Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

Once again, shootings have us asking, ‘What can be done to stop the violence?’

-

An 8-year-old girl. A senior citizen and her adult son. A grandmothe­r. All four Chicagoans were shot to death in less than a two-week time period, while going about their lives in the city.

Three of these victims were with other family members when they were gunned down. That grim detail is a stark reminder, as National Gun Violence Survivors Week continues through Feb. 7, that every person felled by gun violence — including Melissa Ortega, Gloria and Erskine Binder and Bobbye Johnson — leaves behind severely traumatize­d and grieving loved ones.

Fatal shootings are an epidemic in our city, which racked up more than 800 homicides in 2021, the most in more than two decades. Many Chicagoans have likely grown numb to the endless headlines, or have trained themselves to compartmen­talize to cope. But the circumstan­ces surroundin­g these recent murders, of innocent lives needlessly snuffed out in quick succession, have us asking in desperatio­n once again: What can be done to stop the shootings? Every Chicagoan has some role to play, because these crimes are also a sobering reminder — if one was needed — that we are all vulnerable to gun violence, even during the coldest months of the year and in the midst of a deadly pandemic. No matter the ZIP code, anyone in our city can be sprayed with bullets while involved in the most mundane activity, whether it be waiting for the bus or going for a jog.

Melissa Ortega was walking with her mother to a Little Village bank on Jan. 22 when the alleged gunman, a 16-year-old boy, emerged from a nearby alley and started shooting, killing Melissa and wounding a gang member who was the intended target.

Gloria Binder, 67, was in her car running errands with her family on the morning of Feb. 1 when someone opened fire, killing her and seriously injuring her husband, police said. Seconds earlier, the gunman shot and killed the couple’s 42-year-old son as he walked into a South Side grocery store.

Later that afternoon, Bobbye Johnson,

55, was standing near the Chicago police headquarte­rs when she was caught in a gun battle between a security guard and a rival, authoritie­s said.

A complex problem

Curbing gun violence is a massive task, but the solution absolutely must start with making it much harder for people who shouldn’t have guns to get their hands on a weapon.

When Emilio Corripio allegedly shot Melissa, he was three months into an intensive juvenile probation program for a pair of carjacking­s and possession of a stolen vehicle charge. He had a gun while committing those crimes, authoritie­s said.

It’s understand­able to question why Corripio wasn’t locked up at the time, since he had been on the streets stealing cars while waving a gun around. But the teen was apparently following the required conditions of his release since his first arrest at 15. And locking up juveniles, research has shown, is not a good strategy for rehabilita­tion and crime prevention. One 2015 study showed

that minors who were incarcerat­ed in Chicago were less likely to finish high school and more likely to end up in prison as adults.

The indisputab­le fact: Melissa was the victim of gun violence, which is driven by too-easy access to deadly weapons.

The same can be said of the murders of Gloria and Erskine Binder, who were killed just two weeks after another shooting on the same block, between East Chatham and Grand Crossing, left two people wounded. No one has been charged in the murders or the shooting, but it’s a good bet that the shooters had guns they were not legally entitled to carry.

Bobbye Johnson was killed by a bullet fired by Victor Brown, a security guard,

who was firing at another man, police said. Brown has a record of felony conviction­s for domestic battery and armed robbery, and is now charged with Johnson’s murder.

The man Brown was arguing with, just two blocks from the CPD headquarte­rs, fired at Brown — and Brown fired back at the man with his own weapon, then took a gun from another security guard and kept shooting, police said.

Brown was working as a liquor store security guard, but we’re still wondering why a man with a felony record was able to obtain a gun.

Again and again, deadly weapons keep ending up in the hands of people who shouldn’t have them. Again and again, innocent people are gunned down.

Melissa’s mother, who just moved to Chicago from Mexico in August, learned in the most heart-breaking way imaginable how pervasive gun violence is in our city. She asked why we haven’t been able to end the scourge.

Those of us who’ve been here longer keep wondering that too.

THE INDISPUTAB­LE FACT: MELISSA WAS THE VICTIM OF GUN VIOLENCE, WHICH IS DRIVEN BY TOO-EASY ACCESS TO DEADLY WEAPONS.

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Yesenia Juarez and her family stop by a memorial for 8-year-old Melissa Ortega Jan. 29. at West 26th and South Pulaski.
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Yesenia Juarez and her family stop by a memorial for 8-year-old Melissa Ortega Jan. 29. at West 26th and South Pulaski.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States