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Reporter’s Notebook: Chicago cop killed after suspect released under SAFE-T Act
We’ve been swamped with news the last few weeks, and as a result, I feel I was only able to scratch the surface on a very impactful story out of Chicago. So, allow me to get into the details of a case that shows dramatic flaws in the system, and how Chicago citizens and police are paying a terrible price.
It’s the case of Alphanso Talley, 26 years old. His criminal record goes back to when he was a juvenile and the records are sealed. Now, he is accused of killing Chicago Police Officer John Bartholomew and gravely wounding another. Were it not for the Illinois SAFE-T Act, which created cashless bail in 2021, Talley would not have been on the street, critics of the law say.
Talley had so many pending criminal cases, they overlap and get confusing. Talley was accused in an armed carjacking and robbery in Chicago’s Bronzeville neighborhood in April 2025. Despite the violent nature of the crime, Talley was released in December 2025 on electronic monitoring pending trial.
Cook County Circuit Judge John Lyke Jr., who ordered his release, said during a December hearing: “There’s no doubt these bails would have been set at monetary amounts that he presumably couldn’t afford.”
Skip forward to March 8, 2026. Talley is accused of violating the curfew on his ankle monitor and not just a little bit. He stayed out all night. In fact, because he did not return home, he did not charge his ankle monitor and the battery went dead, prosecutors say. That generated an alert, which told the Cook County Chief Judge’s office that “the individual’s whereabouts are unknown.” No one went and picked up Talley.
More than 48 hours later, pretrial services notified Judge Lyke that the ankle monitor went dead and Talley missed a court appearance. Lyke then signed an arrest warrant. No one went and picked up Talley.
Saturday morning, April 25, 2026, one minute after the Family Dollar store opened, Talley and a man alleged as his accomplice, 18-year-old Jeron Tate, followed cashier Maria Velazquez inside, prosecutors allege. Velazquez was robbed at gunpoint and beaten with the pistol so severely her nose was broken. The bruises on her face are punctuated by a knot on her head the size of a golf ball and she can’t sleep.
“I wake up early in the morning, I’m sleeping and I can see his face. I see his face and I can’t sleep,” she said in Spanish to our Fox affiliate in Chicago. For obvious reasons, the single mother of three feared for her life. “If I would have died, what would happen to my children? They are still so young and they depend on me.”
Now, Velazquez has learned that Talley was a frequent visitor of the criminal courts. “They kept letting him out, knowing he had a criminal history. Why did they let him free?” she asked. “This would have never happened. The police officer would not have died.”
POLITICIANS WANT YOU TO PAY FOR ‘CASHLESS BAIL.’ IT’S DANGEROUS AND EXPENSIVE
Talley was picked up a short time after the Family Dollar was robbed and Velazquez was beaten. No stranger to arrest, Talley executed a trick he had used in previous arrests, police say. The affidavit shows he claimed he had eaten five bags of drugs and needed to be hospitalized because he was having trouble breathing. It’s unclear how he was able to smuggle a gun into the hospital. But, it came out in court that Talley was allowed some privacy when it came time to remove his pants and put on the hospital gown.
Cook County Assistant State’s Attorney Mike Pekara said that after metal handcuffs were removed so a CT scan could be conducted, Talley reached under a blanket and fatally shot Officer John Bartholomew in the face. Bartholomew’s partner was shot in the chin, leaving him in critical condition.
Pekara said Talley robbed a hospital staff member of his ID, shot out glass doors at the hospital and set off running practically naked with the hospital gown around his neck and electric monitors still stuck to his chest.
Talley was found hiding under a porch and arrested for the second time that day.
On May 1, a hearing got underway at the Cook County criminal courts building to determine if, this time, Talley should be held in jail pre-trial. His family members filled at least two rows in the courtroom and shouted to Talley that they loved him. Talley interacted with them so much that a sheriff’s deputy hovered over him and Cook County Circuit Judge D’Anthony Thedford admonished him to stop “giggling” while beginning the criminal proceedings for killing a police officer.
When the hearing was over and Talley ordered jailed, I was able to ask John Catanzara, head of the Chicago police union, if Bartholomew would be alive were it not for the SAFE-T Act.
“Yes, it’s just a simple reality,” Catanzara answered. “I mean he wouldn’t have qualified for parole. He would not have qualified for electronic monitoring. He would have had a cash bond that he would not have been able to meet for those extremely violent offenses. So, that alone, the cashless bail let him out and gave him the ability to be out on the street terrorizing.”
“The electronic monitoring system is broken,” said Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke. “Electronic monitoring is not an alternative to detention. It does not keep people safe.”
Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who championed the SAFE-T Act, blamed Judge Lyke without naming him. “In most cases where Republicans have complained about the SAFE-T Act it’s actually been a bad decision by an elected judge,” said Pritzker. “A judge should have made the decision to keep that person in jail.”
Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, who has called incarceration a “sickness,” went back to a familiar refrain against jailing criminals. “Look, we’ve had an addiction on jails and incarceration. More people get locked up in our country than anywhere else in the world. And yet, we have illegal weapons that flow through our streets and we have a lack of mental health support,” said Johnson.
“He’s a sickness and addiction that’s going to be gone in less than a year,” Catanzara responded. “And it can’t come soon enough. I didn’t think it could get worse with [Former Chicago Mayor Lori] Lightfoot, but we got dumber and just more racist and ignorant.”
“We have a mayor of the City of Chicago saying that he doesn’t think this individual should be incarcerated,” Chicago Alderman James Gardiner said. “He’s an embarrassment.”
This is not an isolated incident. Lawrence Reed is a lifetime offender who was put on an ankle monitor. He also disregarded the curfew on his monitor. Court records show he had been out all night twice before Nov. 17, 2025. That night he violated his curfew again, boarded Chicago’s Blue Line train and set Bethany MaGee on fire, police say. Reed faces both state and federal charges.
Alderman Anthony Napolitano says nearly 1,000 people in Chicago are currently enrolled in Cook County’s troubled electronic monitoring program. “Empty jail cells are not a success when we have officers being attacked and shot constantly, and citizens being attacked constantly.”
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TNA Wrestling star Steve Maclin shares why free agents should consider signing with company
Steve Maclin has been through it all since he joined TNA Wrestling (TNA) in 2021.
He’s feuded with major stars in pro wrestling like Nic Nemeth, Josh Alexander, Moose, Alex Shelley, Chris Sabin and Mike Santana just to name a few. He’s a two-time TNA international champion and an Impact world champion.
Amid a recent wave of stars joining the free-agent market over the last two weeks, Maclin shared why anyone should consider TNA as a potential landing spot for the future.
“TNA has always been under the radar. It’s kinda been that land of misfit toys where you can go and reinvent yourself or invent yourself as a new character in general and kinda show the world who you are,” he told Fox News Digital. “TNA has always been giving me that opportunity, especially the day that I hit the ground running in TNA Wrestling, I haven’t stopped – becoming the world champion, becoming the first TNA international champion, and now, hopefully coming back and going back after the world title as well.
“It’s a place where you can grow and it’s a place that’s kinda that locker room that everyone has always been looking for and it’s that family orientation. And it’s said a lot in the world of pro wrestling but it’s very family oriented where we all take care of each other no matter how good or bad the creative is or how the upper echelon is, the locker room always takes care of the locker room. They’re the ones that make bad creative look like its good creative on television.”
Maclin has also been afforded the opportunity to run a benefit event with his wife, fellow pro wrestling champion Deonna Purrazzo, to help give back to veteran and first-responders.
CLICK HERE FOR MORE SPORTS COVERAGE ON FOXNEWS.COM
Maclin and Purrazzo will host the Battle for the Brave on June 6 in support of the Tunnel to Towers Foundation. Maclin served with the U.S. Marines.
“It’s a great cause just because that entire New York/New Jersey area, the Tri-State area, has really been affected by 9/11. It affected both of our lives,” Maclin told Fox News Digital in a story published earlier this week. “I enlisted in the Marine Corps in 2005. It just affected everyone. So, especially a lot of the talent that’s on the card as well, everybody has some type of story or link toward 9/11.
“And with Tunnel to Towers, a lot of people in that area love the cause and love what Tunnel to Towers does for the community by giving back to first responders’ families, paying off mortgages, smart homes for veterans who have been wounded and now paying off college tuitions for first responders’ and veterans’ families who have lost some loved ones.”
TNA airs weekly programming Thursday nights at 9 p.m. ET on AMC.
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Arizona State student vanishes during Grand Canyon trip just days before graduation, family pleads for help
The family of a missing Arizona State student is pleading for help after he vanished during a Grand Canyon trip just days before graduation.
Sandarsh Krishna, 26, was last heard from on April 27, when he told relatives he was traveling to Las Vegas with a stop at the South Rim. He was expected back in time for final exams and a job interview, but never returned.
“We haven’t had any success in finding him,” his sister-in-law, Pooja Shivananjappa, told Fox 10 Phoenix.
According to the National Park Service, Krishna’s last known location was along the Rim Trail off Hermit Road, between Bright Angel Lodge and Mohave Point, sometime between 4 p.m. on April 27 and 12 a.m. on April 28.
FAMILY ON LAS VEGAS, GRAND CANYON VACATION VANISHED ON ROAD TRIP, AUTHORITIES SAY
Investigators say Krishna, who had no known vehicle, may have been using a rideshare or taxi service. His cell phone data has not moved since the day he disappeared, according to his family.
“They’re doing the best they can, but unfortunately we do not have the exact location to see where he went missing,” Shivananjappa told the outlet.
Search efforts have ramped up across the South Rim, with more than 30 search and rescue personnel deployed over several days.
SEARCH UNDERWAY FOR COLORADO MAN IN BLACK CANYON OF THE GUNNISON NATIONAL PARK
Crews are also using multiple techniques in the rugged terrain, including rim trail scanning, walk-down routes into the canyon, technical rope insertions, aerial reconnaissance flights and drone operations, park officials said.
Rangers are continuing to focus on the area along Hermit Road and surrounding sections of the rim as the search remains ongoing.
Officials say Krishna was last seen wearing athletic clothing and is described as 5 feet 10 inches tall with a thin build, weighing about 160 pounds, with black hair and brown eyes.
HIKER DISAPPEARS FROM ‘EDGE OF THE WORLD’ CAMPGROUND ON TRIP WITH FATHER
Investigators also say Krishna was believed to be carrying a black backpack before he disappeared. That backpack was later turned in to hotel staff at Bright Angel Lodge early on April 28.
Rangers are now working to identify and speak with the individual who turned in the backpack, saying the person may have information that could help narrow the search area. Authorities emphasized the individual is not considered a suspect.
His family says they have also hired a private investigator as the search continues.
Krishna moved to Arizona from India in 2024 to pursue a master’s degree in computer science at ASU and was set to graduate May 9, the family told Fox 10 Phoenix. Loved ones describe him as bright, kind and deeply connected to his family.
“It’s impossible to not like him,” Shivananjappa said. “He has a helping hand… he has the heart of a kid.”
Anyone who may have seen Krishna or has information about his whereabouts between April 27 and April 28 is urged to contact the National Park Service Investigative Services Branch tip line at 888-653-0009.
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