Chicago Sun-Times

ACCUSED COP KILLER’S STOMPING GROUNDS

Shomari Legghette prowled the seedy world of Lower Wacker

- BYFRANKMAI­N Staff Reporter

Some of the homeless people who live in the dark netherworl­d of Lower Wacker Drive say they won’t forget Shomari Legghette.

The muscular, 6- foottall man was a bully — and worse, they say.

Last week, a Chicago SunTimes reporter spoke with half a dozen of the down- andout denizens of Lower Wacker. Some of them nodded in recognitio­n when they were shown last week’s photo of Legghette on the front page of the newspaper.

They knew him. And they said they were relieved he’s behind bars — probably for good — on charges of murdering Chicago Police Cmdr. Paul Bauer.

“He’s no good, mean,” one man in a gray hooded sweatshirt said of Legghette. “Really bad.”

“I’m small. He tried to intimidate me. I wouldn’t back down. I used to gang- bang. He didn’t scare me. But he terrorized them.”

The man was pointing to a camp of men and women who are living in blankets and boxes in a concrete enclosure along Lower Wacker a couple of blocks west of the Michigan Avenue Bridge.

Legghette’s last listed address was on the South Side, but he regularly prowled Lower Wacker, according to the residents there.

When most Chicagoans refer to Lower Wacker, what they’re really talking about is the labyrinth of undergroun­d streets and alleys under the downtown area — including Wacker and cross streets such as Post Place, Beaubien Court and Stetson Avenue.

Lower Wacker near Columbus Drive has three levels — the deepest of which is often referred to as Lower Lower Wacker, where trucks can service downtown hotels and office buildings through their basements.

The sidewalks in Lower Wacker are slick with pigeon droppings and black grime. Only the occasional ray of shine breaks through the gloom in the spaces between the ramps.

But this no- man’s land is where dozens of people call home, braving 10- degree winter nights and sweltering summer days. Many are drug addicts. Small- time heroin deals are common. Tiny empty plastic Ziploc bags — which once contained $ 10 doses of heroin — litter the sidewalks.

On summer weekends, outsiders gravitate to the empty streets of Lower Wacker for another reason: drag racing. The roaring engines can be heard in apartments 50 stories up. Occasional­ly, the drivers crash and sometimes die.

The police acknowledg­e that the drag racing and drug dealing are problems — but they also say that crime is not out of control there.

Bauer, who was the commander of the Near North District, had assigned a marked vehicle to patrol LowerWacke­r and sometimes had plaincloth­es officers working

the area in unmarked vehicles, said Anthony Guglielmi, the chief spokesman for the Police Department.

One man hanging out on a ramp leading to Lower Lower Wacker said he knew Bauer— and Legghette.

“Commander Bauer was a good man. He would come down here sometimes to see how we were doing,” said the man, who refused to give his name like all the people the Sun- Times interviewe­d.

Asked about Legghette, the man tensed up.

“He was all business,” the man said. “You didn’t get away with not paying him.”

Legghette was known in the world of LowerWacke­r by his nickname “Strictly Business,” several of the residents said, confirming what police sources told the Sun- Times.

A small group of men who camp together in Lower Lower Wacker said they watch out for each other — and aren’t afraid of violent felons like Legghette.

One by one, three of them reached into the many layers of coats and shirts they were wearing and pulled out tube socks tied off at the ends and filled with coins.

One of the men swung his sock violently.

“We have weapons, too,” he said, smiling.

A review of city crime data shows 154 reports of crimes along Lower Wacker Drive and its side streets in 2017. They included 10 robberies and six cases of narcotics possession.

Thefts were the most frequently reported crime on Lower Wacker last year. There were also 25 assaults and batteries and five motor vehicle thefts.

Of all the crimes reported there in 2017, there have been 24 arrests. Nine of those arrests were for drug possession and two of them were for robberies.

Still, Guglielmi said, “It’s certainly not a haven of violence.”

On the afternoon of Feb. 9, though, someone could have been killed. A shooter in a vehicle fired a gun at another vehicle traveling in the opposite direction on Lower Wacker. No one was hit.

Four days later — last Tuesday, Feb. 13 — police officers were patrolling Lower Wacker in response to that shooting and to recent drug sales, authoritie­s say.

About 1: 30 p. m., the officers approached Legghette to talk to him.

The officers didn’t have any evidence tying him to the shooting but wanted to see if he knew anything about it, authoritie­s say.

One officer got out of his vehicle, announced he was a cop and approached Legghette. That’s when Legghette bolted on foot with the police in hot pursuit.

Bauer, who was downtown for a meeting with aldermen at City Hall, saw Legghette running.

The commander jumped out of his car and chased Legghette into the Thompson Center. They struggled in a stairwell and Legghette, who was wearing body armor, shot Bauer six times, according to Cook County prosecutor­s. Bauer, who was unable to fire his weapon, died at Northweste­rn Memorial Hospital.

Police recovered Legghette’s loaded 9mm handgun, which was equipped with an extended clip of ammunition, according to prosecutor­s.

Police also recovered small amounts of cocaine, heroin and marijuana from Legghette, a convicted felon who’s done prison time for armed robbery, illegal gun possession and drug possession over the past two decades, prosecutor­s said.

Down in Lower Wacker, a homelessma­n said he sawlast Wednesday’s front page of the Chicago Sun- Times, which displayed a photo of Bauer with his daughter, Grace.

Bauer was holding Grace’s hand, and they were smiling.

The homeless man shook his head in grief. They’d met.

“God bless Commander Bauer,” he said.

“HEWAS ALL BUSINESS. YOU DIDN’T GET AWAY WITH NOT PAYING HIM.” MANONA LOWERWACKE­R RAMP, on Shomari Legghette

 ?? | KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? The homeless community under Michigan Avenue in Chicago last week
| KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES The homeless community under Michigan Avenue in Chicago last week
 ?? | AP PHOTOS ?? Cmdr. Paul Bauer, who led the Near North District, was shot to death last week, allegedly by Shomari Legghette.
| AP PHOTOS Cmdr. Paul Bauer, who led the Near North District, was shot to death last week, allegedly by Shomari Legghette.
 ??  ??
 ?? KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES ?? Underneath Michigan Avenue last week.
KEVIN TANAKA/ FOR THE SUN- TIMES Underneath Michigan Avenue last week.
 ?? | MITCHELL ARMENTROUT/ SUN- TIMES ?? Police investigat­e after a man was shot along LowerWacke­r Drive near Garland Court in July 2017.
| MITCHELL ARMENTROUT/ SUN- TIMES Police investigat­e after a man was shot along LowerWacke­r Drive near Garland Court in July 2017.

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