Chicago Sun-Times

• POLICE TRIED TO PULLOVER OFF- DUTY OFFICER BEFORE CRASH KILLED 2

- BY SAM CHARLES, ASHLEE REZIN AND MITCH DUDEK Staff Reporters

The Independen­t Police Review Authority has assumed the lead role in the investigat­ion of a crash that claimed the lives of an off- duty police officer and an “innocent” woman on the West Side early Tuesday.

On- duty officers in an unmarked police vehicle saw the off- duty’s personal car near Roosevelt and Independen­ce shortly before 1 a. m. The vehicle driven by the officer matched the descriptio­n of a vehicle used in an earlier carjacking, according to police officials.

It was not the same vehicle used in the crime, police said.

Police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the officer had just finished his shift 10 minutes earlier and was driving to his girlfriend’s home at the time of the crash.

After a short pursuit, the on- duty officers turned off their vehicle’s lights and left “a great distance” between their vehicle and that of the off- duty officer.

The off- duty officer — who worked in the Ogden District for four years — drove through the intersecti­on of Roosevelt and Kostner at “a high rate of speed” and collided with a vehicle driven by a woman, killing them both, according to Supt. Eddie Johnson.

The woman, 27- year- old Chequita Adams, was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where she died at 1: 27 a. m., according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office. An autopsy for Adams, a resident of the West Side North Lawndale neighborho­od, will likely be performed Wednesday.

The officer’s name was not released Tuesday afternoon. An autopsy Tuesday did not rule on the cause or manner of his death pending further investigat­ion, according to the medical examiner’s office.

“This is among the most difficult, heartbreak­ing addresses I’ve had to make since becoming superinten­dent, due to the unnecessar­y loss of life,” Johnson told reporters Tuesday.

Johnson said that, since the crash involved a Chicago Police officer, he asked Sharon Fairley and IPRA to take the lead in the investigat­ion “in the name of impartiali­ty and public integrity.”

“We have a lot of work ahead of us,” Fairley said.

Johnson said that it was not known if the officers in pursuit knew that the driver was an off- duty officer. The unmarked police vehicle was not equipped with sirens or a dashcam, though their lights were activated at some point during the pursuit.

A visibly dishearten­ed Johnson said, “I really want to say how sorry we are that this happened because it really was an unnecessar­y loss of life. It’s just a tragedy.”

Grief counselors were also assigned to the Ogden District Tuesday to aid grieving officers, Johnson said.

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ASHLEE REZIN/ SUN- TIMES

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