Daywatch: New bail reform to take effect today

Good morning, Chicago.

The night before historic bail reforms were set to take effect on Jan. 1, Cook County court officials and workers were poised to implement the new system after years of seemingly nonstop meetings.

They replaced all the paperwork used for bail-related releases with new forms revised to comply with the law that eliminates cash bail as a condition of release from jail, judges told the Tribune.

Then, on New Year’s Eve, the Illinois Supreme Court halted implementation of the measure hours before it would take effect, putting the reforms in limbo and sending local court staff scrambling to reverse course for the court day.

“We showed up on Jan. 1, … we had all our new forms ready,” said Cook County Judge Mary Marubio, head of the pretrial division. “We didn’t order the old forms.”

She told the public in court that morning to expect some “hiccups.”

“It’s a massive ship that needs to be turned,” said Judge Charles Beach, a judge in the pretrial division. “It doesn’t turn on a dime.”

Now, after a nine-month delay due to litigation from prosecutors across Illinois who opposed the law, the reforms will be rolled out today, a seminal moment for the state after years of debate over how to keep the public safe and create an equitable criminal justice system.

Read the full story from the Tribune’s Madeline Buckley and Robert McCoppin.

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After complaints about Pritzker’s Prisoner Review Board, advocates and observers say it’s become too strict

Ronnie Carrasquillo has been locked up for more than four decades for the 1976 murder of a Chicago police officer. Now 65, he’s come close to freedom on three occasions in recent years.

Carrasquillo went before the Illinois Prisoner Review Board in 2019, 2020, and 2021. Each time, he was narrowly denied parole by a vote of 7 to 6. In two of those cases, the seven votes were in favor of parole — but eight were needed.

But when Carrasquillo again went before the board in May, all of the board members who had been in his corner during the previous three hearings had been replaced. This time, Carrasquillo was denied parole by a vote of 8-1.

Teen’s death, his third encounter with gun violence in three years, shows persistent risks to survivors

Fifteen-year-old Swaysee Rankin was loved. The friends and relatives who gathered last week to honor his life and death wanted to make sure everyone knew it, so they brought balloons, permanent markers and gluesticks to his vigil. They took turns writing messages on balloons and sticking photos of their friend to poster boards tacked to a wall.

Nostalgia and pride: The Chicago history of celebrating Mexican Independence Day by caravan

Caravans as a way to commemorate Mexican Independence Day have long existed in Chicago, though mostly in neighborhoods and away from downtown.

Initially, people showed their pride of Mexican identity and culture by wrapping their cars with Mexican flags or driving through the streets waving flags, honking through the neighborhoods shaped by Mexican immigrants.

At 1st Midwest Beaver Summit, role of the hefty rodents praised in wetland restoration, climate change fight

As the nation faces a future of increasing flooding, drought and wildfires, millions of 60-pound rodents stand by, ready to assist.

Beavers can transform parched fields into verdant wetlands and widen rivers and streams in ways that not only slow surging floodwater, but store it for times of drought.

At the first day of the Midwest Beaver Summit, which is being held virtually and will continue Sept. 20, speakers extolled the beaver’s ability to create healthier and more resilient ecosystems, at a time when climate change is expected to create new challenges.

Is Matt Eberflus on the hot seat? Is the Justin Fields dream still alive? Brad Biggs’ 10 thoughts on the Chicago Bears’ Week 2 loss.

10 thoughts after familiar problems that have dogged the Chicago Bears were again obstacles in a 27-17 loss to the Tampa Bay Buccaneers Sunday at steamy Raymond James Stadium, the franchise’s 12th consecutive defeat dating back to last season.

Column: The greatest Hercule Poirot of all? Mystery solved: The clues are with these 10 actors

First, last and forever, there is the mustache. It’s spelled “mustache” according to the Associated Press and therefore also to the Chicago Tribune. But in Agatha Christie’s stories featuring her most famous and fastidious creation, the Belgian detective Hercule Poirot, now 103 years old, the spelling favors “moustache” and very often “moustaches,” plural.

With a new Hercule Poirot movie out in “A Haunting in Venice,” Tribune movie critic Michael Phillips makes a list of the 10 best Poirots of all time.

Review: 4 stars for Kyoten, Chicago’s best omakase

A few weeks ago, Tribune critic Nick Kindelsperger walked up to an unmarked door along Armitage Avenue and laughed. Like a condemned building, it had torn brown paper covering the glass doors. In the entryway sat a refrigerator, unplugged and wrapped in plastic. Half-opened cardboard boxes rested on top, next to a few bottles of wine.

This is what greeted Kindelsperger at Kyoten, where an 18-course meal costs between $440 and $490 per person.