Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Three are killed, 37 shot in Chicago

- By Hannah Leone and Morgan Greene

CHICAGO — At least 37 people were shot in Chicago from 11 a.m. Saturday through Sunday morning. Thirty-one were shot after midnight with 25 of them shot in five multi-injury shootings over 2½ hours. Three people have died.

Of those shot, 16 were teenagers.

At 16th Street and Avers, where evidence of the annual block party was scattered on the ground, lime-green Tshirts dotted the groups of people still gathered on sidewalks after a shooting around midnight.

One man stood alone, leaning against a chain link fence on the north side of 16th Street, watching police work the large crime scene to his east. He estimated more than 1,000 people had been there. He talked freely but did not want to be identified. He’s lived in the neighborho­od his whole life.

“I know the rules,” he said.

He’d been on his way out when he heard the gunshots, he said. He commented on the brazenness of shootings he’s grown accustomed to.

“If they shoot you they don’t even run,” he said. “They just walk away, they ain’t trying to run.”

Calls of shots fired continued to blare on the scanners for the zone, even with all the police in the area of some of the calls. While officers were still on the scene at Avers, two gunmen shot at a group a little more than half-a-mile away.

Blood thickened on the sidewalk in front of the door to a brick apartment building on the north side of Douglas Boulevard in between Millard and Lawndale avenues and dotted the sidewalk further north. Dozens of people remained outside, some sitting on the steps in front of Stone Temple Baptist Church.

One young man in a backward Bulls cap sat down on the curb away from everyone else, put his head in his hands, and cried.

Others congregate­d at Mount Sinai Hospital, leaning against cars and embracing on the sidewalk. Yellow crime scene tape encircled two cars outside the emergency room, a white sedan and a black one that had its front crumpled and windshield cracked.

Mount Sinai’s emergency department for a few hours was on bypass and accepting no new emergencie­s “just because of the sheer amount of shootings,” spokesman Dan Regan said.

“We went off of bypass around 8:30 this morning, so we are back to normal operations in terms of accepting patients,” Mr. Regan said.

“Our folks are unfortunat­ely well-versed in dealing with these kinds of situations,” he said.

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