Real ID scams surge as deadline nears, BBB warns
With the deadline to obtain a Real ID just weeks away, the Better Business Bureau is warning about a surge in scams designed to steal your identity.
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Award-winning Chicago journalist Dave Savini is an investigative reporter for CBS News Chicago. His stories break ground, create change and news laws, and a positive impact on the community.
Savini joined CBS News Chicago in 2005 prior after beginning his career in Chicago in 1993 at NBC5.
Savini's investigative reporting has been honored with prestigious journalism awards including a Peabody Award, duPont-Columbia Award, national Emmy Award, five national Murrow Awards, Investigative Reporters and Editors Award, two NABJ Awards and 27 regional Emmys.
Savini tackles some of the most complex, challenging and difficult stories to tell, tirelessly exposing public corruption, holding elected officials, government workers, police, hospitals, nursing homes, crematories, funeral homes, DCFS and environmental polluters accountable.
Savini and CBS News Chicago's team of investigative producers have continuously dedicated their efforts to reporting on impactful law changing stories that often lead to the demand for accountability and oversight. Savini's investigation "unWarranted" has been honored with the 2019 Peabody, 2019 Murrow and 2019 IRE Award, and the 2019 NABJ Salute to Excellence Award.
The series also exposed a disturbing pattern of wrong police raids in Chicago's primarily Black and Latino neighborhoods. It led to a new state law, The Peter Mendez Act, requiring training for police officers who may encounter children in traumatic situations like a raid.
Savini's investigation into the wrong police raid on Anjanette Young's home stunned the nation with the way she was mistreated and held naked at gunpoint. He broke the story locally and nationally on the network's CBS Morning Show and CBS Evening News. The story led to new search warrant policy and procedures in Chicago.
Savini won the national Murrow Award and 2021 Emmy for his series "Just 10 Years Old," a riveting report about the Illinois Department of Family and Children's Service and Chicago Police Department. He revealed human trafficking of a little girl whose rapists walked free despite positive matches to rape kits that were processed but left sitting in limbo because of police mismanagement.
In 2018 Savini began exposing decades-old EPA records revealing state regulators warned Willowbrook-based Sterigenics, a medical supply sterilization company, of toxic emissions containing the cancer-causing chemical ethylene oxide. His probe into Sterigenics led to a new law after several whistleblowers came forward say the company knew it was releasing ethylene oxide for decades. In 2019 the Matt Haller Act became law, putting limits on ETO emissions. The series won a 2019 regional Murrow and the 2019 regional Emmy for Investigative Series.
Savini's national awards also include a 2008 Alfred I. duPont-Columbia University Award for his investigation exposing 4,000 missing or lost security badges and other holes in security at O'Hare International Airport. The duPont Award is broadcast's equivalent of the Pulitzer Prize and also decided by a panel of judges at Columbia University in New York.
Prior to working in Chicago, Savini worked at WROC-TV in Rochester, New York as an anchor and investigative reporter. Before that, he was the Raleigh bureau chief at WNCT-TV in Greenville, North Carolina (1990-92). He began his career as a weekend anchor and investigative reporter at WHIZ-TV in Zanesville, Ohio. Savini's fascination with broadcast journalism and investigative reporting began when he worked as an intern in WMAQ's investigative unit in 1987
Savini has also competed in triathlons, a half ironman, and is a certified scuba diver. He was born and raised in Chicago and is a 1985 graduate of Weber High School. He went on to earn a B.A. in Communications from the University of Dayton in 1989 and was a member of the Dayton Flyers Football team. He and his wife Shannon have seven children. He volunteers for dozens of charitable and non-profit organizations. Dave often donates his time as an emcee working to raise funds and awareness for pediatric brain cancer research, organ donation, military veteran groups, youth groups, domestic violence victims, food pantries and homeless shelters.
With the deadline to obtain a Real ID just weeks away, the Better Business Bureau is warning about a surge in scams designed to steal your identity.
The Mendez family is suing the City of Chicago and the Chicago Police Department, accusing officers of violating their civil rights and traumatizing them and their children during the raid.
A south suburban man under investigation for mishandling remains at his crematory has previously been fined for taking bodies from a hospital without a funeral director license.
The new documentation shows how bodies were being handled at the Heights Crematory in south suburban Chicago Heights dating back years.
Mendoza's office has suspended Heights Crematory and has also filed a complaint to revoke the license permanently.
Disturbing images of bodies stacked inside a trailer outside a suburban crematorium, with some wrapped in sheets or plastic, with faces and body parts exposed.
CBS News Chicago obtained records showing Heights Crematory in Chicago Heights, Illinois had been repeatedly warned by the state for their handling of bodies waiting to be cremated.
Heights Crematory in Chicago Heights is accused of mishandling the bodies of people who recently died.
The school had to transition to an "emergency e-learning day" as the investigation continues.
CBS News Chicago went searching for yearly and daily averages for such enforcement actions over the past eight years.
There had been calls for months to reassign Judge Thomas Nowinski to be reassigned after the stabbing that killed Lacramioara Beldie, 54.
City attorneys recommended the settlements in lawsuits tied to former CPD Commander Jon Burge, former Sgt. Ronald Watts, and former Det. Reynaldo Guevara - all of whom have been accused of framing dozens of people.
"JPD's repeated failure to identify and address unreasonable force is not an aberration—it is a hallmark of its supervisory culture," a report from the Illinois Attorney General's office states.
A total of 11 cars have been stolen this month during the evening and early morning hours—the latest two were taken on Saturday.
The judge is under fire for releasing a man who is accused of later killing his wife.