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Stories by Jonathan Bilyk on Cook County Record

COOK COUNTY RECORD

Wednesday, March 12, 2025

Jonathan Bilyk News


Another judge says IL free to ban 'assault weapons' under 2nd Amendment because the guns are 'particularly dangerous'

By Jonathan Bilyk |
U.S. District Judge Lindsay Jenkins says the law holds up, even under recent U.S. Supreme Court rulings, because the country has a history of banning 'particularly dangerous' weapons, so the Illinois law doesn't violate the Second Amendment

Urban Prep lawsuit: CPS has no authority under IL law to take over charter schools without closing them

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Urban Prep Academies, charter high schools known nationally for helping young Black males from Chicago's South Side succeed academically, says Chicago Public Schools is attempting to sidestep state law in a bid to force them out and take over their schools

Foxx to step aside in 2024, ending tenure marked by controversial social justice-minded changes, escalating crime

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Backed by George Soros and progressive Illinois Dems, Foxx's prosecutorial philosophy gained international notoriety over her handling of the Jussie Smollett case. She has also repeatedly clashed with Chicago mayor, cops over handling of criminal cases

Labor board judge: Chicago trampled union bargaining rights by firing workers who refused Covid vax

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The city of Chicago may need to rehire the workers it fired for refusing to receive a Covid vaccine, because the city violated state labor laws by denying unions the chance to negotiate over the consequences vaccine-objecting workers could face under the mandate, an administrative law judge for the ILRB has ruled

Judge: No fundamental right for father to forbid Villa Park school district from helping child change genders

By Jonathan Bilyk |
A Chicago federal judge said a father can't sue Villa Park District 45 for allegedly conspiring with his ex-wife to help their child transition from male to female, because the father has no fundamental right to direct public schools on how to educate to his child

Appeals court turns down bid for injunction vs IL 'assault weapons' ban while appeal of Chicago judge's ruling continues

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The U.S. Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals didn't explain its decision. But the order leaves in place, for now, a Chicago federal judge's ruling that the Second Amendment doesn't apply to particularly "dangerous" weapons, like the semiautomatic firearms banned by the new Illinois law

Two new Dem IL Supreme Court justices refuse to step aside on hearing 'assault weapons' ban case

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Justices Elizabeth Rochford and Mary K. O'Brien said plaintiffs can't prove they are biased in favor of the state gun ban, just because they each received $1 million in campaign donations from Gov. JB Pritzker and strong endorsements from gun control organizations in the 2022 elections

Battle over IL gun ban expanding, setting stage for big showdown to come before Chicago fed appeals court

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Lawyers for gun makers' trade group, the National Sports Shooting Foundation, and others have filed briefs seeking to undo a Chicago federal judge's order largely upholding the Illinois "assault weapons" ban, saying the reasoning doesn't hold up under the U.S. Supreme Court's recent rulings

Appeals panel: School OK to fire Christian teacher for refusing to use transgender students preferred names, pronouns

By Jonathan Bilyk |
A dissenting judge warned the decision would all but empower public schools to steamroll the religious rights of Christians and others who dissent from school policies designed to compel teachers and school staff to affirm transgender students, even against their religious convictions

Appeals panel: Bad deal or not, Chicago parking meter lease isn't illegal monopoly over public street parking

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Federal appeals judges have tossed a class action lawsuit asserting the company that owns the rights to thousands of metered parking spaces in Chicago violated federal antitrust law by cutting City Hall out of control of on-street parking, forcing motorists in the city to pay among highest costs to park in U.S.

Who benefits from Illinois' biometrics privacy law? Mostly trial lawyers, new report says

By Jonathan Bilyk |
A report from the Chamber of Progress, which speaks for many "progressive" minded big tech and ecommerce companies, says Illinois' controversial Biometric Information Privacy Act has harmed Illinois' economy and limited access to new tech offerings in the state, while enriching lawyers

Samsung: Prominent plainfiffs' firm Labaton Sucharow seeking to press 'frivolous' biometrics claims in 'mass arbitration'

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Samsung says the Labaton lawyers have 'weaponized' the arbitration process to extract a large, quick, potentially undue settlement. Labaton says Samsung is throwing a 'tantrum' to sidestep potentially massive liability for allegedly violating the Illinois biometrics privacy law

Two new Dem IL Supreme Court justices asked to step aside from hearing challenge to IL 'assault weapons' ban

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Lawyers for plaintiffs say Justices Rochford and O'Brien both accepted millions in campaign contributions and endorsements from Gov. Pritkzer, other top Dems, and gun rights activists, making it difficult for public to believe they can be impartial on gun ban challenges

US Chamber: Burford, Sysco court fight shows dangers to U.S. economy, security from lawsuit financing

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce says an arbitrator's order would allow lawsuit investors, including foreign interests, to use U.S. courts to further their strategic interests. Burford Capital says court fight is merely Sysco's attempt to avoid contractural obligations and deny Burford the chance to protect $140M investment

City paid $117M to settle lawsuits in 2022; Loevy firm represented clients getting at least $42M of that total

By Jonathan Bilyk |
According to city data,the firm of Loevy & Loevy has sued the city of Chicago at least 111 times since 2010, generating at least $32.9 million in fees in that span. The firm has typically represented people suing over alleged wrongful convictions or allegedly coerced confessions, and other alleged police misconduct

High profile departures from Cook County State's Attorney's Office headline list of 22 new Cook County judges

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Jennifer Coleman was forced out from Cook County State's Attorney's office in 2021, while Natosha Toller publicly resigned to keep her "integrity intact." Other notable appointments include Sunil Bhave from Illinois Attorney General's Office and Hilda Bahena, executive director of Illinois state hate crimes commission under Pritzker

Class action targets apartment tenant ID verifiers CheckpointID, IDScan.net over applicant face scans

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The lawsuit claims the companies, which offer tech to help landlords combat apartment rental application fraud, violated Illinois' biometrics privacy law by scanning applicants' facial images without notice or consent

IL Supreme Court: Employers can use federal law, CBAs to block unionized workers from suing over fingerprint scans

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The decision leaves in place a rare win for Illinois employers besieged by thousands of class actions under Illinois' biometrics law, with potentially millions or even billions of dollars at stake

Lawsuit: Village of Hillside illegally boosting political operations of longtime mayor, as well as IL House Speaker Welch

By Jonathan Bilyk |
The lawsuit accuses the village of Hillside, at the direction of Mayor Joseph Tamburino, of violating Illinois election law by using taxpayer-funded resources, including village staff, to aid the campaigns of Tamburino and Illinois House Speaker Emanuel "Chris" Welch, and the judicial campaign of Welch's wife

Lawsuit: City Hall, Michael Reese developer conspired to use city power to smash value of coveted property

By Jonathan Bilyk |
Lawsuit claims Ald. Sophia King, Chicago Planning department and Michael Reese Hospital redevelopment group GRIT used the city's zoning and permitting authority to block any efforts to improve or sell a property neighboring the former Michael Reese Hospital site, because the city and GRIT wanted to buy it "cheap"