W E D N E S D A Y
February 24, 2021 Vol. 41, No. 30 ONE DOLLAR @oakpark @wednesdayjournal
JOURNAL of Oak Park and River Forest
D97 Super to resign Page 11
River Forest, police chief, four others named in lawsuit Former police officer and union president seeks jury trial By MARIA MAXHAM Staff Reporter
What started as an alleged problem with the Auto Park feature in a squad car has turned into a lawsuit against the village of River Forest and individually against five village employees — Police Chief James O’Shea, interim Village Administrator Lisa Scheiner, and sergeants Michael Swierczynski, Martin Grill and Justin Labriola. The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court on Sept. 23. A motion to dismiss was filed by the defendants on Dec. 30, and a response to that motion to dismiss was filed on Feb. 17. No court date has been set. The plaintiff is Daniel Szczesny, former full-time River Forest police officer, who joined the department in 2013 and resigned in 2019, as a result of what his lawsuit claims were “months of threats, retaliation, and duress.” Szczesny is suing on four counts: violation of rights to free speech; defamation; intentional interference in his job search after resigning from the village; and failure to comply with the Illinois Personnel Review Act. He is seeking a jury trial and looking for relief that includes lost wages and benefits; an injunction forcing the village to adopt employment practices and See LAWSUIT on page 14
ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer
THAT WARM GLOW: Joshua Wood inside the family’s currently melting igloo. He worked with his sister and parents to construct the multi-colored, pyramid shaped igloo in their back yard.
Igloo of dreams
The jewel-toned pyramid of ice a labor of love By STACEY SHERIDAN Staff Reporter
Embodying the fruits of labor, the fleeting nature of beauty and the bond of a family united in the same creative pursuit, the pyramid igloo created by the Wood family in their Oak Park back-
yard is a jewel-toned wonder to behold. “I must admit, my kids were a bit skeptical to begin with. They were like, ‘I don’t think this is going to work.’” said Antony Wood, architect of buildings and igloos alike. When the pyramid began to take shape, the morale of his two teenagers changed. “As it started to grow, it was like, ‘No, this is fantastic!’” Wood said. The spectacular ice pyramid was made entirely by Wood, his wife, also an
architect, and their two children. About 10 feet in height and width, the structure took over two weeks to construct, not including the time it took the bricks of colored water to freeze. A painstaking process, the Wood family used about 800 cardboard juice and milk cartons to create the ice bricks. Once frozen solid, they would run the cartons under the faucet and then peel the cardboard off the brick, each indiSee IGLOO on page 15
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