Police leaders praise response to violence, weather, NASCAR race over holiday


After a long Fourth of July weekend that featured a visit from the president, the first ever NASCAR street race, historic storms and scores of mostly illegal fireworks displays, the leaders of Chicago’s emergency response agencies gathered Wednesday to praise the efforts of first responders.

“Every instance required advanced coordination and collaboration and I could not be more proud of the men and women of the Chicago Police Department,” interim police Superintendent Fred Waller said Wednesday.

But still, the holiday weekend maintained its reputation for violence as eight people were killed and another 57 were wounded in nonfatal shootings across the city between Friday evening and Tuesday night, according to police statistics.

Among those killed were 15-year-old Daniela Alvarez and 48-year-old Karina Gonzalez, who died after they were shot around midnight Sunday while they were inside a home in Little Village.

“I don’t remember, in all the time I’ve been a policeman, a weekend where we had so many things clustered together, so many events on top of Fourth of July, which historically has been probably the most violent weekend (of the year),” Waller added. “And the numbers were good up until … and we know what we faced earlier this morning.”

Waller’s “up until” comment was in reference to a mass shooting that occurred in Englewood early Wednesday. Around 4:47 a.m., five people were shot outside in the 5600 block of South Ada Street, according to police. One victim, a 35-year-old man, was pronounced dead at University of Chicago Medical Center.

Police tape and debris is left on the ground in the 5600 block of Ada Street on July 5, 2023. Someone opened fire on a group gathered outside in the Englewood neighborhood early Wednesday morning, hitting five victims, one fatally, said Chicago police, adding that another man died of a beating.

Another person, a 21-year-old man, was critically injured when he was attacked with a baseball bat in the same incident. Waller said that evidence technicians recovered more than 100 spent shell casings at the scene.

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Fatal shootings have ticked down slightly in 2023 compared to last year, according to police data. Through July 2, CPD detectives had initiated 303 homicide investigations on the year, down from 323 in the first six months of 2022. Aggravated batteries — nonfatal shootings — have risen by 4%, though.

And though the weekend’s severe storms delayed Sunday’s NASCAR race and caused flood damage on the city’s West Side and in the west suburbs, inclement weather can be a blessing for Chicago police officials working to tamp down the city’s entrenched gun violence. Waller acknowledged that the storms kept people inside, but again praised the efforts of CPD officers.

“The weather being what it was for NASCAR, I’m sure…

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Read More: Police leaders praise response to violence, weather, NASCAR race over holiday 2023-07-05 23:25:00

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