The collapse of the indictment of six people who in the fall of 2025 were protesting the Trump administration’s “Operation Midway Blitz” immigration crackdown created problem after problem for the feds—and in particular for the U.S. attorney’s office in Chicago.
As you’re about to hear, that case might’ve gone quite differently if not for a fateful connection between two dads who met on the fields of Oak Park Youth Baseball: One of the defendants, Oak Park Village Trustee Brian Straw, and the man who would become his lawyer, Chris Parente.
In a Wednesday Journal / Chicago Public Square podcast, recorded at Oak Park’s historic 19th Century Club, Straw and Parente explain how it went down, what it means for the nation … and what a movie about the case should look like.
Hear them in conversation June 25, 2026—after an introduction from Journal founder Dan Haley.
R.I.P., junk fees. Gov. Pritzker’s signed a package of laws aimed at eliminating sticker shock when people buy Illinois concert, sporting event or other tickets, or order food or hotel rooms …
■ … so the price you first see when shopping online is the price you pay.
■ Other new laws on the way next week include expansion of the state’s “cyberbullying” rules to include the posting of unauthorized AI images of children, and the permanent extension of a pandemic-era law allowing the delivery of cocktails.
‘Were you apoplectic when you guys bought it?’ City Council members were not encouraging yesterday as they questioned the managing director of a New York investment firm trying to acquire Chicago’s parking meters …
‘Meta culpa.’ Business Insider: After years of mass layoffs, restructuring and overbearing management, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg acknowledges a collapse in employee trust and morale.
‘Radio’s biggest lie.’ Barrett Media news editor Garrett Searight says the massive layoffs at iHeartMedia stations across the country expose the hypocrisy of the industry’s mantra that “content is king.”
‘Babies are an important source of adults, without whom the economy cannot function.’ Pulitzer winner Dave Barry sounds an alarm about the “baby drought.”
■ Columnist Elizabeth Austin declares: “I am sick to death of people poking fun at Trump’s allegedly small, mushroom-shaped penis as a symbol of his unfitness for office.”
‘Dislike the AI cartoon!’ Jessica Knobbe was among a handful of readers turning thumbs down on an artificial-intelligence-generated illustration in yesterday’s Square: “It just seems to be a medium that steals from actual illustrators.”
■ ChatGPT’s “art director” for that picture, Jan Kodner, responds: “I understand that AI is a hot button for some. … I can’t draw at all. … Without AI imaging (under my supervision and direction), I wouldn’t have been able to help create … effective messaging in these dark times.”
■ So Jan’s back with a different approach—his ChatGPT-assisted perspective on this story: