Springfield v. Illinois Department of Human Services d/b/a Chicago Read Mental Health Center
Case Summary
Springfield initiated a civil suit against the Illinois Department of Human Services, operating as Chicago Read Mental Health Center, in the Northern District of Illinois, docket 26-cv-05495. The case likely involves disputes over services or administrative actions related to mental health care. Details on claims or motions are not provided.
No timeline activity recorded yet. This page will grow as rulings and filings land.
Key Issues
- • Mental health services
- • Illinois Department of Human Services
- • Northern District of Illinois
Docket Snapshot
Court
N.D. Ill.
Northern District of Illinois · 7th Circuit · IL
Docket
Not captured
Civil
Stage
Active litigation
Active
Filed
Date unavailable
Not in the available feed
Latest Filing
1:26-cv-05495 Springfield v. Illinois Department of Human Services d/b/a Chicago Read Mental Health Center
Other · May 13, 2026
Coverage
0 articles
0 sources tracked
Participants
1 Defendant, 1 Government Agency, 1 Plaintiff
3 linked entities
Judge
Not assigned in feed
What the record shows
This case is tied to Northern District of Illinois, a federal district court in IL.
The newest docket activity we have is a other dated May 13, 2026.
The visible party/entity graph currently includes Illinois Department of Human Services d/b/a Chicago Read Mental Health Center, 1:26-cv-05495 Springfield and others.
No independent press coverage is attached yet; this page is currently docket-led rather than media-led.
About This Court
Northern District of Illinois (N.D. Ill.) is a federal district court in the 7th Circuit, IL.
Case Timeline
1 event1:26-cv-05495 Springfield v. Illinois Department of Human Services d/b/a Chicago Read Mental Health Center
The case Springfield v. Illinois Department of Human Services d/b/a Chicago Read Mental Health Center was filed under docket number 1:26-cv-05495. This event marks the official initiation of the lawsuit against the Illinois Department of Human Services operating as Chicago Read Mental Health Center. It matters because it sets the legal process in motion, allowing the plaintiff to seek remedies through the court.
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Sources tracked
0 outlets · 0 articles
Timeline events
1 record on file
Last updated
48 minutes ago
Juryvine aggregates docket entries from PACER/CourtListener, press coverage, and GDELT signals. Ingestion timestamps do not appear in the What Changed feed — that reflects real court activity only.