Illinois ‘chicken bill’ aims to boost small poultry farms, expand access to their products

Legislation would allow farmers to sell their poultry at farmers markets, roadside stands and through delivery

By GRACE FRIEDMAN
Medill Illinois News Bureau
news@capitolnewsillinois.com

SPRINGFIELD — A bill that would lift long-standing restrictions on small poultry farmers in Illinois, reducing red tape and transforming the way local farmers process and sell their products, is heading to the governor.

Under a measure dubbed the “chicken bill,” farmers who process fewer than 7,500 birds annually would be exempt from state and federal inspections of their poultry operations or from having to send birds to USDA-approved processing facilities — an increase from the previous 5,000-bird threshold. The change, part of an update to the Illinois Meat and Poultry Inspection Act, also allows these farmers to sell their poultry beyond their own farms — including at farmers markets, roadside stands and through delivery — a major shift from earlier restrictions.

"This is important for our small farmers to be able to get their product to the community, and that's what this is all about," said Sen. Sally Turner, R-Beason, who co-sponsored the bill. The Illinois House voted 116-0 on Friday, May 30, to approve House Bill 2196, and the Senate passed it unanimously on May 22.

Turner represents a largely rural district spanning 10 counties. "Farmers in my community, especially small farmers, are important to me, personally, but also to our whole district," she said.

State Rep. Charlie Meier, R-Okawville, a farmer himself, said the legislation provides local agriculture with a much-needed boost. 

"We always want to get the freshest product to the consumer. We want them to know where it came from," Meier said. "So what's better than meeting the farmer who's raised those chickens, knowing where they're coming from? They're fresh, and you're getting a good, healthy product."

Initially, the bill faced pushback from some public health groups, which argued for stricter labeling and packaging rules to ensure the safety of poultry products for consumption.

The revised bill includes mandated temperature controls during storage, transportation, shipping and delivery. Processed poultry must be packaged in sealed, leak-proof containers to prevent contamination. Each package must also be clearly labeled with the farm’s name and address, the product name, net weight and a statement indicating that the poultry was processed under exemption and not inspected by state or federal authorities.

"Everything you see in that bill was done by some of the public health coalitions," Michael Desmedt, interim director of public health for DuPage County, said. "I think our voices were heard, and they understood our concerns.’’ 

Ed Dubrick, a poultry farmer and policy organizer with the Illinois Stewardship Alliance, a nonprofit organization that advocates for sustainable agriculture, said he went around the state and asked livestock farmers what they needed to help with the processing of their animals. 

Dubrick said the current exemption was too limiting because farmers could only sell “on or from the farm.” 

"Expecting someone to come to the farm every time they want some chicken just really isn't realistic," he said. "But if we can bring it to a farmers market where the consumers are, that adds an opportunity."

Illinois is one of the few states without more flexible on-farm poultry processing exemptions, Dubrick said. 

“In many states — about 40 — you’re allowed to process up to 20,000 birds under similar rules. We’re only asking for 7,500,” he said.

Farmers will benefit, according to Dubrick. 

"It gives them the opportunity to drive both their production and their profits on their farms," he said

For consumers, he said, "I think you'll see an increase in the availability of local poultry, and I don't think you'll see any difference in food quality or safety. Farmers are proud of their product. They're not going to put their name, their reputation, their business on the line."

Anna Morrell, co-owner of The Little Farm at Weldon Springs in Clinton, said the bill could make it more viable for her and her husband to scale up their small operation, which began in 2020.

“This basically just opens up another avenue for getting poultry processed with lower overhead and gives us an avenue of sales into farmers markets," Morrell said. "We're currently not operating under the poultry exemption. We take our meat to USDA-inspected facilities, but there are very few processors in Illinois that process poultry."

Morrell said the current law had made it more challenging for poultry farmers in Illinois to sell their products; this bill would decrease the number of miles farmers have to travel to get their poultry processed. 

If signed, Legislators and advocates say the bill represents a rare collaboration between producers, public health departments and state lawmakers.

"And let's see if we can't keep a few more farm families on the farm and give kids another chance at a future on the farm,” Meier said.

Grace Friedman is a journalism student at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, Media, Integrated Marketing Communications, and a fellow in its Medill Illinois News Bureau working in partnership with Capitol News Illinois.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.


Chickens and ducks roam freely at The Little Farm in Clinton, where sustainable practices support fresh egg and produce production. (Medill Illinois News Bureau photo by Grace Friedman)

Illinois’ $55.2B budget ‘incomplete,’ Civic Federation president says

Democrats monitoring Congress for actions that could force changes to budget

By BEN SZALINSKI
Capitol News Illinois
bszalinski@capitolnewsillinois.com

SPRINGFIELD — Illinois’ latest budget misses the mark in several key areas, according to one independent nonprofit fiscal analyst. 

State lawmakers sent Gov. JB Pritzker a $55.2 billion budget on May 31 that raises $1 billion in new revenue and increases spending by more than $2 billion in fiscal year 2026 compared to the current year. 

But the head of one of Chicago’s top nonpartisan government research organizations said lawmakers made too many short-term decisions to balance the budget in fiscal year 2026 that could make future fiscal years more challenging.

“It’s an incomplete budget,” Civic Federation President Joe Ferguson told Capitol News Illinois. “It does not add in any meaningful way to discuss any structural issues the state has. It’s a maintenance budget.”

Read more: New taxes on sports bets, nicotine products as Democrats pass $55.2B budget

Ferguson said a key reason for that is at least $271 million in fund sweeps used to balance the general revenue fund. Fund sweeps occur when lawmakers dip into lesser-known and underutilized funds outside the main general fund to use as a source of revenue for the fiscal year. This year’s budget also pauses several transfers to keep certain dollars available in the general fund for use this year.

For example, the budget calls for pausing the final transfer of motor fuel sales tax revenue to the road fund. The move would free up $171 million of general fund spending in FY26, but delays putting that money toward road construction projects. 

“It's not balanced on gimmicks,” House Speaker Chris Welch, D-Hillside, told Capitol News Illinois for the latest episode of the “Illinois Lawmakers” program. “It's balanced based on revenues and expenditures, and it's based on what we know. We passed a budget based on what we knew at the time, and we weren't going to pass the budget with cuts alone.”

The FY26 budget would also suspend the monthly transfer to the “rainy day” fund for one year, freeing up $45 million for general fund use. 

“It’s absolutely a mistake,” Ferguson said, calling that decision “troubling.” 

The “rainy day” fund should continue to grow over time, he said, especially “knowing that we are going to need to go to some last-case resorts in all likelihood when we understand the federal impact and when we approach the transit issues as well, and this was not the moment to go to that well.” 

The fund is still expected to grow from interest income and cannabis revenue in FY26.

Lawmakers used some of the fund sweeps to give the governor authority over a new $100 million “emergency” fund to plug unforeseen budget shortfalls. 

Pritzker argued at a news conference after the budget passed that the state’s “structural” deficit – or the gap between ongoing spending and baseline revenues – has improved since he took office in 2019.

“We're diminishing the one-time expenditures that we have to make,” Pritzker said. “So we've gotten, really, much closer than ever before to balancing that structural deficit.”

Relying on fund sweeps will only make budgeting more challenging if a crisis arrives, Ferguson said.

“Everyone acknowledges that it is all but certain that there are additional things that are going to need to be attended to in the coming months,” Ferguson said.

An eye on Congress

New action from Congress that punches holes in state budgets, coupled with the state’s public transportation fiscal cliff, could be a wake-up call for lawmakers, Ferguson said.

Read more: Legislative leaders discuss next steps for failed transit reform push

The U.S. House has already passed a domestic policy plan that would shift more cost of government programs to states, cut Medicaid funding and phase out clean energy tax credits. The Senate is expected to make changes to the legislation, but President Donald Trump wants to sign the bill into law by July 4.

While many components may not hit Illinois’ budget this year, state lawmakers are watching for any changes that could require them to return to Springfield and adjust the FY26 budget.

“We have told the caucus to stand on the ready,” Welch said. State lawmakers boosted spending in the FY26 budget for safety net hospitals and federally qualified health centers, but the state wouldn’t be able to absorb major federal cuts to Medicaid. 

“We got some room in there to be able to respond, but it’s hard to prepare when you don’t know exactly what’s coming down the pipe,” House budget leader Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, said during a news conference Thursday with the Democratic Legislative Campaign Committee. 

House Republican Leader Tony McCombie, R-Savanna, was less worried Congress will cut Medicaid and other key benefits.

“After conversations with the Illinois delegation, I don’t feel that there’s going to be any concerns with cuts that are important in our Medicaid budget,” McCombie told Capitol News Illinois.

Last-minute budgeting

Democrats unveiled a more than 3,300-page spending plan about 24 hours before it passed the General Assembly, while the $1 billion tax plan was filed about five hours before lawmakers took a vote. 

Ferguson, the Civic Federation president, criticized the legislative process that gives lawmakers and the public little time to review the budget’s contents.

“It was chaotic, nontransparent – nontransparent even to the legislators that had to vote on it – and not really the way that we want to go about this business, especially at a sensitive time,” he said.

A group of conservative lawmakers also contended the process was illegal in a lawsuit filed this week in Sangamon County. The Illinois Freedom Caucus argues that the budget amendments were not read on three separate days in each chamber of the General Assembly, which they say violates the state constitution. 

The constitution states a bill “shall be read by title on three different days in each house,” but does not specify that each amendment to a bill receive the same. 

Each of the bills were read on three separate days this spring in both chambers, even though the substantial amendment containing the budget was filed in the final hours. For example, the bill lawmakers used to raise $1 billion of revenue was originally filed to establish an Emmitt Till commemorative day. The bill met the three readings requirement in both chambers before the Emmitt Till Day provision was removed in the final hours of session in favor of the tax plan. 

The constitution also states that it’s up to the House speaker and Senate president to “certify that the procedural requirements for passage have been met.”

In applying what’s known as the “enrolled bill doctrine,” the Supreme Court has consistently declined to infringe on the legislature’s authority to certify its own bills, due to separation of powers concerns. It has also consistently upheld broad authority for the General Assembly to gut the original contents of a bill and amend it with a new subject, making the lawsuit a long shot. 

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.


The Illinois Capitol Building is pictured on the final night of the 2025 spring session on May 31, 2025. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Andrew Adams)

Under bill, state highway cameras could be used to investigate human trafficking

Images obtained by ISP would not be accessible by FOIA

By JADE AUBREY 
Capitol News Illinois 
jaubrey@capitolnewsillinois.com 

SPRINGFIELD — A bill passed in this year’s legislative session would rewrite the definition of a “forcible felony” to allow Illinois State Police to use images obtained from automatic license plate readers in cases involving human trafficking and involuntary servitude.

Automatic license plate readers are cameras that capture images of vehicle license plates. After obtaining pictures captured by ALPRs, state police software runs the license plate numbers through other law enforcement databases – including the National Crime Information Center, the Department of Homeland Security, the Illinois Secretary of State and National Amber Alerts. The software then alerts ISP officials when a license plate number matches one in the databases.

Current law allows ISP to use the cameras for the investigation of cases involving vehicular hijacking, aggravated vehicular hijacking, terrorism, motor vehicle theft, or any forcible felony, which includes treason, first- and second-degree murder, sexual assault, robbery, burglary, arson, kidnapping, aggravated battery resulting in great bodily harm.

House Bill 3339, sponsored by Rep. Thaddeus Jones, D-Calumet City, would add the offenses of human trafficking and involuntary servitude to the definition of forcible felony in that section of law.

“It’s very focused on specific types of crime,” ISP Director Brendan Kelly said in a committee hearing on the bill in March. “It’s not for speeding, it’s not for traffic enforcement, this is for serious offenses, and we use it in a limited and focused way and in a highly effective way.”

The bill is an initiative of ISP that acts as an expansion to the Tamara Clayton Expressway Camera Act passed in 2020, which granted ISP the funds to purchase and install automatic license plate readers along highways in Cook County. The act was in response to the expressway shooting of Tamara Clayton, a postal worker who was shot and killed on Interstate 57 on her way to work in 2019. ISP was ultimately unable to obtain any images of the shooting, and the investigation on her case is still ongoing.

“This is not just an effective deterrent, it’s also an effective program, in terms of our ability to solve cases,” Kelly said. “In 2023, for every expressway homicide that occurred in Cook County, 100% of those homicide cases were charged. Not solved, not cleared, charged. And every single one of those cases included license plate reader evidence.”

“That type of solve rate is not something you see very often in any category of crime,” Kelly said. “But is a result of this very effective tool.”

After the passage of the Expressway Camera Act, ISP installed approximately 100 ALPRs along I-94 in 2021 and by the end of 2022, 289 ALPRs were installed in the Chicago area.

Lawmakers expanded the program in 2022. In 2023, ISP installed 139 additional ALPRs in Champaign, Cook, Morgan, and St. Clair counties, and in 2024, ALPRs were installed in 19 counties and along with Lake Shore Drive in Chicago.

Read more: Highway camera expansion covering 6,600 miles of road in 22 counties awaits Pritzker’s signature

“Since it was put into place in 2021, we’ve seen a decrease in interstate shootings,” Jones said in the March committee hearing on the bill. “A 31% decrease from 2023 to 2024, a 53% decrease from 2022 to 2024, and an 71% decrease from the initial year that we did this.”

If signed into law by Gov. JB Pritzker, the bill also would add cameras in Ogle, Lee and Whiteside counties to those regulated by the Expressway Camera Act. That means cameras in the counties would be subject to existing law’s prohibitions against using them to enforce petty offenses like speeding, and ISP would be allowed to run the licenses plate numbers captured by ALPRs through its software.

The measure also extended the expressway camera program for a second time, to 2028, after it was initially approved on a pilot basis. 

Another aspect of the bill requires ISP to delete images obtained from the cameras from ISP databases within 120 days, with exceptions of images used for ongoing investigations or pending criminal trials. It also bars images obtained through the ALPRs from being accessible through the Freedom of Information Act, expanding on the existing expressway camera law.

“It’s also got protections so that someone can’t try to – if someone is in a divorce case and they want to know where their spouse has been all day, that information cannot be FOIA’d, it cannot be released to them, it cannot be subject to that type of activity either,” Kelly said about the bill. “It’s very limited and very focused.”

It also comes after a lawsuit from two Cook County residents in 2024 on the constitutionality of ALPRs. The residents alleged that the use of ALPRs to cross reference information stored in national databases amounted to a warrantless search of drivers. 

Read more: State highway shootings decline as critics sue over ‘dragnet surveillance’

On April 2, a U.S. District Judge ruled against the claim, saying that license plate numbers are not private information, and as such, do not fall under the Fourth Amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizures.

HB3339 unanimously passed the House in April and passed the Senate on May 30 with only one no vote, by Sen. Jason Plummer, R-Edwardsville.

The bill is a part of a broader ISP initiative to crack down on human trafficking, as outlined in Senate Bill 2323, which also awaits approval from the governor before becoming law. That bill aims to better educate and coordinate officials across state agencies on how to identify and provide essential services to victims of human trafficking, with a specific focus on the Department of Children and Family Services.

Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

A bill passed by lawmakers would add to the crimes that highway camera images could be used to investigate. (Capitol News Illinois file photo)


Prepayments Start For Wabash County Taxpayers

From Wabash County Treasurer Angie Broster: The Treasurer’s Office will be accepting Real Estate Tax Prepayments for the 2024 Payable 2025 until July 31, 2025.

Our Office only allows prepayments to be made within the amount of the previous year’s taxed amount. So, you will still receive a Tax Bill when they are mailed out for the remainder that is due. We anticipate the 2024 Payable 2025 Real Estate Taxes will be out later this fall.

Please call the office at 618-262-5262, if you are interested in the Prepayment Plan or have any questions. We have a form that needs to be filled out and signed by the taxpayer.

Evansville Trails Coalition Launches First Regional Trails Master Plan

Public celebration June 6 at The Pagoda marks major milestone

 Evansville, Ind. – Thursday, June 5, 2025 – The Evansville Trails Coalition has announced the completion of the first-ever Evansville Region Trails Master Plan—a community-driven vision to improve mobility and quality of life across the Evansville Region.

 The plan was guided by public input and shaped through collaboration with regional leaders, trail advocates, and community stakeholders. It outlines a regional network of existing and proposed walking, biking, and wheeling routes designed to safely connect neighborhoods, parks, schools, businesses, and nearby communities. Building on that vision, the plan provides a clear path forward—highlighting high-priority corridors, funding strategies, and long-term goals to guide the development of a more accessible and connected trail system.

 “This plan is more than a list of projects—it’s a community-driven regional blueprint designed to support healthier lifestyles, stronger neighborhood connections, and a better quality of life for everyone,” said Lorie Van Hook, Executive Director of the Evansville Trails Coalition. “More than 100 community members helped shape this vision—and their voices are reflected throughout its pages. Whether you walk, bike, wheel, or run, this is your plan for a more connected, accessible place to live.”

 

How this plan will benefit the Evansville Region

The Trails Master Plan outlines a starting point for achieving the following community benefits:

 

  • Safer routes that keep people walking, biking, or wheeling separate from vehicle traffic

  • Stronger connections between neighborhoods, schools, parks, and businesses

  • Boosts to local tourism and small business visibility along trail corridors

  • Expanded access to green space and recreation for underserved areas

  • A healthier, more active community with more options for how we get around

 What’s in the plan: Proposed trail projects with regional impact

The plan features several proposed projects that stand out for their potential to improve regional trail access and connectivity. Highlights include:

  • Angel Mounds to Newburgh Trail: A scenic eastward extension that would link cultural, recreational, and historic destinations.

  • Lincoln Avenue Corridor Improvements: Enhancing trail access to parks and schools in a key urban corridor.

  • Boonville Greenway via Norfolk Southern Line: A potential rail-trail conversion linking Evansville and Boonville while aligning with the American Discovery Trail.

  • Downtown John Street Crossing: A constructible urban trail connector improving access and safety at the Lloyd Expressway.

  • Future USI Trail Connection: A proposed westward extension that would link the University of Southern Indiana to the broader regional trail network.

 June 6 celebration event open to the public

The public and members of the media are invited to help celebrate this milestone at a special event on Friday, June 6 at 10:00 a.m. at The Pagoda (401 SE Riverside Dr., Evansville). The event will include remarks from local leaders and community trail advocates, a preview of what’s next in the plan’s implementation, and a special presentation by Mayor Stephanie Terry, who will deliver a proclamation officially recognizing June 6 as Evansville Trails Day.

 Plan builds on momentum and strong public partnerships

The plan builds on the momentum of existing and in-progress efforts—such as the Roberts/Wesselman Loop Trail, supported through the Indiana Next Level Trails program, and the Walnut Street Improvement Project, a 3.1-mile corridor redesign that includes a new multi-use path connecting Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard to Vann Avenue.

 The Evansville Department of Parks and Recreation co-led development of the Trails Master Plan, serving as a liaison to other City of Evansville departments and elected officials while supporting community outreach and contributing technical data and mapping resources. 

 While rooted in the City of Evansville, the plan was developed with a regional lens and identifies future trail opportunities that expand access across Vanderburgh County and into surrounding parts of the Evansville region. With continued collaboration among cities, counties, nonprofits, and community stakeholders, the plan sets the stage for a more connected regional network that supports active transportation, recreation, and economic development.

 “The release of this plan couldn’t come at a better time,” said Steve Schaefer, Board President of the Evansville Trails Coalition. “Interest in trails and outdoor spaces has never been higher, and now we have a clear roadmap to guide what comes next. With strong community support, we can start pursuing funding, building momentum, and moving forward on the trail connections that matter most to our region. We hope community members will join us on June 6 to celebrate this important step and learn more about where we’re headed.”

 The Trails Master Plan was developed in partnership with the engineering firm Butler, Fairman & Seufert, whose expertise helped translate public input into a clear, actionable framework. With a focus on equity and sustainability, the plan offers a framework to guide future trail development and move projects from concept to construction.

County Applying For Grant To Help Lessen Impact Of Mine Closure

Wabash County Commissioners have approved moving forward with applying for an Energy Transition Community Grant administered through the State of Illinois. Jeff Vaughn of the Greater Wabash Regional Planning Commissioner was at Monday’s county board meeting to explain the grant to assist communities who face losing a coal mine or power plant…

Vaughn said other entities can attach themselves to the Wabash County application to perhaps receive funding. Vaughn seemed confident Wabash County would at least receive the minimum grant of $50,000, which can be used for most anything the county chooses. But, he said the grant could end up being much more…

Vaughn will be working with county treasurer Angela Broster to put the necessary reports together to submit the grant application before the June 30th deadline. If approved, Wabash County would have the chance to receive the grant for up to 6 years in a row.

More on the grant can be found here:

https://omb.illinois.gov/public/gata/csfa/Program.aspx?csfa=3071

Baby food safety, press freedom, public defender measures will head to governor

Measures passed in legislative session’s final hours

By BEN SZALINSKI
& JADE AUBREY
Capitol News Illinois
news@capitolnewsillinois.com

Gov. JB Pritzker will have hundreds of bills to review after lawmakers concluded their spring session, including measures protecting press freedoms and baby food, as well as creating a state public defender’s office.

Lawmakers voted along party lines Saturday to pass House Bill 3363, which would create the “Office of State Public Defender” that would primarily be responsible for providing public defender offices around the state with more resources. 

It also reforms how public defenders would be appointed by requiring a local nominating committee to appoint or remove public defenders, which is designed to give the public defenders more independence from the judiciary.

“Every Illinoisan deserves a strong defense, no matter their income,” bill sponsor Sen. Robert Peters, D-Chicago, said in a statement. “Instating this new system would ensure real help reaches people who have been left behind in conversations about criminal justice reform for far too long.”

Read more: Lawmakers moving forward on public defender reform

Public defender offices throughout the state have been starved for resources, with some defense attorneys at public defender offices handling hundreds of cases at a time. Supporters of the legislation say the main goal of the office, at least initially, will be to provide more comprehensive state resources to public defender offices, which now are typically subject to the limitations of county budgets. 

Limited data shows all Illinois counties need more public defenders. According to an analysis of county public defender budgets compiled by Northwestern University, no Illinois counties have “sufficient” staffing in public defender offices.

State lawmakers appropriated $10 million for county public defense services in the FY26 budget and have appropriated as much each year since 2023. If signed by the governor, Peters’ legislation won’t fully take effect until 2027.

Safer baby food

Lawmakers in both chambers unanimously passed Senate Bill 73, which bans the sale and distribution of baby food in Illinois that contains levels of toxic elements – including arsenic, cadmium, lead or mercury – that surpasses the limits set by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration. The bill now only needs a signature from the governor to become law.

Under SB73, any manufacturer selling baby food in Illinois would be required to test a sample of their product monthly to ensure the levels of toxic elements contained in the product fall in line with the limits set by the FDA. The bill also gives the Illinois Department of Public Health the right to request and review manufacturers’ testing results and requires manufacturers to publish the levels of each toxic element in each of their products on the manufacturer’s website.

Manufacturers who sell products in Illinois would also have to print a QR code on the label of any baby food that contains toxic elements that are limited by the FDA. The QR would be required to direct consumers to the product’s testing information and FDA guidelines on “the health effects of the toxic element on children.”

The bill comes after a study published in 2019 by Healthy Babies Bright Futures, which found that 95% of 168 baby foods tested for toxic elements contained one or more contaminants. One in four of the baby foods tested in the study contained all four elements, with arsenic being found in 73% of the baby foods tested and lead in 94% of the products.

The study gained public traction after its publication, resulting in the creation and implementation of “Closer to Zero” – an FDA initiative that aims to reduce the percentage of toxic metals found in baby food to zero.

If signed by the governor, the bill will take effect on Jan. 1, 2026.

Press protections

Pritzker will also consider a measure to bolster news media protections against lawsuits. 

Senate Bill 1181 explicitly adds news media as an entity protected under the state’s Citizen Participation Act, which prohibits “strategic lawsuits against public participation,” or SLAPPs. It passed the House 75-38 and the Senate 47-10.

It was spurred by a recent state Supreme Court ruling that allowed a defamation suit filed by a former government employee against the Chicago Sun-Times to progress. 

Read more: Supreme Court dismisses Jussie Smollett convictions, allows Trump Tower defamation suit to continue | Sun-Times seeks dismissal of defamation suit centered on Trump Tower reporting

The Supreme Court’s ruling in that case differentiated “investigative” reporting from the paper’s coverage of a state inspector general’s investigation into the Illinois Property Tax Appeals Board’s executive director. 

Lawyers from the Chicago Sun-Times sought to use the Citizen Protection Act to dismiss the executive director’s 2021 lawsuit against the paper, which contended it mischaracterized the inspector general’s investigation. 

But the Supreme Court declined, ruling the paper’s coverage lacked any intent to elicit action or a solution from the government – which was needed to apply SLAPP protections – because the coverage was not investigative in nature. 

“We are simply holding that the (Citizen Participation) Act specifically protects government participation and does not encompass all media reports on matters of public concern,” Justice David K. Overstreet wrote in the opinion.

SB 1181 directly addresses that sentiment. The bill states, “The press opining, reporting, or investigating matters of public concern is participating and communicating with the government,” meaning organizations doing so would be protected under the law if the bill is signed. It would apply to actions taken after Jan. 1, 2026.

The measure also provides that all legal proceedings in a case would be paused while a party’s Citizen Participation Act lawsuit motion progresses in court.


Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan news service that distributes state government coverage to hundreds of news outlets statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.

The Illinois House is pictured in the waning hours of the spring legislative session on Saturday, May 31. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)

Death Investigation Being Conducted After Clay County, Indiana Pursuit 

Clay, IN : Wednesday, June 4, 2025, at approximately 5:00 p.m., Trooper Caleb Cannon was requested to investigate a suspicious subject and vehicle near a residence in Cory, IN., but the subject had left the area before Trooper Cannon arrived.  A short time later, he observed a vehicle matching the description from the original call traveling eastbound on County Road 300 South. Trooper Cannon observed the vehicle travel left of center and stopped in the middle of the roadway.  He attempted to conduct a traffic stop, but the driver disregarded the emergency lights and continued traveling away from Trooper Cannon, instigating a low-speed pursuit that headed southbound on County Road 300 towards State Road 59. 

Upon reaching State Road 59, the Clay County Sheriff’s Department had successfully deployed stop sticks, which flattened multiple tires on the pursued vehicle, but the subject continued traveling onto State Road 59.  Trooper Cannon then performed a precision immobilization technique maneuver (PIT), causing the subject’s vehicle to travel into a cornfield, striking Trooper Cannon’s patrol vehicle, coming to a stop.  

Multiple troopers gave loud verbal commands to exit the vehicle, but the subject refused to exit and began to disrobe. After an hour-long standoff, troopers used extrication tactics to remove the subject from the vehicle, taking the subject into custody without incident.
  
The subject was then identified as Aaron Krout, age 35, of Brazil, Indiana.  Krout was transported to a local hospital in Terre Haute due to indicators that he was under the influence of a controlled substance.  While at the hospital, Krout had a medical episode and was later pronounced deceased by medical staff.  

Family has been notified.  

An autopsy has been scheduled for tomorrow at Terre Haute Regional Hospital. The cause of death will be determined by Vigo County Coroner, Travis Norris.   

Assisting Agencies: Troopers of the Putnamville State Police Post, Clay County Sheriff’s Department, Hoosiers Towing, and the Vigo County Coroner's Office.

 

County Board Approves Various Appointments

Wabash County Commissioners on Monday made appointments to various boards and while the votes were mostly unanimous, there was one appointment that was not. Dr. Bryce Miller and Theresa Marcotte were nominated to be reappointed to three-year terms on the board of health. Miller’s nomination was approved by all three commissioners, but Marcotte was not as board chairman Rob Dean voted no against her reappointment. Dean has been at odds with the health board over a variety of issues in the last few years.

Other appointments Monday included Colleen Whyte to a three-year term on the 377 Board for care and treatment of the developmentally disabled; Ernest Majors to a three-year terms on the Hallock Cemetery Board; and Roxanna Seybold was reappointed to a five-year term on the museum board.

Coroner Releases Information Regarding Death Of Juvenile

Wabash County Coroner Shaun Keepes responded to a residence in Mount Carmel on Thursday, May 29, 2025, regarding the tragic accidental death of a juvenile.

An autopsy was conducted in Springfield, Illinois, on Friday, May 30, 2025. Preliminary findings indicate that the cause of death is consistent with suffocation due to a Mylar-helium filled balloon. Additional testing and toxicology, are pending to determine the final cause of death.

Coroner Keepes wishes to raise public awareness about the unrecognized potential dangers associated with large child size Mylar balloons. While often seen as harmless decorations, these balloons can pose serious risks—particularly to young children—including the rare but devastating possibility of suffocation and/or helium toxicity.

The Wabash County Coroner’s Office extends its deepest condolences to the family and loved ones affected by this heartbreaking accident. As a community, please hold this family in your prayers.

Agencies involved in the ongoing investigation include the Mount Carmel Police Department and the Illinois State Police Child Death Task Force.

No other information will be released at this time.