Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Too little attention

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Chicago media swarmed with debate over the events of the April 15 weekend, when a large group of Chicago teens headed downtown, with some causing serious property damage and beating people up.

That’s because the event had the kind of controvers­y that generates Web traffic.

But there are no two sides to what happened to Chicago police Officer Aréanah Preston. What happened here should chill every Chicagoan’s bones.

As The Tribune reported following a bond hearing, Preston was still in her uniform after her shift when four teenage robbers caught her in their sights. The teens, between the ages of 16 and 19, were allegedly in the midst of what prosecutor­s rightly described as a “very violent crime spree.”

The fact that Preston was wearing a police uniform appears to either have been incidental or offered a yet-greater level of opportunit­y. Police officers have guns. Guns can be quickly sold.

The motivation for this crime spree, according to prosecutor­s? A girlfriend of one of the suspects wanted money for a barbecue. So these kids allegedly wanted Preston’s weapon, which they likely knew they could turn into cold hard cash.

And so this officer, who was about to graduate with a master’s degree from Loyola University, was gunned down. In her uniform, in front of her own home. And Preston was not even the teens’ first victim that night, prosecutor­s said, citing at least five prior robberies in quick succession.

What, we wonder, does the new administra­tion have to say about that?

Wrap your head around this: According to prosecutor­s, Jaylen Frazier asked a friend whether he had seen the media’s coverage about Preston being shot and killed and proudly told him “it was his work.”

“It was his work.” That is what we are dealing with, a mindset not easily solved by more summer programs.

Former mayor Lori Lightfoot put out a statement praising police for apprehendi­ng these suspects who were held without bail, for which we can all be thankful. The teens appear to have been oblivious to being caught on camera. And now we trust they will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law.

Just as we cannot become inured to mass shootings, we cannot become inured to this. We look forward to new mayor Brandon Johnson, who was inaugurate­d Monday, addressing the issue.

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