Chicago Sun-Times

Man on parole for armed robbery held without bail in Blue Line shooting

- BY STEFANO ESPOSITO, DAVID STRUETT AND ANDY GRIMM Stefano Esposito and Andy Grimm are Sun-Times Staff Reporters. David Struett is a CST Wire Reporter.

A headshot — including a “large, distinguis­hing neck tattoo” — posted on social media helped police quickly nab a man suspected in a robberyrel­ated shooting on a CTA Blue Line train, police said Thursday.

“Once his picture is pushed out over social media, detectives received several anonymous tips identifyin­g the name of the offender from the community,” Brendan Deenihan, CPD chief of detectives, told reporters at police headquarte­rs.

Patrick Waldon, 31, has been “preying on the people of Chicago for years,” said interim Supt. Charlie Beck.

Waldon was arrested Wednesday night with a revolver in his pocket, Cook County prosecutor­s said at a bond hearing several hours after police held their news conference.

Waldon, of the 8000 block of South Ingleside Avenue, has felony conviction­s for theft, robbery, armed robbery and for being a felony in possession of a gun, and was on parole for a 2013 armed robbery.

Judge Susana Ortiz ordered Waldon held without bail Thursday, citing evidence that included CTA surveillan­ce video that allegedly showed Waldon standing behind the 30-year-old victim by the train doors and firing a single shot before exiting the train with the victim’s backpack.

Assistant State’s Attorney Catherine Howlett said Waldon and the victim boarded the train at the Jackson stop Wednesday morning, and that Waldon took a seat beside the victim, then demanded the victim give him his backpack.

The victim tried to ignore Waldon and rose to get off at the UICHalsted stop. Waldon then got up, stood behind the man, pressed a gun into the man’s back, fired once and got off the train with the bag, Howlett said. A witness who was standing behind Waldon also saw him holding the gun and fire the shot, Howlett said.

Detectives tracked Waldon to a Target store, where he was seen on video dumping items from the victim’s backpack, police said. Police then used the video surveillan­ce to generate the photograph that was posted on social media.

That led to Waldon’s arrest in the 3000 block of West Harrison Street, police said. Both the victim and a “very cooperativ­e” witness on the Blue Line train identified Waldon in photo lineups, police said.

“Thank goodness [the victim] is in stable condition at this point,” Beck said.

Court records show Waldon was charged in 2013 in a home invasion case in suburban Maywood. Waldon pleaded guilty to armed robbery and was sentenced to 12 years in prison. He was paroled in 2018, and was expected to be discharged in 2021, according to the Illinois Department of Correction­s.

Waldon also served prison time for a 2010 robbery case, records show.

Police records show in the past 10 years there have been nearly 6,200 robberies and attempted robberies on CTA property. Of those, 835 have ended in arrests.

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 ?? SAM CHARLES/SUN-TIMES ?? CTA personnel gather outside the Blue Line station at UIC-Halsted, 430 S. Halsted St., on Wednesday after the shooting.
SAM CHARLES/SUN-TIMES CTA personnel gather outside the Blue Line station at UIC-Halsted, 430 S. Halsted St., on Wednesday after the shooting.
 ??  ?? Patrick Waldon
Patrick Waldon

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