Dayton Daily News

11 killed, 70 wounded in Chicago over weekend

- By Associated Press

Police attributed the violence primarily to gangs, some of whom use large summer crowds as cover and fire indiscrimi­nately.

At least 11 people CHICAGO — were shot and killed and about 70 others were wounded over the weekend in Chicago, in a spasm of gun violence that police attributed mostly to gangs and that the president’s lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, used to criticize the city’s Democratic leadership.

The violence peaked early Sunday, including one shooting on the city’s South Side that wounded eight people.

By comparison, at least seven people were killed and 32 were wounded during the long Memorial Day weekend, which is often one of the most violent weekends of the year for the city, the Chicago Tribune reported.

Gang members are using large summer crowds as cover in some cases, police Patrol Chief Fred Waller said Sunday.

“They take advantage of that opportunit­y and they shoot into a crowd, no matter who they hit,” he said.

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said one lesson from a wave of weekend violence is that people who live in neighborho­ods where the shootings occurred have to be willing to name potential suspects.

Emanuel held a news conference with Police Superinten­dent Eddie Johnson Monday to address the violence.

Emanuel said residents must be willing to “speak up” and help identify suspects. Johnson echoed that, saying there are often people who know who pulled the trigger but don’t go to police.

Emanuel and Johnson say the weekend shootings were concentrat­ed in just a few neighborho­ods on Chicago’s West and South Sides, in areas where street gangs are entrenched.

Johnson says the shootings “are not random” and are “fueled by gang conflicts.”

Police have said violent crime has declined overall in Chicago. Still, anti-violence protesters have blocked highways to voice their outrage.

Chicago ended 2017 with fewer homicides, 650, than 2016, when there were 771. Although the drop was significan­t, it exceeded the combined number of killings in New York City and Los Angeles, which are the two U.S. cities bigger than Chicago.

Chicago’s gun violence has drawn widespread attention, including from President Donald Trump and his lawyer, Giuliani, who blamed the problem on Chicago’s longtime “Democratic rule” in a series of tweet s on Sunday and Monday.

The former New York City mayor also tweeted his support for Chicago’s former superinten­dent, Garry McCarthy, referring to him as “Jerry” and calling him a “policing genius.” McCarthy announced this year that he plans to run for mayor next February against Democratic Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who fired McCarthy in 2015 after the release of dashcam video showing a white police officer shoot a black teenager 16 times.

Misspellin­g Emanuel’s last name, Giuliani tweeted: “He can do a lot better than Mayor Emmanuel who is fiddling while Chicago burns.”

Giuliani also falsely claimed that Chicago had “63 murders this weekend.”

 ??  ??
 ?? ANTONIO PEREZ / CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Two women cry outside Chicago’s Stroger Hospital after they were asked to leave due to large crowds of shooting victims’ family members and friends.
ANTONIO PEREZ / CHICAGO TRIBUNE Two women cry outside Chicago’s Stroger Hospital after they were asked to leave due to large crowds of shooting victims’ family members and friends.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States