Chicago Sun-Times

NEIGHBORS TOLD, ‘GO INTO YOUR HOUSE!’

Witness recounts end of manhunt for Huesca suspect

- BY SOPHIE SHERRY, STAFF REPORTER ssherry@suntimes.com | @SophiePShe­rry

Eighty-four-year-old Joyce Compton was sitting on her patio Wednesday, as she does most afternoons, when the first police car raced across the lawn of her Glendale Heights apartment complex.

Dozens more followed carrying officers in helmets and shields. One of them shouted at her.

“The guy yelled, ‘Go into your house!’ So I did,” Compton recalled.

Compton said she thought some domestic argument had gotten out of hand, but she later learned the officers were arresting Xavier Tate, suspected of killing Chicago Police Officer Luis Huesca late last month.

Police were saying little about what led them to Glendale Heights, though Compton said she heard one of Tate’s relatives lived in the complex. “He came back from somewhere, he was out of town and came back here — which was a mistake,” she said.

Tate was taken into custody without incident shortly after 7 p.m., according to Belkis Sandoval, a spokespers­on for the U.S. Marshals Service Great Lakes Regional Fugitive Task Force. Sources said the slain officer’s own handcuffs were used to detain him.

An arrest warrant for Tate had been issued last week charging him with first-degree murder in the shooting, which occurred early on April 21 in the Gage Park neighborho­od as Huesca was coming home from work. Tate is also facing charges of aggravated vehicular hijacking and possession of a stolen firearm. In a statement Thursday, the Cook County state’s attorney’s office said it has approved the charges and Tate will appear in court on Friday.

“While we take this critical step, we will continue to gather and analyze further evidence,” the office said. “We extend our deepest sympathies to the family of Officer Huesca and recognize the courage of all our officers. We remain steadfast in our pursuit to ensure that justice is served for Officer Huesca and the city he served.”

Tate had eluded authoritie­s for a week and a half even though his photos were distribute­d widely by police and a reward of $100,000 was offered. The search took authoritie­s to Wisconsin and Iowa, sources said.

The day after Huesca was killed, Chicago police released a community alert containing surveillan­ce videos of a person wanted for questionin­g. The alert did not name the person but said he should be “considered armed and dangerous.”

Four days later, police issued an arrest warrant for the person in the alert, identifyin­g him as Xavier Tate and charging him with first-degree murder.

As the warrant was being issued, a fugitive task force was recovering Huesca’s missing service weapon. Officers had arrived at a home in the 10800 block of South Hale Street during the afternoon of April 26 to talk to a woman about Huesca’s killing, authoritie­s said.

A relative of Tate, Caschaus Tate, 20, stopped the officers at the door, then went out a back door and was seen tossing Huesca’s Glock 9 mm pistol over a fence, according to a police report. Tate was arrested and charged with unlawful use of a weapon. He remains in jail.

Compton found it hard to believe that the search would end near her apartment. She had just moved to the Glendale Heights complex a few years ago to be closer to her older sister.

“I tell you, if anything more like this happened, I don’t know where I would go,” she said as she smoked and worked on a scratchoff. “I mean, where are you safe anymore?”

 ?? PHOTO PROVIDED TO THE SUN-TIMES ?? Police arrest Xavier L. Tate Jr., 22, in Glendale Heights Wednesday evening.
PHOTO PROVIDED TO THE SUN-TIMES Police arrest Xavier L. Tate Jr., 22, in Glendale Heights Wednesday evening.

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