Chicago Sun-Times

‘ WILLIE’ COOPER’S MURDER SPARKS FEAR AMONG ACTIVISTS

- Email: marym@ suntimes. com MARY MITCHELL @ MaryMitche­llCST

William “Willie” Cooper, 58, was gunned down on Saturday near the “Lilydale OutreachWo­rkers for a Better Community,” a nonprofit organizati­on he ran.

A car drove up on 95th Street near the Dan Ryan Expressway. Someone waved Cooper over to that car, and someone in that vehicle wielding an AR- 15 assault weapon fatally shot Cooper in the mouth and torso.

He was pronounced dead on the street.

So far, police have made no arrests.

But Cooper’s death has had a chilling effect on the community.

After all, if someone known for helping teenagers find jobs and ex- offenders get back on their feet could get assassinat­ed on the street, then what hope is there?

People who knew Cooper describe him as the “Mayor of 95th” Street.

But so far, no one has stepped up with the informatio­n police need to make an arrest.

Besides running his own anti- violence group, Cooper was associated with CeaseFire, now known as “Cure Violence.”

“Willie was one of my first violence interrupte­rs. He helped mediate over 50 conflicts that could have turned deadly while he worked with me. Everybody loved him and respected his office,” said Tio Hardiman, the former director of Ceasefire Illinois.

“Cure Violence” is part of the UIC School of Public Health. Cooper was last employed by “Cure Violence” in 2009, according to a spokesman for UIC.

But apparently not everyone respected Cooper’s street cred.

According to sources, there’s gang fighting in that stretch of 95th Street, and Cooper was right in the middle of it. That conflict allegedly pits older gang members against younger gang members and could have led to Cooper’s assassinat­ion.

“This thing is going to escalate. The older guys are not going to take this sitting down. It’s going to be 100 percent retaliatio­n,” the source said.

If that’s true, then 95th Street could become one of the deadliest streets in the city.

It is hard to imagine that the violence could get any worse.

Last weekend was the deadliest non- holiday weekend of the year, with 10 people killed, including 10- year- old Gustavo Garcia.

The fact that Cooper is so widely known in the area where he was shot suggests that his killers aren’t concerned about being caught, which speaks to the number of shooting cases that go unsolved.

“I do believe he was targeted. Who targeted him, I don’t know,” said Bamani Obadele, a longtime community activist who served six months in prison on corruption charges under the Rod Blagojevic­h administra­tion.

“But if a fellow activist can be shot, they can shoot Andrew Holmes. They could shoot me. [ Cooper] was trying to bring all sides together to intervene,” Obadele said.

Holmes usually shows up on the scene after a shooting, and he urges the community to cooperate with police.

Some people considered Cooper the “neighborho­od protector,” Obadele said.

“Last week, he stopped a security guard from chasing a kid down the street for stealing some hair out of one of the stores. My point is anyone who worked up in that part of Roseland and Princeton Park knewWillie Cooper and knew what he was all about,” he added.

But Cooper’s murder— in broad daylight on a busy thoroughfa­re like 95th Street— shows the people who are behind the guns don’t even fear getting caught.

Police are not ready to say Cooper was targeted, and they do not have a motive for this killing.

However, police found a small amount of heroin on Cooper when he was killed. Detectives are exploring the possibilit­y that Cooper, who had gang involvemen­t in his past, might have had contact with the “gang lifestyle” or was involved with some type of “drug interactio­ns,” a police source said.

Hardiman said it is “highly” unusual for a 58- year- old man to be killed in a gang dispute.

“I can’t see anybody harmingWil­lie because of anything associated with any type of gang situation. I just think he was shot, and he was targeted for sure,” said Hardiman, who is running for governor.

I hate to say it. I hate to even think it.

But this brazen killing is reminiscen­t of the violence committed by drug cartels in Mexico.

If the killer’s intent was to intimidate an entire community into silence, then that tactic is apparently working.

 ?? | SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? Tio Hardiman ( shown in June) says of William “Willie” Cooper: “Willie was one of my first violence interrupte­rs. He helped mediate over 50 conflicts that could have turned deadly while he worked with me. Everybody loved him and respected his office.”
| SUN- TIMES FILE PHOTO Tio Hardiman ( shown in June) says of William “Willie” Cooper: “Willie was one of my first violence interrupte­rs. He helped mediate over 50 conflicts that could have turned deadly while he worked with me. Everybody loved him and respected his office.”
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