Chicago Sun-Times

Man caught with gun amid 2020 looting gets time served after 14 months in jail

- BY JON SEIDEL, FEDERAL COURTS REPORTER jseidel@suntimes.com | @SeidelCont­ent

A federal judge sentenced a man who has already spent more than 14 months in jail to time served Thursday for being in illegal possession of a gun amid the Chicago looting in June 2020.

U.S. District Judge Thomas Durkin told Gustavo Luna-Barrios “I think you deserved every day of the 14½ months you served.” Prosecutor­s say Luna-Barrios is a Mexican citizen illegally residing in the United States, so the judge noted he will next be handed over to immigratio­n authoritie­s.

“You contribute­d to the social unrest,” Durkin told Luna-Barrios. “There was anarchy in the city. It was ridiculous.”

Luna-Barrios, in a lengthy statement before learning his sentence, apologized to his family, community and to the judge. He said, “I caused a lot of grief, pain and suffering to myself and loved ones for making this bad decision.”

But Durkin said Luna-Barrios should instead “apologize to the Chicago police” who had to arrest him while trying to keep others from being injured and shot.

Chicago police caught Luna-Barrios, 34, with a loaded semiautoma­tic handgun after they checked on a looting call around 12:30 a.m. at O’Reilly Auto Parts in the 3200 block of South Ashland on June 1, 2020, according to federal prosecutor­s.

When police arrived, they spotted Luna-Barrios and another person climbing through a broken window to get out of the store and then running to a nearby vehicle, court records show. The pair fled when officers approached, the feds say.

A Chicago detective caught the other person near the front of the store, but prosecutor­s say a sergeant had to chase Luna-Barrios in the parking lot. The police said they found the gun in Luna-Barrios’ front waistband after placing him under arrest.

Luna-Barrios’ sentencing is the latest in federal court to stem from last summer’s rioting in Chicago. Late last month, U.S. District Judge Virginia Kendall gave a one-year prison sentence to Brandon Pegues, who was caught downtown May 31, 2020, with a hammer and a loaded gun he was not legally allowed to have. A few days after Pegues’ sentencing, the same judge gave a year-and-a-half in prison to Javonte T. Williams, who was caught with a gun illegally during the looting in August 2020.

A federal judge in Minnesota handed a hefty prison sentence of nearly nine years Tuesday to Matthew Lee Rupert of Galesburg, who burned down a store in Minneapoli­s in May 2020 before moving on to Chicago, where he was arrested. But U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman in Chicago also gave probation to Jacob Fagundo, who admitted setting fire to a CPD SUV during the May 2020 riots — a sentence defense attorneys have begun to point to as they seek leniency for their clients.

Luna-Barrios pleaded guilty in May to unlawful possession of a firearm. Prosecutor­s asked the judge last month to sentence him to 18 months in prison.

“Nothing good could have possibly come

from [Luna-Barrios’] illegal possession of a loaded firearm,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Kalia Coleman wrote in a court memo. “In a city plagued by traumatic injuries and death from bullets being indiscrimi­nately sprayed on the street, the public is truly fortunate that Chicago police officers were able to interdict [Luna-Barrios] and seize the firearm before anyone was harmed.”

Coleman wrote that immigratio­n officials previously gave Luna-Barrios until March 4, 2015, to leave the United States, but he did not do so. He also did not present himself to U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t officials as he was later asked to do so.

He was then charged in 2018 with resisting a peace officer, pleaded guilty in that case and was on bond when he was caught at the auto parts store on June 1, 2020, the prosecutor wrote.

Luna-Barrios’ defense attorney, Phillip J. Oliver, wrote in his own memo that LunaBarrio­s is a lifelong Chicago resident who was brought here when he was 18 months old to escape danger in Mexico.

Oliver wrote that Luna-Barrios has a cinematogr­aphy and film business, helps elderly residents on his block with chores, runs coat and canned-food drives and is “well-regarded among those who know him.”

The defense attorney also wrote that Luna-Barrios told court officials, “This is not who I am, I hope it doesn’t characteri­ze who I am, I am not a criminal.”

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Members of Illinois State Police walk near the Thompson Center in the Loop during unrest on May 30, 2020.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Members of Illinois State Police walk near the Thompson Center in the Loop during unrest on May 30, 2020.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States