Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

GUN USED IN MURDER SPREE TIED TO PAST SHOOTINGS IN CHICAGO

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @FrankMainN­ews

Ballistics tests show the .45-caliber handgun used in a Jan. 9 terror spree that started on the South Side and ended in Evanston — leaving four people dead and three wounded — had been used in previous “shooting incidents” in Chicago, police said.

Tom Ahern, a spokesman for the Chicago Police Department, said he didn’t know whether anyone was killed or wounded in the earlier shootings or when and where they took place.

Investigat­ors have tested the gun that authoritie­s say Jason Nightengal­e used in the spree earlier this month and have linked it to bullet casings found at other shooting incidents in Chicago that remain under investigat­ion, Ahern said.

Police and the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives also are investigat­ing how Nightengal­e got the gun. That, too, remains under investigat­ion.

The spree that ended in Evanston began, authoritie­s say, when Nightengal­e, 32, of Chicago, fatally shot Yiran Fan in the head as the 30-year-old University of Chicago graduate student sat in a car in an East Hyde Park parking garage.

Nearby, at the Barclay condo building in the 5400 block of South East End Avenue, Nightengal­e shot and killed a doorwoman, Aisha Nevell, 46, and wounded a 77-year-old woman in the building’s lobby, authoritie­s say.

They say he then drove to 93rd Street and Halsted Avenue in Brainerd, where he fatally shot 20-year-old Anthony Faulkner Jr. inside a convenienc­e store where Faulkner was buying snacks and a lottery ticket. He also wounded an 81-year-old woman who was working behind the counter.

Then, authoritie­s say Nightengal­e shot a 15-year-old girl in the head in the 10300 block of South Halsted Avenue through the window of the car she was riding in with her mother. The girl was left in critical condition.

The rampage ended nearly four hours later, at about 5:40 p.m., when Nightengal­e shot and killed Marta Torres, 61, after taking her hostage at an IHOP restaurant at 101 Asbury Ave. on the Evanston side of Howard Street.

Evanston police officers said they killed Nightengal­e in a shootout after he ran out of the restaurant.

The gun Nightengal­e used was purchased at a store in the Chicago area and was stolen from a legitimate owner, a law enforcemen­t source said.

Police believe the gun was on the street for a “long, long time,” the source said.

Nightengal­e, a father of twin girls, listed jobs over the years as a janitor, security guard, taxi driver and forklift operator, according to his LinkedIn page.

His family said he “was fighting some demons.” In the week before the shootings, he had posted dozens of videos online in which he ranted about Satan, waved a gun and talked about killing random people.

Court records show Nightengal­e once lived in the Hyde Park area where the spree began as well as in Rogers Park, near the Chicago-Evanston border where he was killed.

The police haven’t said whether they know a motive for the killings.

 ??  ??
 ?? EVANSTON POLICE DEPARTMENT ?? The Evanston Police Department says Jason Nightengal­e used this gun during a deadly shootout with Evanston cops on Jan. 9.
EVANSTON POLICE DEPARTMENT The Evanston Police Department says Jason Nightengal­e used this gun during a deadly shootout with Evanston cops on Jan. 9.
 ??  ?? Jason Nightengal­e
Jason Nightengal­e

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States