Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Eastertime at the Chatham Food Market!!!

It's about time for Easter holiday season with great food and delicious candies from the Chatham Food Market. And don't forget that Delicatessen in German means "an abundance of good food." You can find that abundance of great food for Easter at the delicatessen at Chatham Food Market, 327 East 79Th Street. http://www.chathamfoods.com/

Detectives warn of robberies in Park Manor





















Police alert regarding recent South Side robberies.

Police alert regarding recent South Side robberies. (March 25, 2012)















Chicago police detectives are warning residents of the Grand Crossing police district of strong-arm robberies in the area in recent weeks.



One man, sometimes with another, has committed at least four robberies since Feb. 24 in the Chatham and Park Manor neighborhoods, according to an alert issued by Area Central detectives this morning.



People have been approached by one or two men and and had their belongings taken through force or threat of force, police said.



The robberies have taken place in the afternoon or evening. Police mentioned four of them in their alert:



•In the 700 block of East 71 st Street on Feb. 24, 2012 about 12:08 p.m. in the Park Manor neighborhood



•In the 6900 block of South Eberhart Avenue on Feb. 26, about 9:10 p.m. in the Park Manor neighborhood



•In the 7000 block of South Wabash Avenue on March 9, about 10:30 p.m. in the Park Manor neighborhood



•In the 6800 block of South King Drive on March 10, about 4 p.m. in the Park Manor neighborhood



The robbers are described as black men between the ages of 18 and 23, standing between 5 feet 9 inches and 6 feet 2 inches, and weighing between 150 and 180 pounds, with medium to dark complexions. Both are said to have either dreadlocks or braided hair.



Anyone with information about the robberies is asked to call 911 or call Area Central detectives at (312) 747-8382.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Emanuel says community must join fight against gangs













Mayor Rahm Emanuel yesterday called on residents to help police take back their neighborhoods in the wake of a spate of shootings around Chicago.

The mayor said the spike in violence -- including 49 shootings with 10 fatalities last weekend and the Monday shooting of Chicago police officer Del Pearson -- "tears at the city's fabric."


"This is not alone a law enforcement issue, although it needs -- law enforcement plays a major role," said Emanuel, making his first public comments about the violence since returning to Chicago from a spring break trip with his children.

He said he visited a church in the Chatham neighborhood Thursday evening near the scene of a recent shooting.

"As I said in the church last night, the first word in community policing is 'community.' I see the strength that happens inside a church, and I want that strength out in the neighborhood, in the community, working with the law enforcement community."

Emanuel said the Chicago Police Department is working on a "citywide anti-gang strategy" and he compared it the police crackdown against the Maniac Latin Disciples after the June shooting of two young girls in a Northwest Side park.

Responding to criticism that there aren't enough cops on the streets to prevent the violence, Emanuel pointed out he has moved more police officers into patrol jobs from administrative positions since taking office.

Asked why it took such a violent weekend before he called for a citywide gang crackdown, the mayor said he and police Superintendent Garry McCarthy have actually been working on the initiative for some time.

"(McCarthy) is working through exactly what I've asked, and I talked to him before about it," Emanuel said during a news conference at Curie High School to announce an expansion of college prep programs in public schools. "They're working through a series of issues. I don't expect them to turn something around. I want more than 'we have an anti-gang unit.' I want a strategy that's comprehensive to the problem and the challenge that we face."

Earlier this week, McCarthy said the violent weekend reinforces that Chicago ranks with Los Angeles as the worst in the country with gang woes. He defended the department's anti-violence strategy but acknowledged that officers need to focus more on preventing retaliatory shootings.

McCarthy said beat patrol and gang officers are working on a “gang audit” in the Southwest Side’s Chicago Lawn District—-which saw at least 10 people shot last weekend--to map out where in the district the gang problem is most prevalent. That data will then be disseminated into beat cars, enabling a regular beat cop to know more about the gang problem in the areas they patrol.

Emanuel also added his name to the list of Democratic Party leaders calling for state Rep. Derrick Smith, D-Chicago, to step down in the face of federal bribery charges that came a week before he won his party's nomination for a full term.

"It's an honor to serve the public, and I do not think -- while Mr. Smith won the primary -- that his name should be on the ballot in November, because I think he has already shown a violation of the code of conduct that comes with the honor of serving the public," Emanuel said.

Smith was charged March 13 with accepting a $7,000 cash bribe in return for supporting a bid for a state grant. He was snared in an undercover FBI sting that included an audio recording of Smith allegedly accepting the bribe.

He nonetheless won Tuesday's primary election handily over Tom Swiss, with the help of House Speaker Michael Madigan and others.

Emanuel was also asked about the city's denial of a parade permit for protesters who want to march to McCormick Place convention center on the first day of the NATO summit in Chicago.

The city approved the original request for a May 19 march through the Loop and down Michigan Avenue, timed for the first day of what was to be a G-8 meeting of world economic leaders. But when the G-8 was moved to Camp David, the protesters asked to hold the same march a day later to instead target the first day of the NATO May 20-21 summit.

In denying the group's request for the same route, the city Department of Transportation said "there are not available at the time of the parade a sufficient number of on-duty police officers, or other city employees authorized to regulate traffic, to police and protect lawful participants in the parade and nonparticipants."

Emanuel said the route would need to be changed. "When the application was originally accepted and the route was accepted, if you change the date, the route -- not the destination, the route -- needs to be changed," he said.

The mayor was asked whether the city has enough police to handle the event, and responded "we're going to make sure people have their First Amendment rights protected, and we're also going to make sure we can enforce the law. As I've said repeatedly, those two are not in conflict."

1-year-old and mother suffer graze wounds in East Chatham shooting










Chicago police investigate the shooting of a mother and 1-year-old child near 79th Street and Maryland Avenue this afternoon. Eric Clark for the Chicago Tribune

Chicago police investigate the shooting of a mother and 1-year-old child near 79th Street and Maryland Avenue this afternoon. (Eric Clark for the Chicago Tribune)




A mother and her 1-year-old suffered graze wounds in a shooting in the East Chatham neighborhood this past Sunday, March 18th, afternoon, authorities said.



The two were injured about 3:20 p.m. while in the area of 79th Street and Maryland Avenue, said Chicago Police Department News Affairs Officer Darryl Baety.


The 1-year-old was taken to Comer Children's Hospital and the mother to the University of Chicago medical center after suffering graze wounds, said Chicago Fire Department spokesman Will Knight.

1 dead as gunfire erupts in Chatham




A man died following a shooting in the East Chatham neighborhood last Saturday, March 17th, one of several shootings around the city, Chicago police said.


The man, 21, was shot in the head at about 7:52 p.m. in the 7900 block of South Cottage Grove Avenue, said Officer Veejay Zala, a Chicago police spokesman. The man, whose identity had not been released, was dead on the scene, Zala said.

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

BREAKING NEWS: Schaumburg doctor convicted of health care fraud












(Tribune illustration / February 28, 2012)




A federal jury convicted a physician who operated a Chatham neighborhood medical clinic on the South Side of engaging in a health care fraud scheme between 2007 and July 2010, the U.S. Attorney’s office said today.

Dr. Jaswinder Rai Chhibber, who operated the former Cottage Grove Community Medical Clinic, 642 East 79th St., was convicted Tuesday of defrauding Medicare and Blue Cross Blue Shield of Illinois by submitting false insurance claims for medically unnecessary tests and using false diagnosis codes to justify the tests he had ordered, according to a release from the U.S. Attorney’s office.

Chhibber, 43, of Schaumburg, was found guilty of five counts of health care fraud and four counts of making false statements involving a health care benefits program after less than two full days of deliberations following a week-long trial, the release said. The jury found him not guilty of seven additional counts.

Chhibber remains free on bond pending sentencing, which is set for May 10.

He faces a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison on each count of health care fraud, and five years in prison on each false statements count, and a $250,000 fine on each count, the release said.

Chhibber ordered medically unnecessary tests, falsified patients’ medical records, and used false diagnosis codes on insurance claim forms in various fashions for at least five patients who testified at trial, including two undercover federal agents who posed as patients, according to the release.