Usually I run "Works in progress" on Saturdays, such as Lane Lubell's well-received post yesterday. But this week I got two submissions, and — my blog, my rules — decided to extend the practice to Sundays, when necessary. Readers met Donald Colley in 2022, during the R. Kelly trial. He's been attending the court hearings of ICE sturmbannführer Gregory Bovino, and files this report:
In court today. So too one Cmdr. Gregory Bovino, Chief of U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, present to appear before Judge Sara Ellis.
Whether I go to court for myself or as the eyes of the public, the moment I pass thru the metal detector and retrieve my satchel with sketchbook and drawing gear, I look to be disinterested, as though I haven’t got a dog in the fight. Not so easy today. Today, I will draw and listen as the chief Federal law officer will address the questions posed by a judge concerned about tactics and practices of the Federal agents charged with apprehending undocumented immigrants and alleged criminals. Sent by the current POTUS and directed to ferret out those we’ve been told are here illegally, these Federal agents' stated targets are a criminal element that took advantage of a porous border, many of whom are described by current U.S. Secretary of homeland security as the worst of the worst.
In the weeks since September, when Cmdr. Bovino and the CBP and ICE agents under his command initiated “Operation Midway Blitz”, daily coverage by media, thousands of videos documenting citizens and residents caught up in incidents related to these maneuvers, and criticism of this Federal directive by, among others, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson and Illinois governor J.B. Pritzker, have caught the attention of the courts. It will be thru today’s inquiry that Judge Ellis will determine if, in the execution of “Operation Midway Blitz”, the Constitution that both she and Cmdr. Bovino are sworn to uphold, is being followed. This in a city I’ve called home for 26 ½ years.
I find it imperative, should I feel the tug of personal interest, that I fall in line with what most of us want in a judicial system: impartiality, fairness, a high standard of practice, and an effort in earnest for veritas. So when I open my sketchbook and set pen to paper, I avoid caricature, refrain from giving added pugnaciousness or ghoulish cast. (However, if the lead lawyer has a Nixonian, bluish cast 5 o’clock shadow, so be it. Honesty should guide the pen). If I take license to hang a lantern jaw on someone, turn a slightly furrowed brow into a freshly plowed field, or grow a lawyer’s loose jacket into Emmett Kelly’s overcoat, then I come off as a clown in a forum where much is at stake for plaintiffs, defendants, and the people who care for and may depend upon them, not to mention my making light of the integrity of the institution. My brother spent some extended time incarcerated and the family pain and concern for the duration of his sentence was real. Yet another reason for veracity.
Courtroom artists are present when Rule 53 is in effect, which forbids the presence of cameras, and sometimes all electronic media. One district attorney told me that some of the cases are enough of a circus that the inclusion of teams of photojournalists and AV equipment would only add to that. Note taken. Therefore, I work smaller than most, leaving large sketchpads and drawing boards at home. I prefer fountain pens and nonvolatile markers of various brush widths for detail and broader coverage in lieu of dusty pastels or pencils that need sharpening. At times I have been seated in the jury box, which affords a closer view of witnesses, questioning lawyer and judge. Mostly, I find myself seated among journalists, family members of plaintiffs and defendants, and interested members of the public. I call that perspective embedded, and it may have its own benefits.
I first entered a courtroom as a 21-year-old art student whose brothers had found themselves in a fracas with music venue security guards. My sketchbook went along. The concert security guards took issue with me drawing them. I was summoned to the bench to hand the judge my sketchbook. A wide grin broke out over his court officer’s face as he recognized himself in my sketches. The book was handed back to me with the judge’s verdict, ”You’re fine. He may continue.” In the years since, my sketchbook and I have been the occasional visitors to a courtroom and it has always been engaging. I highly recommend it. We also like to go to city council meetings, and political rallies. I think of it as my continuing adult education and merger of Art, Politics and Civics lessons.


Great decision to post two fine Works in Progress pieces this weekend. Both creative, informative, and thoughtful and thought-provoking. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteAnd of course Bovino could not be bothered to put on a jacket and tie in court.
ReplyDeleteBovino is a dangerous, violent lunatic, who apparently thinks that he should act like the worst of the Gestapo & SS!
ReplyDeleteHe also has his underlings act that way, he thinks cracking heads is the way we do things here!
He's an out of control monster, that walks around with a tear gas canister all the time.
He belongs in prison, forever!
Fantastic column, bearing witness to the dangerous lunacy of our times
ReplyDelete"ICE sturmbannführer Gregory Bovino" indeed. You're not only writing the best columns in Chicago but you're also giving us the best guest columnists. Thank you again.
ReplyDeleteEmmett Kelly.
ReplyDeleteBoy, there's a name from the past. I hadn't thought of the longtime Park District Superintendent for years.
Gotta wonder how many people here are old enough to get the joke. You have to be of a certain age to know that Emmett Leo Kelly (1898 – 1979) was an American circus performer who created the clown character "Weary Willie", based on the hobos of the Great Depression in the 1930s.
DeleteHis clown face was world famous, and he toured with various circuses from the early 1920s to the early 1960s. That "sad clown face" became the model for all the millions of ubiquitous sad clowns that appeared everywhere. My doctor had them in his waiting room when I was a kid.
On the other hoof, on the day I was born, Ed Kelly...the Park District czar and Democratic Party slate-maker...was celebrating his 23rd birthday. Lived in his 47th Ward from 1986 to 1990, when the parks were still Kelly's Kingdom, and he was the alderman.
If you had a sponsor, and Kelly's okay, and cast your vote for the right people, your kid could have a chance for a shot at a good city job. Maybe at an ice rink, or on a golf course, or even at the zoo. Even so, you still had to find a way to "kiss his mistletoe"...as Daley the Elder liked to call it.
Jimmy Carter and Ed Kelly were both born in the same year (1924), and both became centenarians. Jimmy passed away last year, but Ed is still kicking at 101. One was a statesman and a humanitarian, and the other was a hack politician who dispensed favors like candy, and who knew and met dozens of famous people. The only reason Ed Kelly is still alive is because he hasn't died yet.
Emmett Kelly?
DeleteYou must be thinking of Ed
R Kelly is an entirely different person. An imprisoned singer
I know, Grizz. My arcane humor reaches about 5% of the readers. Sometimes I think I do it just to see the gears in your mind (and, hopefully Neil's) click.
DeleteCapturing a scene with all the action happening and drama is a gift indeed and bearing the brevity of what your rendering conveys to the public is masterful. Thank you
ReplyDeleteI dont have the education to understand the complexity of our countries/state/municipalities laws. For this I often turn to my good friend Seth , a retired federal prosecutor. He worked in the field of immigration for many years.
ReplyDeleteI am a semi retired carpenter that was contracted by the us district court at the Dirksen as well as the federal court in Milwaukee, Hammond, Rockford and Indianapolis over the last 30 years.
I have had the good fortune to attend naturalization ceremonies for hundreds of people both strangers and a few friends. Some friends and coworkers have been unable to move down the path to citizenship. Not because of the current administration but because our leaders could not untangle the immigration system in our country for decades.
Seth on the other hand worked to deport thousands of people during the Bush , Obama and first trump administrations. He worked to do this based on the law which he explained was pretty straight forward. Some people were denied asylum. Some had overstayed visas, most simply came here dare I say illegally. Many hundreds of thousands of people were ordered to leave or expelled during his time as a prosecutor.
Their lives and those of their families were upended . Some stayed even after their cases were adjudicated. some people returned after they were expelled. There weren't enough judges or prosecutors to hear the backlog of cases which stretched out for years and people poured in by the millions during this time.
The cowardess of our representatives over this time helped to give us this fucked up situation. I dont know if what the trump administration is doing is illegal. Its up to the courts to decide. Maybe it is. but if its not illegal what then?
Just because I hate trump if they follow the law, what can we do? Change the laws I guess. dont follow the law? Thats what caused this in the first place . That and corporate greed.
Franco,
DeleteWell put. But that's a big IF at the end. I'm a retired lineman so, for what it's worth, Trump and Noem and company aren't following the law. There's different categories of immigrants; border jumpers, student or work visa holders, DACA, those on the path to citizenship. They are all being rounded up.
The chaos and fear is more important to this administration than following the law. If they followed the law and cut it out with the militaristic show boating, they'd accomplish their mission with a lot less protest.
Either way, US is going to get an object lesson on what immigrants, legal or not, contribute.
I enjoyed this article. Well crafted pictures, the work to be accurate comes through.
ReplyDelete