Discussion:
George Soros-backed Cook County's former top prosecutor, Kim Foxx, lost her Illinois license to practice law
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useapen
2024-12-20 11:31:29 UTC
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Former Cook County Prosecutor Kim Foxx is no longer authorized to practice
law in Illinois after she failed to keep her license current.

According to the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary
Commission (ARCD), Foxx is "unauthorized to practice law as [the] attorney
has not demonstrated required MCLE [Minimum Continuing Legal Education]
compliance."

Her license to practice law was suspended on Dec. 1.

https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/george-soros-backed-cook-county-s-
former-top-prosecutor-kim-foxx-lost-her-illinois-license-to-practice-
law/ar-AA1w3v5l
Chris Ahlstrom
2024-12-20 15:16:35 UTC
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Post by useapen
Former Cook County Prosecutor Kim Foxx is no longer authorized to practice
law in Illinois after she failed to keep her license current.
According to the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary
Commission (ARCD), Foxx is "unauthorized to practice law as [the] attorney
has not demonstrated required MCLE [Minimum Continuing Legal Education]
compliance."
Her license to practice law was suspended on Dec. 1.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/george-soros-backed-cook-county-s-former-top-prosecutor-kim-foxx-lost-her-illinois-license-to-practice-law/ar-AA1w3v5l
It's Chicago, man!

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boss_(book)

Boss outlines Daley's Irish working-class origins and his step-by-step rise
through the rough-and-tumble hierarchy of the Chicago Democratic party
machine, until he was first elected mayor in 1955 and went on to become
influential in national politics. The book describes patronage and
political strong-arm tactics in vivid detail and contains stinging
depictions of precinct captains, aldermen, bureaucrats, judges, the Chicago
Police Department, and of Daley himself. The final chapters cover the
turbulent 1960s, with social unrest surrounding the Civil Rights Movement,
violent confrontations between protesters and authorities, and the
notorious, rowdy Chicago Democratic convention in 1968.

. . .

Royko, said Terkel, writes with "a street wit, an elegant irony and a cool,
though far from detached, indignation" to produce "a stunning portrait"
that "probes not only into the psyche of a neighborhood bully but into the
nature of the city that has so honored him".
--
I think the world is ready for the story of an ugly duckling, who grew up to
remain an ugly duckling, and lived happily ever after.
-- Chick
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