Tag Archives: Arlington

No victims injured after reported shooting at Vandergriff Honda in Arlington, police say – CBS News

  1. No victims injured after reported shooting at Vandergriff Honda in Arlington, police say CBS News
  2. Arlington, Texas, shooting: Suspect in custody after shots fired at car dealership along I-20, police say WFAA.com
  3. Search continues for suspect after woman shot multiple times outside East Arlington apartment NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
  4. Former employee who brought gun to Vandergriff Honda dealership shot by police FOX 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth
  5. Arlington teen who allegedly hit victim in head with hammer before shooting him charged with murder FOX 4 News Dallas-Fort Worth
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Arlington closes public splash pads, pools after possible brain-eating amoeba detected – CBS News

  1. Arlington closes public splash pads, pools after possible brain-eating amoeba detected CBS News
  2. Arlington father of child killed by amoeba speaks after city announces possible presence of amoeba WFAA
  3. Arlington closes public splash pads after possible brain-eating amoeba detected CBS TEXAS
  4. Public pools and splash pads in Arlington remain closed NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
  5. His 3-year-old son died of a rare brain eating amoeba two years ago. Now, he fears the possibility it could be back at another Arlington splash pad. WFAA.com
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

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Arlington nun is accused of having sex with a priest. Here’s what we’ve learned about him – Fort Worth Star-Telegram

  1. Arlington nun is accused of having sex with a priest. Here’s what we’ve learned about him Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  2. Texas nun allegedly admits to breaking vow of chastity in recording played during court hearing WFAA
  3. ‘I made a horrible, horrible mistake,’ nun accused of sex with priest tells Fort Worth bishop Fort Worth Star-Telegram
  4. Judge hears testimony in dispute between Fort Worth diocese and Arlington nuns NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth
  5. Fort Worth Bishop Michael Olson defends handling of Arlington nun investigation CBS TEXAS
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14 Hurt After Car Slams Into Arlington Pub, Sparks Fire – NBC4 Washington

Fourteen people were hurt when a car slammed into an Irish pub, causing the building to catch fire in Arlington’s Courthouse neighborhood Friday evening.

Medics took eight people to hospitals, and four of them were critically injured, Virginia’s Arlington County police said. The other four patients have injuries that are not life-threatening, according to police. Medics treated six other people at the scene, and they are all OK, police said.

Photos of the scene at Ireland’s Four Courts show a gaping hole in the front of the building with clouds of smoke pouring out.

A spokesperson for the fire department said the crash happened about 6:45 p.m., and firefighters arrived to the pub to find it engulfed in flames. The fire has since been extinguished, the fire department said.

Mary Reilly, a server at Ireland’s Four Courts pub in Arlington, Virginia, describes the moments when a car slammed into the restaurant Friday night.

“I was just talking to some regulars that come in and I heard a bang. We all heard a bang, an explosion so I just turned around and I saw all the debris coming towards the back of the pub. So, it was just pure panic,” Mary Reilly, a server at the pub, told News4. “It was just pure panic. ‘Everybody out the back, everybody out the back.’ That’s what it was. Just panic.”

Reilly said she didn’t see the car at all from where she was, and she saw smoke and debris.

“I thought the whole place was just going to explode,” she said.

Reilly said she believes the amount of people injured would have been worse had the bar been busier, as it typically is on a Friday night.

“It’s the grace of God that we weren’t busy tonight. Of course, servers, bartenders complain that we’re not being busy, but we’re usually packed. That top bar where the car went through is usually packed,” she said.

It’s too early to know why the car crashed into the building or the extent of the structural damage to the pub, the spokesperson said. While it’s unclear what direction the car was traveling before the crash, the restaurant sits at an intersection with N. Courthouse Road ending at Wilson Boulevard.

More than an hour after the crash, dozens of firefighters, medics and police officers were still working at the scene.

Ireland’s Four Courts is a popular spot for soccer fans and the bar’s trivia nights also garner crowds.

The pub has been around for 20 years, according to its website. It asked in a tweet to “keep the all the injured in your thoughts and prayers.”

Stay with News4 for continuous coverage.



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Arlington restaurant crash: Multiple injuries reported after vehicle crashes into Ireland’s Four Courts pub

Eight people were transported to area hospitals — four of whom were critically injured — and six other people were treated on the scene and released, the Arlington County Police Department said.

The crash took place at Ireland’s Four Courts pub and restaurant in the 2000 block of Wilson Boulevard, according to police. The restaurant issued a statement Friday evening saying it was “devastated” by the accident.
The structure fire has been extinguished, according to a tweet from the Arlington County Fire Department. Building engineers have “evaluated the structure and determined it was structurally sound but could not be reoccupied,” Arlington police said on social media.

An investigation into the crash remains ongoing, police said.

Correction: A previous version of this report misidentified the number of people injured, according to police. It is 14.



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Once called National Landing, Amazon’s Arlington area tries on ‘NaLa’

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At first, it showed up on freebie water bottles. Then it made its way onto rainbow T-shirts for Pride month.

In June, it popped up on Instagram as a hashtag, and this month it was suddenly plastered on the surfboard and silver Airstream set up in a grassy patch of Arlington, declaring to the commuters, dog-walkers and joggers strutting by that their neighborhood had earned a brand-new nickname: NaLa.

Yes, “National Landing” — the term invented by local economic development officials to lure Amazon to Northern Virginia four years ago — is being shortened and SoHo-ized, whittled down to a two-syllable abbreviation that says everything, and nothing, all at once.

“NaLa?” asked Mohsin Abuholo, sitting on a bench near a faux lifeguard shack advertising the NaLa Beach Club on a humid evening this week. “I guess it’s a name for a female. Like Anala?”

“That must be a new thing they’re doing?” wondered Allison Gaul, 38, a lawyer walking her 10-year-old Dalmatian, Dotty, nearby. “I don’t know what the hell ‘NaLa’ means.”

“I had to try to figure that one out. I mean, sure, I guess,” said Johnathan Edwards, 40, who moved back to the area a year ago for his job at Amazon. “I’m not a big fan of it, to be honest.”

National Landing, the combined umbrella name for this set of Northern Virginia neighborhoods — Crystal City, Pentagon City and Potomac Yard — was subject to plenty of confusion when it first debuted in 2018, with many longtime residents refusing to adopt a label they said felt like a corporate creation for Amazon. (Amazon founder Jeff Bezos owns The Washington Post.)

Now, much like AdMo (Adams Morgan) and CoHi (Columbia Heights) before it, or NoMa before that, the area appears to be trying on the kind of shorthand that, depending on whom you ask, is synonymous with either peak yuppiness or a new kind of urban cool.

The rebranding of Amazon’s HQ2 neighborhood: Alpacas, mocktails and flower crowns for dogs

Tracy Sayegh Gabriel, the executive director of the National Landing Business Improvement District (BID), made it clear that “NaLa” was nothing more than an event series her organization was putting on this summer.

Besides the beach club — which invites neighbors to “close your eyes and enjoy this summer escape with your toes in the sand” — there’s NaLa Fit, featuring outdoor barre, HIIT and yoga classes, and NaLa Fridays at the Park, a weekly concert series featuring local musicians.

“It’s more of a shorthand that’s intended to be fun and punchy,” Sayegh Gabriel said. “There’s no intention to introduce a new name for the neighborhood at all.”

But some others have also adopted the abbreviation, unprompted: A dentist’s office in Old Town Alexandria — officially outside the bounds of National Landing — recently changed its name to NaLa Smiles, in part to attract some of Amazon’s new customers as patients. (“It was a better abbreviation on boards and signage, and it sounds better,” said Hisham Barakat, the office’s owner.)

And across social media, a few residents and small businesses have also begun using the shorthand for a rapidly changing area that is already seeing an influx of new apartment buildings, restaurants and corporate relocations.

“We have a lot of community pride and equity and social capital in the names that we have. So we’re really committed to keeping ‘Crystal City,’ ‘Pentagon City’ and ‘Potomac Yard’ in regular use, along with the umbrella name of ‘National Landing,’ ” Sayegh Gabriel added. “It is the destination we are building.”

That doesn’t mean everyone else sees it the same way.

‘A cultural shorthand’

The logic behind “NaLa” is nothing new in the D.C. area or beyond. As long as there have been neighborhoods, there have been portmanteaus meant to sell those neighborhoods and their potential trendiness.

“It’s sort of a cultural shorthand,” said Jeffrey Parker, an urban sociologist at the University of New Orleans. “Places with this kind of name, this kind of nomenclature are associated with certain types of amenities and certain types of commerce. … It is very silly, but it’s branding. It’s boosterism.”

One of the earliest examples in the United States, he said, is New York’s SoHo. Once a deteriorating, light-industrial area, it was rebranded by city planners as they looked to rezone the neighborhood for the artists taking over its spacious lofts.

It didn’t hurt that the new name evoked a hip part of London, and copycat versions followed across Lower Manhattan: Tribeca. NoMad. FiDi.

But more than half a century later, as New York real estate agents tried to peddle monikers like “SoHa” (South Harlem) and “SoBro” (the South Bronx) well outside the city’s downtown core, some said it had gone too far: One lawmaker even proposed a bill that would punish brokers who used made-up names to sell property.

The trend — and the ensuing pile-on — made it inside the Beltway not long after. “North of Massachusetts Avenue” was successfully re-christened “NoMa,” with a stop on the Metro’s Red Line to seal the deal. Other attempts withered amid the blowback: Neither SoNYA (South of New York Avenue), the GaP (between Georgia Avenue and Petworth), nor SoMo (southern Adams Morgan) seemed to stick.

“This is something really easy to make fun of,” said Parker, the urban sociologist, but “people see something work once, and they latch onto it.”

Perhaps it is no surprise, then, that the two-syllable craze has reached South Arlington, where this rapidly changing neighborhood has for the past four years been trying to sort out its identity — and what it should be called.

After decades of being known as a kind of soulless concrete maze, the neighborhoods of Crystal City (named for a chandelier in the lobby of a local building) and Pentagon City (after the nearby home of the U.S. military) were immediately thrust into urban superstardom when Amazon announced in November 2018 that it would be bringing its second headquarters here.

But when officials celebrated the company’s new neighborhood as “National Landing,” an umbrella term that also looped in part of Alexandria’s Potomac Yard, the resounding reaction was: What?

“Never heard of National Landing?” asked one local blog. “You’re not alone.”

Stephanie Landrum tells its origin story: When economic development officials in Northern Virginia came together in 2017 to submit a joint bid for Amazon’s second headquarters sweepstakes, the proposal was known as “Alexandria-Arlington.”

She and her colleagues put together a 285-page booklet extolling the virtues of this booming region to send to Amazon, and just before printing, realized they were lacking something — anything — more compelling to label it.

“We literally spent so much time word-smithing everything about a vibrant, connected community,” said Landrum, the president and chief executive of the Alexandria Economic Development Partnership, “that we kind of got to the last day and needed to make a decision.”

Crystal City? That was just one neighborhood. Potomac Landing? That didn’t stick. Landrum said she was texting her counterpart in Arlington, each with a celebratory glass of wine in hand, when they settled on “National Landing.”

The name, meant to evoke Reagan National Airport nearby as well as the area’s long list of transportation options, quickly became ubiquitous in the respective offices as they engaged in secret talks with Amazon over the following year.

When they finally made the announcement, “we sort of forgot that the rest of the world didn’t know we had created this moniker,” Landrum said.

Still, the BID and developer JBG Smith both embraced it, using the name more and more as the neighborhood began a physical and cultural transformation: Besides Amazon’s offices, the area is now home to Boeing’s new headquarters and, soon, Virginia Tech’s new graduate campus. There will be a new Yellow Line station in Potomac Yard (PoYa?), the first infill stop added to the Metro system in decades, and a pedestrian bridge connecting the airport with the rest of the neighborhood.

Sitting on a picnic table near the NaLa Beach Club, Robert Vainshtein, a 36-year-old federal employee, broke into a chuckle when asked about the neighborhood’s two new monikers.

“What’s wrong with ‘Crystal City’ ?” asked Vainshtein, 36, an Alexandria resident who commutes here for work. “It’s been ‘Crystal City’ forever. I don’t think people are going to get that off the bat.”

Across the table from him, Lauren Callahan, 27, said “NaLa,” let alone “National Landing,” has not clicked for her yet, either. But the changes that have come with these names are hardly a bother.

She’s a fan of the free bananas that Amazon has been handing out near Crystal City’s infamous underground mall, she noted, and the iced coffee the BID gives out weekly at the installation a few yards away.

“They’re doing nice things for the area. It’s a very trendy thing to do,” Callahan pointed out. “Who knows? Maybe ‘NaLa’ will catch on more than ‘National Landing.’ ”

“Yeah,” Vainshtein objected, “but it’s made-up.”

“Well,” she asked, “what isn’t made up?”



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Missouri Valley Conference loses Loyola Chicago but pursuing Murray State, UT Arlington and Kansas City

The Missouri Valley is ambitiously pursuing a plan to add multiple schools, sources told CBS Sports. The three schools in the mix are Murray State, UT Arlington and Kansas City. At this stage, it is expected they will eventually receive invites to join the Valley, with sources telling CBS Sports that Murray State and UT Arlington are considered the two strongest candidates.

There are some lingering questions with Kansas City’s (formerly UMKC) facilities that need to be ironed out in the coming months to firm up its status as a legitimate candidate. Missouri Valley commissioner Jeff Jackson has toured all three campuses in recent weeks, according to sources, and there is a presentation tentatively scheduled for MVC presidents the week before Christmas. 

The invites aren’t imminent — meaning they won’t officially happen in the next few weeks — but there is clear progress being made toward expansion for the Missouri Valley. It’s not yet determined, should any of those schools be formally accepted, if they would join in 2022 or 2023. Murray State is a member of the Ohio Valley Conference. UT Arlington is in the Sun Belt. In 2020, Kansas City rejoined the Summit League (where it was a member from 2007-2013) after leaving an ill-fated residency in the WAC. 

In September, the Valley announced Belmont as a future member, beginning in July of 2022, a move that was glowingly received. 

The news coincides with Tuesday’s headline that Loyola Chicago will be leaving the Missouri Valley after nine seasons to join the Atlantic 10 in 2022. One source told CBS Sports that Loyola Chicago had been privately making its pitch to join the Atlantic 10 since the early summer. While it wasn’t a deciding factor, one source said the trio of schools the MVC is currently considering weren’t nearly enticing enough to make Loyola Chicago hesitate with its decision to jump to the A-10. 

Sources also said the A-10 is not in danger of losing any of its 14 members, meaning that conference will enlarge to 15 starting next July. Loyola Chicago will be holding a press conference at 2 p.m. ET on Wednesday. 

As for the Missouri Valley’s potential new members, the appeal for Murray State is clear and most obvious. It’s one of the most accomplished mid-major programs in men’s basketball, with 17 NCAA Tournament appearances to its name. The school previously failed to win its campaign to join the Valley in 2017, when league presidents picked Valparaiso over the Racers. Since then, Murray State has gone 92-33 under Matt McMahon, won an NCAA Tournament game, made two NCAA Tournaments and produced the No. 2 overall pick in the 2019 NBA Draft, Ja Morant. The only thing holding back Murray State was its remote location and lack of being in a metropolitan area. That appears to no longer be a sticking point for MVC presidents. 

UT Arlington and Kansas City are candidates for one huge reason: their proximity to major media markets. Arlington is in the greater Dallas area, which is by far its greatest selling point and the thing that entices the MVC’s presidents as they look to expand the conference’s appeal geographically. UT Arlington is not storied, however; it has one NCAA Tournament appearance (2008). Kansas City, which is in the heart of MVC territory, has vowed a return to play at Municipal Auditorium. The historic arena has hosted more NCAA Tournament championship games (nine) than any other venue. In order for Kansas City to be a viable candidate, per one source, there needs to be “shovels in the ground” on new facilities as quickly as possible. 

Another reason there is optimism within Kansas City’s athletic department: former Missouri athletic director Mike Alden — who got Missouri out of the Big 12 and into the SEC nearly a decade ago — is said to be heavily involved in the school’s pitch. Powers-that-be at that school remain highly optimistic as of now about joining the Valley, also due in part to the fact that Kansas City as a metropolitan area is one of the more robust college basketball media markets in the country. 

One source told CBS Sports that there remains a possibility for another school beyond the three favorites for the MVC right now, but at this stage it’s those three that are in the best position. If all were to join, it would bring the Valley to 13 teams — the most in its 114-year history.

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1 Of 4 Timberview HS Shooting Victims Critical, Suspect Timothy Simpkins In Custody – CBS Dallas / Fort Worth

ARLINGTON (CBSDFW.COM) — The “all clear” has been given at Timberview High School in Arlington after an active shooter situation Wednesday morning and suspected teenage gunman is in custody.

A person with a weapon opened fire on the 2nd floor of Timberview High School, in the 7000 block of South Watson Road in Arlington around 9:15 a.m. The school is in the Mansfield Independent School District.

READ MORE: University Police Department Identifies Fatal Shooting Victim As Marc Anthony Montes

Arlington Assistant Police Chief Kevin Kolbye confirmed that there are 4 victims from the situation. Three people were transported to a local hospital. One injured person refused treatment at the scene.

As of 1:00 p.m. all of those victims were being treated at Medical City Arlington. Reporting from the scene CBS 11 News reporter Steve Pickett learned that a 15-year-old victim is in critical condition, a 25-year-old male employee at school is in good condition, and a slightly injured female teen is being treated and will soon be released.

During a morning press conference Kolbye said he wasn’t sure if Timberview has metal detectors.

Police searched for hours to find suspect Timothy George Simpkins.

Police say Simpkins, a student a the school, opened fire in a classroom after getting into a fight with another student. Officials say they have seen video of the fight, but not the shooting. “This is not a random act of violence,” Kolbye said. “This is not somebody attacking our school.”

Simpkins, 18, is considered armed and dangerous.

The school was immediately placed on lockdown, and students and staff were locked in their classrooms/offices. The Mansfield ISD has began the reunification process of families. Officials said students are being ‘safely’ escorted to buses.

READ MORE: Expert: Textbook Reaction From Law Enforcement, ‘Best Of The Best’ Handling Timberview High School Shooting

CBS 11 News reporter Nicole Jacobs spoke with a parent who described information gotten from their child inside of a classroom. “He said the doors are locked and the police still haven’t found the shooter,” the mother recalled. “I haven’t been able to reach my son for 20 minutes… when we last spoke I heard the other kids crying and screaming in the classroom.”

From Chopper 11 heavy police activity and dozens of people could be seen outside.

Officials with the Arlington Police Department confirmed that the ATF Dallas Field Division, Mansfield PD, Grand Prairie PD, and Mansfield ISD police are all working the scene and are doing a ‘methodical search’ of the campus.

Mansfield ISD has set up a reunification location where adults can pick up students. Parents are being told to go to the Center for Performing Arts, located at 1110 West Debbie Lane in Mansfield. Police say students will eventually be bused to the location after the school is completely secured and officers will be on the scene. The current student population is around 2,000.

(credit: CBSDFW.COM)

CBS 11 News photographer Vince Bosquez reported live on CBS 11 News that police had surrounded a home where they believe the suspect lives. That location is near Ragland Road, in the 8000 Block of South Collins.

As a precaution, the following Arlington ISD schools are on lockout as police search for a suspect/s related to the active shooter event:

  • Arlington Collegiate High School at Tarrant County College
  • Ashworth Elementary
  • Barnett Elementary
  • Beckham Elementary
  • Bebensee Elementary
  • Bowie High School
  • Bryant Elementary
  • Hale Elementary
  • Ousley Junior High
  • Pearcy STEM Academy

A lockout means all school exterior doors are locked from the inside. Administrators say all students at those schools are safe inside and that teaching and learning will continue.

MORE NEWS: Van Horn Border Patrol Agents Arrest Convicted Rapist Trying To Enter U.S. Illegally

* This is a breaking news story and will be updated regularly. Refresh your page often.



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Active Shooter at Texas High School, Multiple Victims – NBC 5 Dallas-Fort Worth

Multiple people are wounded after a shooting at Timberview High School in Arlington, police confirm.

The Mansfield ISD has confirmed in a letter to parents that police are investigating an active shooter situation at the high school.

The letter goes on to add that students and staff are currently locked in their classrooms/offices and no visitors are being permitted at this time.

Multiple people have been shot at Timberview High School in Arlington, Texas, according to police.

NBC 5 crews have seen officers with long guns running from the parking lot and into the school.

The school is currently on lockdown.

Timberview High School is a part of the Mansfield Independent School District.

Parents are being asked to stage at the student nutrition center at 151 Mansfield Webb Road. The district will then work to bus students from the high school to this location.

NBC 5 has crews on the way to the scene and will update this story as we get additional information.

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Bears sign purchase agreement for Arlington Park property: Exclusive

The Bears have signed a purchase agreement for the Arlington International Racecourse property in suburban Arlington Heights, Ill., The Athletic has learned. The team is expected to announce the news Wednesday morning.

“We are not surprised by this move. We remain committed to continuing the work to keep the team in Chicago and have advised the Bears that we remain open to discussions,” a spokesperson for the mayor’s office said in a statement to The Athletic. “However, just as the Bears view this as a business decision so does the City. This season, Soldier Field signed a major contract with the Chicago Fire and just last weekend Soldier Field hosted the Shamrock Series — both of which are lucrative for the Chicago Park District and local economy.

“These examples and others demonstrate that Soldier Field remains a very sought-after venue, and, as the Mayor has said many times, overall, the City and Park District must explore all options to both enhance the visitor and fan experience at Soldier Field year-round and maximize revenues. Therefore, we must do what’s in the best economic interests of our taxpayers and maximize the financial benefits at the important asset that is Soldier Field. As for the Bears, the Mayor has said numerous times, our door in City Hall remains open to engage the Bears.”

Mayor Lori Lightfoot added in a tweet later Tuesday, “My statement still stands on the Bears: my admin remains committed to continuing the work to keep the team in Chicago. As I have said numerous times, our door in City Hall remains open.”

On June 17, the Bears submitted a bid to purchase the Arlington International Racecourse property.

“It’s our obligation to explore every possible option to ensure we’re doing what’s best for our organization and its future,” team president Ted Phillips said in a statement in June. “If selected, this step allows us to further evaluate the property and its potential.”

The Bears’ lease at Soldier Field runs through 2033, but according to the Chicago Tribune, the Bears would have to pay $84 million to the city if they broke the lease in 2026. The financial penalty decreases after 2026.

“($84 million) represents just 3 percent of the $2.2 billion average cost of the league’s seven newest stadiums,” the report stated.

At the time, Lightfoot referred to the Bears’ bid as “a negotiating tactic.”

“As a season ticketholder and longtime Bears fan, I am committed to keeping the ‘Chicago’ name in our football team,” she said. “And like most Bears fans, we want the organization to focus on putting a winning team on the field, beating the Packers finally and being relevant past October. Everything else is noise.”

Last week, WBEZ released two reports reflecting the conflict between the Bears and the Chicago Park District, which owns Soldier Field. In an April meeting, Phillips “allegedly asked for engineering reports regarding the infrastructure” of Soldier Field. Michael Kelly, the Chicago Park District superintendent, emailed Phillips accusing him of a “propensity for historical statements.”

In early June, Phillips accused the Chicago Park District of refusing “to engage in good faith discussions” when the Bears reached out about the creation of a sportsbook near Soldier Field.

During a meeting with the Chicago Sun-Times, Lightfoot said, “I am a Bears fan. I want the Bears to stay in the city of Chicago. And we are willing to work with them to try to address their concerns. But, I’ve got to do it in a way that is fiscally prudent and doesn’t preclude other uses in that stadium.

“We are evaluating ways in which we can enhance the fan experience at Soldier Field. … I know that it can be better. I’ve been to other stadiums across the country where the fan experience is far superior to what we have at Soldier Field.”

(Photo: Robin Alam / Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)



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