Chicago Sun-Times

RELATIVES MOURN MAN SLAIN ON STREET

‘ We didn’t have a father, and he took care of us . . . He was a family man’

- BY ASHLEE REZIN Staff Reporter Email: arezin@suntimes.com Twitter: @ Ashlee_ Rezin

A man walking to a bus stop with his girlfriend Thursday morning was gunned down in the Avondale neighborho­od on the Northwest Side.

“I don’t believe this,” said Antonio Arroyo, 47, who identified the victim as his 24- year- old nephew, Maximilian­o “Max” Arroyo.

Officers responding to reports of a person shot at 5: 41 a. m. found him lying in the street in the 4000 block of West Melrose, according to Chicago Police. He was pronounced dead at the scene.

A police source said the victim was walking to the bus stop with his girlfriend when a vehicle pulled up and someone inside asked them if they had gang affiliatio­ns, then opened fire. The girlfriend was not injured.

Antonio Arroyo hugged the woman as she sobbed, while Max Arroyo’s body could be seen in the street nearby, covered by a blue sheet.

Antonio Arroyo said he lives on the block, and that his nephew — a father of two boys younger than five — has been staying with him for about two months. Max Arroyo had just started working with his uncle at a factory in southwest suburban Bolingbroo­k.

Before sunrise, Max Arroyo’s brothers, 19- year- old Julio Gomez and 21- year- old German Gomez, arrived at the scene. They paced, yelled, and gathered with family and friends in the street outside the red crime scene tape as Chicago Police detectives and evidence technician­s investigat­ed.

“We didn’t have a father, and he took care of us,” said Julio Gomez. “He took care of us, cooked for us, got us ready for school. He was a family man.”

He said Max Arroyo was “straighten­ing his life out,” adding, “This shouldn’t have happened.”

German Gomez called his brother a great father. “It didn’t matter if he only had $ 2 in his pocket, we both ate,” he said.

The shooting happened at a busy intersecti­on, prompting police to pull their squad cars close to the body in an effort to block the scene from sight of family members and passersby.

Employees at City Cafe, which was supposed to open at 6 a. m., were prevented from entering the corner restaurant while the body was still at the scene, according to 28- year- old Miguel Tapia, who has worked in the cafe’s kitchen for nearly two years.

Customers at Soap Box Laundry, on the opposite cor- ner, peered out windows and stood quietly in the parking lot.

Roberto Castelano, 30, was in the laundromat at the time, getting some clothes cleaned before his shift at Glazed & Infused.

“This is so sad,” he said, adding he’s only seen two shootings in the 10 years he’s lived in the Portage Park neighborho­od.

“Chicago right now, it’s a mess,” Castelano said. “Two or three people are dying every day. It’s just sad.”

 ??  ?? Family and friends ( above, right) mourn Thursday at the corner of Pulaski and Melrose, where 24- year- old Max Arroyo was shot to death. | ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES PHOTOS
Family and friends ( above, right) mourn Thursday at the corner of Pulaski and Melrose, where 24- year- old Max Arroyo was shot to death. | ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES PHOTOS
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