Illinois quick hits: ICE ordered to wear body cameras; Fed’s Beige Book released
ICE ordered to wear body cameras
A U.S. District Court judge in Chicago has ordered federal immigration enforcement officers to wear body cameras while performing their duties.
Judge Sara Ellis issued a temporary restraining order last week to limit federal authorities’ use of tear gas and other measures to disperse protesters.
The judge updated the order Thursday to include the body camera mandate.
Camera funds announced for local police
The Illinois Law Enforcement Training and Standards Board has announced the opening of the application period for the Fiscal Year 2026 Law Enforcement Camera Grant.
This grant provides over $56 million in state taxpayer funding to equip police agencies across Illinois with video technology.
Individual awards of up to $3 million are available through the program.
Fed’s Beige Book released
The Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago says economic activity in the Fed’s Seventh District was little changed in the latest reporting period.
The Beige Book released Wednesday showed declines in business spending and manufacturing activity, and increases in consumer spending and real estate activity.
Employment was flat, prices rose moderately and wages went up modestly.
The Chicago Fed covers parts of five Midwestern states.
Latest News Stories
Judge ends anti-ICE case, jumps into IL Dems’ bid to freeze ICE
U.S. Supreme Court to define decades-old consumer law
WATCH: Candidate investigates Medicaid spending; Diversity program audit urged
TCS stories about Illinois’ diversity agency prompts call for audit
DOE issues emergency orders to mitigate blackouts in New England, Texas
First Annual Laker Academic Invitational to be Held for Local High School Students
Government Shutdown Causing Ambulance Billing Delays
Everyday Economics: Fiscal reality meets Central Bank caution in week ahead
Tariff uncertainty here to stay regardless of Supreme Court ruling
Nearly 1M without power as massive winter storm rages
Walz deploys 1,500 National Guard troops in Twin Cities
Epsilon Sigma Alpha Approved as New Student Organization