Sleepy Don / Costly move / Plugs Pulled Dept.

Sleepy Don. By several accounts, ex-President Trump nodded off during his trial yesterday …
 … although, in a development that CNN’s Oliver Darcy says “underscores the information vacuum that has been birthed by the lack of transparency into the case,” the Trump campaign denies it …
 … and Trump himself reportedly glared for several seconds at one reporter who noted his catnap.
 Warning that “Trump is filling the void with lies,” columnist Brian Beutler says President Biden “should end his vow of silence on Trump’s legal jeopardy.”
 The matter triggered a field day for late-night TV hosts—including Jimmy Kimmel, who’s dubbed Trump “Dozo the Clown.”

‘A pretty good start.’ That’s law professor Joyce Vance’s assessment of the first round of jury selection: “More than half of Trump’s prospective jurors in the first panel of 96 people were excused after they told the judge they could not be fair and impartial. That suggests 45 or so were willing to at least consider it.”
 Trump’s niece Mary counts “10 big losses” for him in court yesterday.
 Historian Heather Cox Richardson: “Trump is trying to undermine the rule of law not only out of apparent fear of the outcome of his trials, but also because his appearance in court is likely to hurt his popularity.”
 Contrary to some mainstream media pooh-poohing, columnist Dan Pfeiffer calls this trial “a big deal with massive implications.”
 Politico: “The reality of being a criminal defendant on trial finally dawned on Trump. He didn’t take it well.”

‘Greater risks than typical social media platforms because of … the involvement of President Donald J. Trump.’ Donald Trump’s Trump Media & Technology Group tells the Securities and Exchange Commission that Donald Trump himself poses a threat to Trump Media’s Donald Trump-centric social media app, Truth Social.
 Fun exercise: Search the registration statement for the word “Donald.”

‘The story seems cooked up.’ A short surveillance video recorded two blocks from where Chicago police killed Dexter Reed has fueled columnist Eric Zorn’s doubts about cops’ explanation for why they stopped Reed in the first place.
 A Tribune editorial: The chief administrator of the Civilian Office of Police Accountability needs to step up the agency’s game.

Money for nothin’. WBEZ: Cook County’s set aside $20 million for suburbs to help migrants, but only two towns have applied.
 The Chicago City Council’s advanced a plan to spend $70 million more for migrant care.

Costly move. Chicago City Treasurer—and unsuccessful congressional candidate—Melissa Conyears-Ervin has been fined $60,000 for violating the city’s ethics ordinance.
 An Indiana corruption case before the Supreme Court yesterday could impact laws in Illinois and across the country.

Pride goeth. Limited in size by new city regulations, Chicago’s Pride Parade has denied slots to all the Chicago schools that participated last year.
 The school board wants your ideas for its five-year strategic plan …
 … and you can sign up here.

‘What are the teams in these f**king wars?’ If you need a scorecard to figure out who’s allied with whom in the Mideast—well, Jon Stewart’s with you.
 As world leaders counseled restraint, Israel was vowing a response to Iran’s attack Saturday.
 Some of Chicago’s Jewish and political leaders—including Ald. Debra Silverstein, who called the offer “hollow”—skipped Mayor Johnson’s roundtable on antisemitism yesterday.

Plugs Pulled Dept. Apologizing for cutting off Billy Joel’s Sunday night concert prematurely, CBS has scheduled a rebroadcast in full Friday night.
 R.I.P., CNN’s Gayle King-Charles Barkley show.
 Jason Koebler at 404 sees TV’s dystopian future: AI-generated garbage.

‘Losing roughly $300,000 a month.’ Semafor reports that The Intercept—“the left-wing U.S. newsroom that’s been a thorn in Joe Biden’s side and a hub for pro-Palestinian coverage”—is running out of cash.
 News credibility rating site NewsGuard has stripped The New York Times of its perfect rating.
 News biz critic Mark Jacob condemns journalists who just bend over and take it when liars lie to them.

Showtime / Chicago Jews, divided / Dairy downfall

Showtime. Live updates: Jury selection has begun today in Donald Trump’s historic criminal trial—the first for an ex-president …
 … and, the AP reports, “almost certain to be the most salacious, with testimony expected about alleged marital infidelity, a supermarket tabloid’s complicity in a cover-up, and payouts orchestrated by a former Trump loyalist who now counts himself among the ex-president’s enemies.”
 Trump’s accused of faking business records to keep voters from learning unflattering info about himself—in what the Washington Post’s Jennifer Rubin calls his “first—and only successful—attempt to use deception … to gain power.” (That’s a gift link, courtesy of Chicago Public Square supporters.)
 Politico introduces you to the trial’s potential cast of characters.
 No live video from the courtroom, but a University of Texas journalism professor says still photos will reveal much.

Judge won’t budge. Dismissing the Trump team’s request as “a series of inferences, innuendos and unsupported speculation,” Judge Juan Merchan kicked things off by refusing to recuse himself from the case.
 Law prof Joyce Vance: “Trump has been … baiting the judge all weekend.”
 Lisa Needham at Public Notice: If Trump “really thinks it’s a nothingburger, he certainly isn’t acting like it.”
 Ex-Illinois Republican Rep. turned Trump adversary Adam Kinzinger: The system is working.
 Prospective jurors may be asked what media they consume and where they get their news …
 … a thing that last week brought joy to Stephen Colbert.

Chicago Jews, divided. Politico’s Shia Kapos says the escalating Middle East war has become “a huge wedge issue” splitting the city’s Democrats—particularly left-leaning Jewish leaders and some of the city’s most prominent Democratic Jewish politicians.
 “Free Palestine” and “Stop Genocide” protesters today were blocking access to O’Hare—partly to call attention to Boeing’s sale of weapons to Israel.
 The AP: “Iran’s attack on Israel raises fears of a wider war, but all sides have also scored gains.”
 Also from Politico: “The Biden administration’s main message for Israel … comes down to this: Stop and think.”
 Same thing from Britain and France.

‘We are all allowed to be outraged.’ Mayor Johnson is condemning a Back of the Yards mass shooting that killed an 8-year-old girl and injured 10 others—including her mother and three boys, ages 9, 8 and 1.
 Chicago police say the city’s controversial ShotSpotter technology led them to the scene of the crime.
 Behind the nearly 100-shot police killing of Dexter Reed, Block Club and Bolts see a surge in West Side traffic stops.
 CWBChicago: A man was shot while relieving himself on a tree in Lincoln Park.

Dairy downfall. Oberweis Dairy—the milk and ice cream company with almost 40 stores in Illinois and Missouri—has filed for bankruptcy.
 Its website showed no clues to its business plans.
 Its family ownership includes Trump-backed ex-State Sen. Jim Oberweis, who unsuccessfully ran—and then contested his defeat—in a 2020 race for Congress (2021 link).
 Popular Information catches Ohio’s Trump-allied Senate candidate in a series of falsehoods about his purported aversion to China.

No ‘sweetheart deal’ for Obama shrine. Two lawyers representing efforts to block plans for an Obama Presidential Center in historic Jackson Park say the legal fight ain’t over yet …
 … even though a federal appeals court last week gave further construction the go-ahead.


‘News organizations should put their election content in front of their paywall.’ Former Time managing editor Richard Stengel calls for making journalism free—at least during the 2024 campaign …
 … reflecting the reasons why Chicago Public Square is always free—thanks, in part, to the support of readers who’ve stepped forward to help cover the continually rising cost of its production and distribution.

Soundtrack for this edition. Chicago radio veteran (WXRT, WLUP) Dave Benson’s free Bensonic stream on Live365.
 Jerry Role made this edition better. (Image generated in part by Google’s ImageFX.)

Subscribe to Square.