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Center Square

ā€œIt’s about pooling our resources together and becoming a collaborative team to help raise up the quality of the workforce, and also the quality of impact that we have on the future of microchips and semiconductor manufacturing,ā€ Ken Christensen, provost and senior vice president for academic affairs of Illinois Tech, told The Center Square. ā€œWe share a deep reserve of talent and innovation. This network is poised to make great contributions to the industry."

ABC7 Āé¶¹APP

ā€œThey understand that staying a new and important law go from going into effect is significant, and that if that they're going to strike down the law or uphold the law either way that decision needs to be made relatively quickly,ā€ said Professor Carolyn Shapiro, Āé¶¹APP Kent College of Law.

WGN Radio

ā€œWhat I think the opinion misses is that the legislature plays a vital role in the criminal justice system and always has,ā€ Āé¶¹APP-Kent Professor Harold Krent said of a judge’s ruling on Illinois’ SAFE-T Act. ā€œIn fact it starts with the fact that, what is criminal? Judges don’t decide what’s criminal, the legislature does. What about sentencing? It’s the legislature that sets the parameters of sentencing. ... There is a joint undertaking from the legislature and the judicial.ā€

WLS-AM 890

ā€œI’m not suggesting that the legislature drew a perfect line here in terms of when we should decide an individual is dangerous and should not be released prior to the trial, but I do think that it’s up to the legislature to make a good-faith effort to accommodate the interests of safety, of fairness, and that’s what they attempted to do,ā€ said Āé¶¹APP-Kent Professor Harold Krent.

Daily Herald

ā€œWe can all draw the lines differently,ā€ Āé¶¹APP-Kent Professor Harold Krent said, ā€œbut I think ... the Kankakee court didn’t notice that this was a reasonable effort under the Illinois constitution to try to accommodate the interests of the public in being safe, with having a fair and equitable criminal justice system that didn’t automatically make freedom pending trial contingent upon someone’s wealth.ā€

WBEZ Radio

ā€œThe arguments raised all had merit, they weren’t frivolous,ā€ Āé¶¹APP-Kent Professor Richard Kling said. He noted that Judge THomas Cunnington did not issue an injunction along with his ruling, meaning that the decision will not stop jurisdictions that are not among the plaintiffs in the suit from implementing the provisions of the SAFE-T Act.

ABC7 Āé¶¹APP

"The court short-changed the legislature's longstanding interest in defining what is a crime, defining what is a sentence for a particular crime, and defining when bail should be allowed or not allowed," said Professor Harold Krent, Kent College of Law and separation of powers expert.

Āé¶¹APP Tribune

Harold Krent, a law professor at the Illinois Institute of Technology’s Āé¶¹APP-Kent College of Law, called Judge Thomas Cunnington’s ruling on the separation of powers violations ā€œhighly contestable,ā€ arguing that the state legislature also has an interest in making sure the court system is fair. The legislature has already weighed in on similar matters, such as limiting judges’ discretion in sentencing.

Bloomberg Law

ā€œThere has never been a criminal action brought against a foreign state-owned enterprise in our history,ā€ Āé¶¹APP-Kent Professor Harold Krent said of a case before the Supreme Court involving a Turkish bank accused of laundering money for Iran. ā€œAnd the 2nd Circuit held that there’s no law immunizing a state-owned bank for its commercial activities the way there would be to protect a state diplomat, and so the criminal charges could go forward. So this is really unprecedented and it’s a major change which will have ripple effects around the world.ā€

Harper's Bazaar

ā€œThe people who grew up playing these games are adults now—there’s a lot of nostalgia for them,ā€ Illinois Tech professor Carly Kocurek said in an article about her research into the Games for Girls movement. ā€œWe’re starting to see that a lot of the folks that were designers and influential during the Games for Girls movement have become leaders. We have a radically different landscape for games now, so ā€˜Games for Girls’ sounds almost antiquated—because of course people are making games for many different audiences—but that wasn’t always the case.ā€