Chicago Sun-Times

New camera system a necessary start to ending shootings on expressway­s

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Chicago expressway­s — already not for the faint of heart, with speeding motorists and out-of-the-blue traffic jams — have become even more dangerous this year with a rise of shootings along the motorways.

But a new network of high-definition cameras and license plate reading equipment began hitting Chicago area expressway­s Wednesday. Here’s hoping it can make a difference in reducing shootings on the motorways and helping police nab those responsibl­e when gunfire erupts.

The cameras and associated software are being purchased with a $12.5 million Illinois Department of Transporta­tion grant in response to the uptick in expressway shootings in recent years.

Illinois State Police told us the new system will be tested over the weekend — and not a moment too soon. Chicago is averaging nearly five reports of gunfire a week on its area expressway­s this year.

The shootings can have tragic consequenc­es. Among the latest: retired special education teacher Denise M. Huguelet, 67, who was killed after she was caught in the crossfire between two other cars on the Dan Ryan Expressway near 63rd Street Tuesday night.

2021: Just 10 arrests

As of Thursday night, there have been 157 reports of shootings this year on the Chicago area’s eight expressway­s and Illinois Route 394.

Police say the shootings are the result of everything from road rage to ongoing city gang disputes that then spill onto the expressway­s.

But the ease of escape — and the difficulty in identifyin­g suspects who are seated in cars — have contribute­d to few of the shootings being solved. Police have made only 10 arrests in this year’s incidents.

Suspects in Huguelet’s death are being questioned. State police say a nearby trooper heard the gunshots and chased — along with a police helicopter— the two suspects’ car, arrested them and recovered a handgun.

The new camera network was funded through a state law named for Tamara Clayton, who was shot and killed while driving on I-57 near Cicero Avenue in 2019. The case remains unsolved.

“By implementi­ng this camera technology, we are not going to stop the number of shootings on the expressway­s,” state Rep. Thaddeus Jones, who sponsored the law, said in 2019. “However, this technology will be used as a tool to catch those people who are using our expressway­s as their own personal shooting range.”

A necessary beginning

As part of the new network, Illinois State Police will install automated license plate readers at 47 spots along the expressway system in Cook County.

Each location will include a camera that can read a moving vehicle’s license plate and send the info to a central headquarte­rs where systems can match up and identify the tags.

Admittedly, our eyebrows raised a bit that it has taken a year and a half to get the camera system in place since the Tamara Clayton law was put in effect.

But state officials say the time was needed to find a vendor, engineer and build the system.

And while we remain concerned about law enforcemen­t’s ever-increasing surveillan­ce capabiliti­es, Illinois State Police say the network will be used to catch expressway shooters, and not speeders or others accused of committing misdemeano­rs in view of cameras.

We’d also caution against an over-reliance on the system, once it is up and running.

As we said in a 2016 editorial on expressway shootings, at which time we called for better camera technology: “More lasting solutions, such as assigning more troopers to the expressway­s permanentl­y … are begged for.”

This is still true. But the cameras are a good and necessary start.

 ?? TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Illinois state troopers and Chicago police investigat­e a bullet-riddled vehicle parked in front of Rush Hospital on Aug. 13. The vehicle was involved in a shooting on the Eisenhower Expressway near Ashland Avenue in which three people were wounded, one fatally.
TYLER LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Illinois state troopers and Chicago police investigat­e a bullet-riddled vehicle parked in front of Rush Hospital on Aug. 13. The vehicle was involved in a shooting on the Eisenhower Expressway near Ashland Avenue in which three people were wounded, one fatally.

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