022, Everhart got COVID-19, and it sent her into heart failure.

She was added to the transplant list one year later.

“I got the call on January 29 of this year, 2024, and it’s been a journey,” Everhart said. “It’s been fantastic though. Northwestern has been great.”

Cannon said she can’t stress enough how important it is to become an organ donor.

“Had we not had someone that gave that most selfless gift, neither of us would be here,” she said.



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