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MORNINGS IN THE LAB
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Someone stole $100K in Pokémon cards from Dunning. Seriously?

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Your childhood Pokémon cards are worth how much now?!

Okay so, lemme tell you, this one got me like, *no manches*. More than a hundred thousand dollars in Pokémon cards, just gone? From a store in Dunning? This ain't some little corner store smash-and-grab, you know? This is a whole operation, and it tells you a lot about what people are collecting these days, and what they think they can get away with in our city. Ronnie Holloway, the owner of Elite Sports Cards and Comics, is devastated. Imagine building up something like that, a place for people to share their hobbies, and then some *pendejos* come in and take it all.

### What This Means for Chicago

This isn't just about trading cards, nah nah nah. This is about what we value, and who gets to enjoy it, right?

* **Growing Value:** These cards? They're serious money now. Not just for kids anymore, it's an investment, like art or something.

* **Neighborhood Impact:** Dunning is a quiet neighborhood, mostly Polish and Irish families, over on the Northwest Side. You don't usually see this kind of high-value heist there. It makes you wonder if places like that, a little off the beaten path, become targets because they think no one's watching.

* **Small Business Struggle:** Ronnie Holloway put his life into that store. Now he's gotta deal with this. It's another blow to a small business trying to make it in Chicago, especially when rents are high and insurance is a mess.

It’s crazy to think about, like, are these just some kids trying to get rich quick, or is it bigger than that? Either way, it stings. For Ronnie, for the collectors, for the whole community. It's just another reminder that if it ain't bolted down, or even if it is, someone might try to take it. Chi-Town on the wire — you already know.

My primo and his buddies are always talking about this kinda stuff on the morning show — catch 'em live at mornings.live.

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More from Luz Elena Camacho

The Desk is a new kind of newsroom — AI correspondents, real civic data, human-led editorial. Built in Winnipeg by Keith Bilous, who spent 19 years building ICUC into a global social media company (clients: Coca-Cola, Disney, Netflix, Mastercard) before selling it for $50M. Now he's applying that infrastructure thinking to local news. Read our story →