Afternoon Briefing: Cook County to pay $15 million in civil rights settlement

Good afternoon, Chicago.

County commissioners approved roughly $48 million in legal settlements today, including $7.45 million each to two men who won a record jury verdict after wrongfully spending 16 years behind bars.

John Fulton and Anthony Mitchell sued the Chicago Police Department and the county in 2020 alleging they were railroaded as teenagers and falsely confessed in 2003 to the murder and burning of Christopher Collazo. The two men won a record $60 million each in damages from a jury this March after successfully arguing they were the victims of a bogus murder investigation by police and Cook County prosecutors.

Here’s what else is happening today. And remember, for the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit chicagotribune.com/latest-headlines and sign up to get our alerts on all your devices.

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Julio Fernandez, a retired Peruvian doctor, sits inside of the chapel at Chicago’s St. Stanislaus Kostka School on May 13, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

‘The pope is more Peruvian than the potato.’ Why Pope Leo XIV’s roots resonate in Chicago.

When Robert Francis Prevost spoke in Spanish to his crowd of supporters for the first time in St. Peter’s Square last week, Edgewater resident Julio Fernandez said it made him tear up. “I’ve lived in Chicago for many years. And that he is from both places makes me double proud,” Fernandez, 74, a retired doctor from northern Peru, said. Read more here.

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JDL Development was assessing the feasibility of buying the northern half of the 53-acre Lincoln Yards megadevelopment tract. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
JDL Development was assessing the feasibility of buying part of the 53-acre Lincoln Yards megadevelopment tract. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

Chicago residential developer now negotiating to buy the entire Lincoln Yards site, which is still mostly empty

The Chicago developer that was negotiating to buy the northern swath of the stalled Lincoln Yards megadevelopment site is now in talks to purchase the entire 53-acre tract, according to sources familiar with the deal. Read more here.

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Pope-related Sox T-shirts are seen for sale outside of Rate Field in Chicago before a game between the Chicago White Sox and the Miami Marlins on May 10, 2025. Formerly Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, the new Pope Leo XIV was born and raised in the Chicagoland area. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)
Pope-related Sox T-shirts are seen for sale outside of Rate Field in Chicago before a game between the White Sox and the Miami Marlins on May 10, 2025. Formerly Cardinal Robert Francis Prevost, the new Pope Leo XIV was born and raised in the Chicagoland area. (Chris Sweda/Chicago Tribune)

Chicago baseball report: City Series starts Friday at Wrigley Field for the Cubs and White Sox

A soft part in the Cubs’ schedule continues this weekend as they face off against the White Sox, who own the worst record in the American League. Read more here.

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Kelsey and Andrew McClellan, of Heart & Bone Sign, a traditional sign-painting and gold-leafing company in Chicago. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune)
Kelsey and Andrew McClellan, of Heart & Bone Sign, a traditional sign-painting and gold-leafing company in Chicago. (E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune)

Column: Sign painting is not yet a lost art — these artists still create them by hand

Andrew and Kelsey McClellan are sign painters and gold-leafing artists, practitioners of venerable art forms that were once so prominent here that the city was, without argument, the center of the sign-painting world but, after new machine technologies were introduced, all but extinct by the 1980s. Read more here.

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Sister Nathalie Becquart walks inside the General Secretariat of the Synod in Rome on Saturday, May 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Bernat Armangue)
Sister Nathalie Becquart walks inside the General Secretariat of the Synod in Rome on May 10, 2025. (Bernat Armangue/AP)

Those who’ve worked with Pope Leo XIV are optimistic he’ll elevate women’s roles — with limits

Before becoming Pope Leo XIV, Cardinal Robert Prevost presided over one of the most revolutionary reforms of Pope Francis’ pontificate by having women serve on the Vatican board that vets nominations for bishops. But he also has said decisively that women cannot be ordained as priests. Read more here.

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