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Tag: chicago crime

  • Gov. JB Pritzker expecting federal ‘actions’ by weekend as local officials brace for 300 immigration agents

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    Amid growing angst, anxiety and even annoyance over the continued sketchy details surrounding the Trump administration’s threats to deploy forces into Chicago, Gov. JB Pritzker on Wednesday said he expects federal agents to assemble here by the end of the week, and suburban officials have been told to expect about 300 immigration agents to be sent to the area as part of increased operations.

    “They haven’t confirmed any of that to us, but what we’re hearing is that they’ll be assembled, ready to go on Friday, and that they will begin actions on Saturday,” Pritzker said, referring to possible additional immigration enforcement in the Chicago area.

    Pritzker’s latest comments came after President Donald Trump once again said he wanted the two-term governor to ask him to send in the National Guard to help stem crime in Chicago — a move Pritzker has repeatedly vowed he would not do, arguing it’s unnecessary and an authoritarian move to put troops on the streets of the nation’s third-largest city.

    While Trump has said the issue of sending troops to Chicago isn’t political, his campaign team sent out a fundraising email Wednesday stating, “WE’RE GOING INTO CHICAGO” and declaring as “breaking news,” “CHICAGO WILL BE LIBERATED.”

    The email sought donations of as little as $15 to “join the MAGA Blitz and say: LIBERATE CHICAGO – SAVE AMERICA – STAND WITH TRUMP!”

    “The Radical Left Governors and Mayors of crime ridden cities don’t want to stop the radical crime. I wish they’d just give me a call. I’d gain respect for them,” Trump was quoted in the email from his political team. “This isn’t a political thing; We have the right to do it because I HAVE AN OBLIGATION TO KEEP AMERICA SAFE!”

    During his comments in Washington, Trump claimed Chicagoans want him to send the National Guard into the city and that politicians who oppose such a move, including Pritzker, are “out of tune” with their constituents.

    As Trump attempted to lure Pritzker into asking for the president’s help, he did find another governor — Louisiana Republican Gov. Jeff Landry — asking for federal assistance, with Trump pivoting to say he might send Guard troops to New Orleans.

    The move appeared to be aimed at cutting into the criticism from Democratic governors that the White House was only focusing on blue states.

    “We have a great thing going. I could do that with Chicago. We could do that with New York. We could do it with Los Angeles,” Trump said. “So we’re making a determination now, do we go to Chicago, or do we go to a place like New Orleans, where we have a great governor?”

    Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, right, listens during a bilateral meeting between President Donald Trump, left, and Polish President Karol Nawrocki, not pictured, in the Oval Office at the White House on Sept. 3, 2025, in Washington. (Alex Wong/Getty)

    Pritzker, a 2028 presidential aspirant, maintained on Wednesday that he thought the Trump administration was staging the Texas National Guard for deployment in Illinois, even after a report from the Houston Chronicle on Tuesday said Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office had denied that claim.

    “I’m not suggesting that I am absolutely certain of whether or not the Texas National Guard will, in fact, end up in the state of Illinois. What I know is that we’ve been told by people who seem to have the credentials to know,” Pritzker said Wednesday at the Metropolitan Peace Academy on the Lower West Side.

    The governor also reiterated that the state “cannot stand in the way” of federal law enforcement.

    “It’s not like we’re going to have armed men standing in between,” he said, but rather, the state could combat potential illegal actions in court.

    As the politicians spoke with reporters, local law enforcement near the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago, which is expected to act as the nerve center for the federal effort, met with federal authorities who on Wednesday morning briefed them on the roughly 300 agents’ arrival and the potential for the National Guard’s deployment, according to Gregory Jackson, chief of staff for North Chicago Mayor Leon Rockingham Jr. The city’s police chief, Laz Perez, was among those in attendance, Jackson said.

    As a result, Rockingham and Waukegan Mayor Sam Cunningham said they are taking steps to ensure the safety of people in their communities, where there is fear of family separation in mixed families where some members are documented and others are not.

    “I don’t believe that a time has come in our country where the National Guard and ICE are coming into our community to basically scare the Latino population,” Rockingham said. “I didn’t think our country would ever get to that point.”

    The officers will stay in hotels in Waukegan, Gurnee and possibly other area communities. National Guard troops will be used as they were in Los Angeles to protect federal buildings, Jackson said.

    Federal buildings in the area include the Navy base, the James A. Lovell Federal Health Care Center and an FBI firing range in North Chicago, as well as a U.S. Social Security Office in Waukegan.

    Along with representatives of law enforcement from neighboring communities, Jackson said U.S. Navy personnel and naval police were at the briefing, as well as representatives of ICE, U.S. Customs and Border Patrol and the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.

    The main gate of Naval Station Great Lakes before sunset on Sept 2, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
    The main gate of Naval Station Great Lakes before sunset on Sept 2, 2025. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

    With the naval base in North Chicago becoming a focal point of the federal effort, Illinois U.S. Sens. Dick Durbin and Tammy Duckworth, both Democrats, said they had requested a meeting with the secretary of the Navy about “Trump’s plan to use Naval Station Great Lakes to house ICE officers.”

    Durbin, the top Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, also demanded the committee’s chair schedule a hearing on “Trump’s threats to deploy the military to Chicago and other American cities,” according to his office.

    Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth told Fox News on Wednesday that he thought a federal judge’s ruling this week that found the deployment of the National Guard to Los Angeles to be unconstitutional would be overturned.

    In June, Trump sent more than 2,000 Guard members to California following protests over stepped-up immigration enforcement actions. But a federal judge in California on Tuesday issued an injunction that prohibits the Trump administration from using federalized National Guard troops and military personnel in that state for law enforcement activities.

    Hegseth touted the cooperation the Trump administration has received from Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser as “the right kind of collaboration with state, local, city law enforcement” and called it a “template” for other cities.

    But the District of Columbia is not a state. Rather, it is a federal district where Trump has greater latitude than he does in dealing with state governors and state sovereignty.

    Hegseth declined to provide a timeline for potential Guard intervention in Chicago, saying that the decision lies with the president.

    “Whether it’s Chicago or Baltimore or New Orleans, wherever it is, we will be proud to partner with law enforcement that will partner with us. But, as the president has said, he wants governors to invite us in. And, unfortunately, you have got some governors that aren’t willing to do that in Illinois and Maryland,” Hegseth said.

    Gov. JB Pritzker speaks with reporters after leaving a meeting with community violence intervention leaders Wednesday, Sept. 3, 2025, at Metropolitan Peace Academy in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
    Gov. JB Pritzker talks with reporters after leaving a meeting with community violence intervention leaders Sept. 3, 2025, at Metropolitan Peace Academy in the Pilsen neighborhood of Chicago. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

    Pritzker on Wednesday said he thought the president might be floating actions in the more Trump-friendly state of Louisiana in response to Tuesday’s court ruling.

    The governor also suggested the administration was pushing for him to call the president in order to help in possible future litigation.

    “He’s going to end up in court,” Pritzker said, “and that will be a fact that they will use in court, that the governor called to ask for help, and I’m sorry, I’m not going to provide him with evidence to support his desire to have the court rule in his favor.”

    Steve Sadin is a freelance reporter.

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    Olivia Olander, Steve Sadin, Rick Pearson

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  • Pilsen mourns community ‘icon’ caught in crossfire after years of homelessness, relatives say

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — A memorial is growing on Tuesday at the spot where a man was killed while standing in the crossfire of a Southwest Side gun battle over the weekend, relatives told ABC7.

    When the sound of gunfire erupted near Juanita Romero’s home, she did not know that the violence took the life of her decades-old friend, who family members identified as Pedro Toledo.

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    “He was the icon of this community. Everybody loved him,” Romero said. “There was a lot of gunshots. I jumped out of my bed. It scared me so much.”

    Balloons, candles, and a picture of the man beloved in the Pilsen community now mark the area where his life ended and his loved ones’ heartache began.

    “He will never be forgotten. He will always be remembered here,” Romero said.

    Relatives say the 57-year-old, who was affectionately known as Pepe, was one of three people shot on Sunday morning near 17th and Wolcott when multiple gunmen opened fire.

    Summer 2025 violence: Tracking shootings across Chicago Live updates

    Police say Toledo was shot multiple times. He was the only victim of that shooting who died from his injuries.

    Toledo’s family and friends told ABC7 he was an innocent bystander, caught in the crossfire of gun violence after years of experiencing homelessness.

    “He survived all these years through winters, through COVID, and nothing ever happened to him. And for him to die this way, it’s just not fair,” Romero said.

    “Friends and family say they plan to gather at the memorial until Toledo is laid to rest. Relatives said his funeral arrangements are pending. So far, no one has been arrested in connection with the shooting.

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  • Gov. JB Pritzker braces Chicagoans for federal incursion as Trump says ‘we’re going in’ but won’t say when

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    In the face of continued and confusing threats that Chicago would be subjected to a federal incursion over immigration and crime, Gov. JB Pritzker on Tuesday sought to brace Chicagoans for a spike in raids from federal authorities and even potentially the National Guard in coming days.

    “Let’s be clear, the terror and cruelty is the point, not the safety of anyone living here,” Pritzker said at a downtown news conference, standing alongside Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson, Cook County President Toni Preckwinkle and other state leaders.

    While Trump remained ambiguous — even in his most recent comments Tuesday — about a timeline or the details of a federal crackdown in Illinois, Pritzker made it clear his administration thinks Trump plans to deploy armed military personnel to Chicago’s streets and direct immigration enforcement agents to “raid Latino communities” in the coming weeks.

    The deployments would look similar to recent actions the Trump administration took in Los Angeles and Washington, D.C., Pritzker said, citing conversations with unnamed sources and journalists, though he acknowledged the administration’s plans are blanketed in rumors and speculation, and the governor blamed Washington for a lack of coordination.

    The governor’s announcement in Chicago came just hours after Trump told reporters in Washington that it was a matter of when — not if — he would send members of the National Guard into Chicago over the city’s crime problem.

    “Well, we’re going in. I didn’t say when we’re going in,” Trump told reporters in the Oval Office. “Look, I have an obligation. This isn’t a political thing. I have an obligation when we lose, when 20 people are killed over the last two and a half weeks, and 75 are shot with bullets.”

    But Pritzker countered that the move was not only political but authoritarian, adding that he specifically has “reason to believe that the Trump administration has already begun staging the Texas National Guard for deployment in Illinois.” The Texas Military Department didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment on Pritzker’s remarks, but in a published report in the Houston Chronicle Texas Gov. Greg Abbott’s office disputed the claim.

    How Trump’s moves would actually occur, however, remained unclear. Earlier Tuesday, a federal judge in California issued an injunction that prohibits the Trump administration from using federalized National Guard troops and military personnel in that state for law enforcement activities. The judge said the Trump administration “willfully” broke federal law by sending Guard troops to the Los Angeles area in early June after days of protests over immigration raids. Trump dismissed the ruling as a decision from a “radically left judge.”

    Pritzker said the state has heard from representatives within the Trump administration that it planned to soon send agents from the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agency to assist ICE agents in Chicago. Already, the administration is “staging military vehicles on federal property,” including at the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago, Pritzker said.

    Federal officials are preparing for raids, Pritzker said, potentially timed to coincide with planned celebrations for Mexican Independence Day this month — though he later added he was not suggesting people change their plans in anticipation of potential immigration enforcement actions.

    Gov. JB Pritzker, center, invites Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson to talk about the planned deployment of federal military and Department of Homeland Security personnel to Chicago during a news conference on Sept. 2, 2025. Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton is at right. (John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune)

    The governor said Trump would be looking for “any excuse” to send active duty military to Chicago.

    “If someone flings a sandwich at an ICE agent, Trump will try to go on TV and declare an emergency in Chicago,” Pritzker said, apparently referring to a widely shared incident in Washington in which a person threw a sandwich at a federal officer. “I’m imploring everyone, if and when that happens, do not take the bait.”

    The governor said he expected the amplified federal presence to last around one month.

    The latest intelligence relayed by the governor came after the head of Illinois State Police received a phone call from Trump border official Gregory Bovino over the weekend “indicating that ICE would be deployed to Chicago,” Pritzker told reporters. It is the first outreach the state has received from the Trump administration on the issue, the governor said.

    Bovino spearheaded Trump’s immigration crackdown in Los Angeles and is known for his aggressive tactics and social media videos promoting his agents’ role in deporting thousands of immigrants.

    “Bovino was short on details and long on rhetoric,” Pritzker said Tuesday.

    Pritzker continued to call for Chicagoans to peacefully protest against Trump’s actions, look out for neighbors and know their rights in the face of immigration enforcement. Chicagoans should also “film things that you see happening in your neighborhoods and your streets and share them with the news media,” he said.

    “Our goal is not to scare anyone but to prepare everyone to face some ugly realities in the coming days,” Lt. Gov. Juliana Stratton said at the same news conference Tuesday. “Many Illinoisans who look a certain way are going to spend this time living in deep fear.”

    A man runs south on Main Street past the main gate at the Naval Station Great Lakes on Sept 2, 2025, in North Chicago. Gov. JB Pritzker said the administration is "staging military vehicles on federal property," including at the Naval Station Great Lakes in North Chicago. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)
    A man runs south on Main Street past the main gate at the Naval Station Great Lakes on Sept 2, 2025, in North Chicago. Gov. JB Pritzker said the administration is “staging military vehicles on federal property,” including at the Naval Station Great Lakes. (Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune)

    Before Pritzker’s public comments Tuesday, Trump renewed his criticisms of the Democratic governor and said he’s responsible for crime in Chicago.

    “There’s no place, there’s no place in the world, including you can go to Afghanistan. You can go to places that you would think of, they don’t even come close to this. Chicago is a hellhole right now,” he said.

    The president’s comments came following a Labor Day weekend that saw more than four dozen people shot and eight killed between 10 p.m. Friday and 5 p.m. Monday.

    Even though the spotlight was once again turned on Chicago violence with the threat of Trump sending in the National Guard, CPD records show the 2025 Labor Day weekend’s killing total actually was slightly down compared to other recent years. Records reviewed by the Tribune show that the Labor Day weekend in Chicago has on average in recent years resulted in 11 killings and about 38 other nonfatal shootings.

    The worst recent year came in 2020, when 14 people were killed and 44 were wounded over that holiday period. This year’s figure comes during a continuing trend of better violence numbers in the city since the COVID-19 pandemic. Before the weekend began, Chicago had recorded 266 homicides in 2025, according to the Police Department. That was a 32% decline in killings from the same time period in 2024. Total shooting incidents were also down 36% citywide.

    Trump had previously warned of National Guard intervention in Chicago but had said he would like to be invited by Pritzker — something the two-term Democratic governor said would not happen.

    President Donald Trump spoke about sending National Guard troops to Chicago during a press conference in the Oval Office at the White House on Sept. 2, 2025. (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)
    President Donald Trump talks about sending National Guard troops to Chicago during a news conference in the Oval Office at the White House on Sept. 2, 2025. (Mark Schiefelbein/AP)

    Also during the news conference, Trump contended that a morning TV show interviewed a dozen people urging Guard intervention in Chicago.

    “Most of them were African American. They were Black. And they were saying, ‘Please, please, please, let the president send it.’ These were people from Chicago. ‘Please. We need help. We need help. We can’t walk outside. We’re petrified,’” Trump said.

    “If the governor of Illinois would call up, call me up. I would love to do it now. We’re going to do it anyway. We have the right to do it because I have an obligation to protect this country,” he said.

    Asked about violence in Chicago, Johnson pointed the finger back at Trump for the city’s ongoing gun violence epidemic — including this past holiday weekend because “the president continues to allow tens of thousands of guns to be trafficked into our state and our city.”

    “Every time someone is shot, every time someone loses their life to violence, it’s a tragedy,” Johnson said. “The fact of the matter is, is that we have illegal guns that are being trafficked in our city. That’s the problem, right? We have done everything in our power locally getting guns off the streets of Chicago.”

    The mayor also staunchly rejected the notion Trump would help the situation by sending in troops and instead said local leaders will “take every single measure that we can to protect our people from these threats.”

    Trump, who federalized law enforcement in Washington, D.C., as well as deployed the National Guard, said the nation’s capital “serves as a template, and we’re going to do it elsewhere, but Chicago is certainly going to be high.”

    Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson appear on a television screen in downtown Chicago on Sept. 2, 2025, as they respond after President Donald Trump said he's sending troops to the city. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)
    Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson appear on a television screen in downtown Chicago on Sept. 2, 2025, as they respond after President Donald Trump said he’s sending troops to the city. (Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune)

    But Trump has greater power to federalize resources, such as the Guard, in the District of Columbia, which is not a state. The president’s power is limited elsewhere by state sovereignty.

    “It’s an honor to do it. … A lot of presidents wouldn’t do what I’m doing. I don’t need this heat. But when I watch television last night and I’m watching the news and I see that nine people were killed in Chicago and 54 were badly wounded with bullets. I say, ‘That’s not this country. We have to do something,’” Trump said. “We have a lot of people. We have a great force. We have a great military force.”

    After he spoke to reporters, the White House issued a statement asking, “For J.B. Pritzker, When Will Enough Be Enough?”

    “Pritzker is too blinded by Trump Derangement Syndrome to … act in the best interest of his constituents and end this bloodshed,” the statement said. “The Trump Administration’s message to Chicagoans and residents in Democrat-run cities nationwide is simple: You don’t have to live like this.”

    Chicago Tribune’s Alice Yin, Sam Charles and Dan Petrella contributed.

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  • Chicago police warn of armed thief targeting North Park, Norwood Park stores

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    ByABC7 Chicago Digital Team

    Tuesday, September 2, 2025 3:21AM

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago police issued a warning on Sunday about an armed thief targeting Northwest Side businesses.

    In each incident, the suspect enters a store, points a handgun at the clerk and demands money from the register, police said. The suspect then flees the scene with the stolen money.

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    The robberies happened in the North Park and Norwood Park neighborhoods at the following times and locations:

    • 5100-block of North Kimball Ave. on Aug. 15 at 11:20 p.m.

    • 3400-block of West Peterson Ave. on Aug. 17 at 10:28 p.m.

    • 5100-block of North Kimball Ave. on Aug. 30 at 11:44 p.m.

    • 6300-block of North Milwaukee Ave. on Aug. 30 at 11:53 p.m.

    The suspect is described as a male of an unknown age who wears dark clothing and a facemask.

    Police asked anyone with information to contact Area Five detectives at 312-746-7384 or submit an anonymous tip at CPDTIP.com and use reference # P25-5-023A.

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  • Chicago shootings: At least 43 shot, 7 fatally, in Labor Day weekend gun violence, police say

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — At least 43 people have been shot, seven fatally, in shootings across Chicago so far this Labor Day weekend, police said.

    The weekend gun violence comes as the Trump administration prepares to potentially deploy the National Guard to the Chicago area.

    Summer 2025 violence: Tracking shootings across Chicago | Live updates

    A woman was shot and killed in a South Shore apartment on Friday night.

    The shooting happened at about 11:56 p.m. in the 7700-block of S. Essex Avenue, according to police.

    Police found two women with gunshot wounds inside the apartment.

    A 25-year-old woman was shot twice to the abdomen, and once to the left leg. Police said she was taken to University of Chicago Hospital where she died.

    READ MORE | Woman killed, other hurt in South Shore apartment shooting, police say

    A deadly shooting investigation is underway in East Garfield Park on Saturday, Chicago police said.

    The shooting happened at about 11:01 a.m. in the 500-block of North Sawyer, police said.

    Police said two men, 29 and 32, were standing outside when a dark SUV pulled up.

    A suspect got out of the SUV and started shooting in their direction, Chicago police said

    The 29-year-old male was shot multiple times; he was taken Mt. Sinai Hospital where he died.

    READ MORE | Man killed in East Garfield Park shooting, Chicago police say

    A woman was shot to death in the Altgeld Gardens neighborhood on Saturday evening, police said.

    The shooting happened at about 7:46 p.m. in the 900-block of E. 131st Street, police said.

    A 43-year-old woman was approached by five male suspects and they started to shoot at her, police said.

    She was taken to an area hospital with multiple gunshot wounds, where she died.

    Nobody is in custody.

    READ MORE | Woman killed after being approached by 5 armed suspects, Chicago police say

    On Sunday, a 33-year-old man was shot to death during an argument in Englewood, police said.

    The shooting happened at about 2:52 a.m. in the 6300-block of S. Elizabeth Street.

    The man was shot in the head and died at the scene, police said. Nobody is in custody.

    Chicago police are also investigating two separate drive-by shootings.

    In Bronzeville, at least seven people were shot at about 11:10 p.m. on Saturday in the 3500-block of S. State Street, police said.

    All victims were taken to area hospitals and are expected to be OK.

    In Humboldt Park, at least four people were shot at about 1:11 a.m. on Sunday in the 2700-block of W. Haddon Avenue, police said.

    A man was killed in a triple shooting on Sunday, Chicago police said.

    The shooting happened at about 1:39 a.m. in the 1900 block of W. 17th Street.

    Police said three men, aged 41, 43 and 46, were outside when a male suspect approached and started shooting.

    All three were taken to an area hospital.

    The 46-year-old man was shot multiple times, police said he died at the hospital.

    The other two were shot in the legs and are expected to be OK.

    A teenage boy was shot on the city’s West Side on Sunday afternoon, Chicago police said.

    Police said the shooting happened in the Lawndale neighborhood’s 1500-block of South Christiana Avenue just after 5 p.m.

    A 14-year-old boy was near the sidewalk when someone approached him, took out a gun and fired shots, police said.

    The victim, shot in the arm and hand, went to St. Anthony Hospital in good condition.

    There is no one in custody, and area detectives are investigating.

    Police did not immediately provide further information about the shooting.

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  • Man runs into elementary school for help after Uptown shooting injures him and 9-year-old girl

    Man runs into elementary school for help after Uptown shooting injures him and 9-year-old girl

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Evidence markers littered the sidewalks after an eruption of gunfire had North Side school kids seeking cover on Friday afternoon.

    “It’s shocking, because I never thought I would see this many cops at this time over here,” said Uptown resident Lisette Gonzalez.

    The shooting happened around 3:30 p.m. as school was letting out at Goudy Elementary near Winona Street and Winthrop Avenue, steps from the Argyle CTA Red Line stop.

    “This cannot happen again,” said 48th Ward Ald. Leni Manaa-Hoppenworth. “Any instance of gun violence, especially when it’s around children, is unacceptable.”

    Police said a 9-year-old girl was grazed by a bullet in the calf while standing on a sidewalk.

    A 45-year-old man was shot in the arm, and officials said he ran into the school for help.

    The principal said teachers helped put pressure on his wound until help arrived.

    It is unclear if that injured 9-year-old was a student at the school or just passing by.

    Police say both shooting victims are expected to be OK.

    But many in the neighborhood are alarmed by a rise in violence in the police district that includes Uptown.

    There has been a 60% increase in shootings in the first 10 months of this year compared to the same period last year.

    The alderperson asked for more police.

    “We would love to see more patrols in this area, especially foot patrols, bike patrols,” Manaa-Hoppenworth said.

    No one is in custody. Police have not said who the shooter or shooters were targeting and why, and it is unclear if the two victims were together or were on different parts of the block.

    Chicago shootings: Tracking gun violence in 2024, with live updates

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  • Victim shoots back in attempted robbery, video shows car on fire in Fulton Market District

    Victim shoots back in attempted robbery, video shows car on fire in Fulton Market District

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    ByABC7 Chicago Digital Team

    Sunday, October 13, 2024 11:13AM

    Attempted robbery ends in shooting, car fire on NW Side: CPD

    The attempted robbery happened around 1:41 a.m. on Lake and Morgan, according to police.

    CHICAGO (WLS) — An attempted armed robbery ended in a shooting and a car engulfed in flames on the city’s Northwest Side.

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    The shooting happened on Sunday around 1:41 a.m. near Lake and Morgan in the Fulton Market District, according to Chicago police.

    Police said the offender jumped out of a Ford SUV and tried to rob a man at gunpoint.

    However, the victim pulled out his own gun and fired several shots toward the offender.

    No one was hit. The suspect ran off.

    Video shows a nearby SUV engulfed in flames. It is unknown how it caught fire.

    No one is in custody.

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    At least 15 people have been shot, two fatally, in gun violence across Chicago so far this weekend, police said.

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  • Thieves loot freight train on West Side, Chicago police say; at least 6 arrested

    Thieves loot freight train on West Side, Chicago police say; at least 6 arrested

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago police are investigating a railway cargo theft Friday afternoon on the city’s West Side.

    Chopper 7 was above the scene, showing the brazen freight heist as a mob of apparent thieves were seen ransacking a cargo train in South Austin, ripping through multiple boxes of merchandise.

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    Witnesses told ABC7 at least a dozen people took part in the burglary for nearly an hour before police even arrived.

    “When I seen the guys up there, I’m like, ‘Eh, this doesn’t look right,’” witness Princess Shaw said. “As we were coming down, we saw the gentleman on Cicero itself, opening up the freight train.”

    That’s when Shaw said she began snapping pictures just as the group began breaking into the freight cars.

    Who’s really doing something about this, right? Because obviously this is a broken system.

    In a statement late Friday, a spokesperson for Union Pacific said “the train was stopped, awaiting an interchange with a partner railroad, when thieves began opening containers.”

    Chicago police said officers responded to the scene just before 4 p.m. in the 400 block of North Lamon Avenue.

    “We just seen the police just, like, flying down here from all different directions,” Shaw said.

    At one point, police officers were seen drawing their weapons and aiming them toward at least one vehicle apparently speeding away from the scene.

    The railway is no stranger to these type of freight cargo thefts. It was the second time in a few months people allegedly broke into cargo trains on the train route.

    “This happens on and on, over and over again,” Shaw said.

    It was back in August, near Lawler and Kinzie on the city’s West Side, when thieves broke into another freight train and got away with multiple boxes full of TVs, police said.

    READ MORE | Union Pacific investigating freight train cargo theft on West Side, authorities say

    It is a crime of opportunity in a West Side neighborhood that Shaw said, for many, is empty of opportunities.

    “Who’s really doing something about this, right?” Shaw said. “Because obviously this is a broken system.”

    Union Pacific, who has now taken over the investigation from CPD, said at least six people have been arrested and some of the merchandise was recovered.

    In a statement earlier Friday, a Union Pacific spokesperson said, “rail burglaries pose a safety threat to the public, our employees and local law enforcement officers.”

    Metra trains were stopped near Kedzie when police were investigating.

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  • Wrightwood restaurant employee charged with fatally shooting 2 customers: Chicago police

    Wrightwood restaurant employee charged with fatally shooting 2 customers: Chicago police

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — An employee of a popular fast-food restaurant on Chicago’s South Side has been charged with fatally shooting two customers on Monday night, police said.

    Police said the shooting happened inside a JJ Fish and Chicken in the Wrightwood neighborhood near 79th and Western at about 10:30 p.m.

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    Police said the shooting happened after an argument between a customer and an employee, 42-year-old Mehdi Medellel.

    Police said two customers started arguing with Medellel, and he, at some point, pulled out a handgun and fired shots. The two customers, a 55-year-old man and a 56-year-old man, were shot in their heads and died at the scene.

    Another worker at the fast-food restaurant got word of what happened on Tuesday morning.

    “I don’t know why this happened or why he did what he did, what made him do what he do,” she told ABC7.

    She did not want to be identified and said she was not working at the time, but she knew one of the customers who was killed.

    “He sat in there with me every day. Sometimes, I fed him. He was homeless. He didn’t harm nobody or anything,” the worker said.

    JJ Fish and Chicken closed for business Tuesday afternoon. There were no visible signs left over from the deadly scene that played out less than 24 hours prior.

    John Grant lives nearby and knows the area well.

    “You know those peoples in there are really nice people, and their food is pretty decent, so I go there all the time,” Grant said. “On this particular corner, you have to watch your back. You know, it’s always something.”

    CPD said Medellel has been charged with two counts of first-degree murder. He is due in court on Wednesday.

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  • Man shot to death in Portage Park: Chicago police

    Man shot to death in Portage Park: Chicago police

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — A man was fatally shot on the city’s Northwest Side early Saturday morning, Chicago police said.

    Police said the shooting happened in the Portage Park neighborhood’s 5600-block of West Addison Street around 4:15 a.m.

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    A person in a black sedan dropped off a 20-year-old man who had been shot in his right hip, police said.

    The victim was listed in critical condition and later died.

    Police said the circumstances surrounding the shooting are unknown.

    No one in custody and Area One detectives are investigating.

    Police did not immediately provide further information about the shooting.

    Chicago shootings: Tracking gun violence in 2024, with live updates

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  • Burglars target Cuban restaurant in Irving Park, video shows suspects take thousands in cash

    Burglars target Cuban restaurant in Irving Park, video shows suspects take thousands in cash

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Burglars targeted two businesses on the city’s Northwest Side on Wednesday morning.

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    The crime happened at Mima’s Taste of Cuba near Irving Park Road and Richmond around 3:57 a.m.

    The owner told ABC7 Chicago this is the second time they’ve been hit in a matter of months.

    READ ALSO | Burglars break into multiple NW Side restaurants, smoke shops, Chicago police say

    In video shared with ABC7 Chicago, the burglars are seen jumping over the counter as they ransacked the store.

    “Its frustrating,” the owner of Mima’s Taste of Cuba said. “You pay your taxes; you’re trying to do the right thing out here and the criminals just keep… breaking into small businesses.”

    The owner told ABC7 Chicago on Wednesday this is the second time they’ve been hit in a matter of months.

    The restaurant owner said the two suspects took off with $3,000.

    “It’s becoming almost a normal thing in the city of Chicago,” the owner added.

    Chicago police confirmed the robberies happened around 4 a.m. in the 2900-block of Irving Park Road.

    The owner of the Cuban restaurant added that a neighboring Serbian restaurant called Cafe Beograd was also targeted.

    Police said burglars broke in through a window and took a cash register.

    Three suspects were seen driving off in a black car. No one is in custody.

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  • Burglars use chain, truck to rip gate off of South Side gas station, steal ATM, video shows

    Burglars use chain, truck to rip gate off of South Side gas station, steal ATM, video shows

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Thieves used chains and a truck to pull the gates off of a South Side gas station early Thursday, Chicago police said.

    It’s a common trend that Chicago police are now warning businesses about, with police reporting at least 20 other similar break-ins on the South Side in the last couple of weeks.

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    Businesses on the South Side of Chicago cannot catch a break from the recent string of smash and grabs, with thieves using vehicles that are believed to be stolen so they can snatch ATMs.

    In the most recent crime, store owners told ABC7 Chicago it’s going to cost thousands of dollars to replace the doors and security gate as the store was targeted for the third time. The crime happened just before 2 a.m. Thursday at a gas station at East 76th Street and South South Chicago Avenue.

    “You don’t expect these things in a gas station… every time it happens the damage is more than what they took,” store owner Aysar Abushanab said.

    Abushanab said he feels helpless as this is the third time his shopper has been burglarized.

    Surveillance video shows a group of people attach a chain to the back of a black pickup truck and connect it to the store’s security gate. The driver of the truck then accelerates and rips the doors off the building.

    READ MORE | Burglars use chains to pull doors off of at least 20 South Side businesses, Chicago police warn

    Once they gained access to the store, surveillance video shows the criminals take an ATM. They place the ATM in the back of the truck and drive off in a matter of minutes.

    Abushanab said the ATM is owned by a third party company, but he is responsible for the money inside.

    “They must know all the ATMs are getting refilled…and what else can we do to protect ourselves?” Abushanab said. “Look at the gates… a whole bar of gates and two doors.”

    Police said in a community alert Sunday that hooded suspects are likely using stolen vehicles in at least 20 other similar break-ins on the South Side.

    Another similar crime was caught on camera earlier this month at a convenience store near South Indiana and East 75th street.

    A video shows a similar black pickup truck being used to ram the shop when it was closed, with one offender using a chain to grab the ATM. After unsuccessful attempts of dragging it away, the offenders appeared to give up but still came away with merchandise while leaving behind substantial damage.

    “I think it’s messed up,” said Ali Abdullah with Big Sam’s convenience store. “We need more security… we need help from the police or something.”

    It was more of the same for another shop just down the block, near East 75th and Vernon Avenue, as offenders came by in another pick up truck. Thousands of dollars taken from an ATM there after the offenders used those chains to break in again.

    The owners of the convenience stores said these burglaries will continue to hurt the entire community if police can’t respond quicker.

    “More quick response… if they came in as soon as the alarm went off… within five to 10 minutes… it could’ve prevented it, because it took them about 10 minutes to break in,” Abushanab said.

    So the clean up begins yet again for Abushanab’s quick mart. He said he’s looking into any other possible option to prevent the burglaries.

    No one is in custody for the burglaries. Chicago police are investigating.

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  • Man killed, 3 others shot near Chinatown restaurant, Chicago police say

    Man killed, 3 others shot near Chinatown restaurant, Chicago police say

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — A man was killed, and three others were shot in Chicago’s Chinatown neighborhood, according to police.

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    The shooting happened on Sunday around 3:01 a.m. in the 2100-block of South Canal Street.

    A group was standing outside when an argument started with another group of unknown men.

    The argument escalated into a fight, and then someone started to shoot.

    A 39-year-old man was shot and killed at the scene.

    A 27-year-old man was taken to the hospital with multiple gunshot wounds to the body. At last check he was in critical condition.

    Two other men were shot, a 34-year-old was shot in the leg and a 21-year-old was shot in the calf. Both were expected to be okay according to police.

    No one is in custody. Chicago police are investigating.

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  • Pedestrian critically injured in Calumet Heights hit-and-run: Chicago police

    Pedestrian critically injured in Calumet Heights hit-and-run: Chicago police

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    ByABC7 Chicago Digital Team

    Tuesday, July 30, 2024 12:19AM

    ABC7 Chicago 24/7 Stream

    Live streaming newscasts, breaking news, weather & original, local programming.

    CHICAGO (WLS) — A pedestrian was critically injured in a South Side hit-and-run crash on Monday afternoon, Chicago police said.

    Police said the crash happened in the Calumet Heights neighborhood’s 2800-block of East 95th Street just before 3:45 p.m.

    A male, whose age was not immediately known, was standing near the street when a sedan, traveling eastbound on 95th Street, struck him and continued driving, police said.

    Police said the victim was transported to the University of Chicago Medical Center in critical condition.

    No one is in custody and area detectives are investigating.

    Authorities did not immediately provide further information about the crash.

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  • ‘Take Back the Block’ anti-violence initiative receives skeptical response from West Side community

    ‘Take Back the Block’ anti-violence initiative receives skeptical response from West Side community

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — A week after a violent Fourth of July holiday weekend, Mayor Brandon Johnson launched a new plan he hopes makes communities safer.

    Some neighborhood residents on the West Side said Friday’s Take Back The Block initiative to foster safer communities was just a show and nothing more.

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    “It’s crap. Its crap,” resident Roland Chatman said. “Next year, we’ll be having the same meeting. Next year. Nothing don’t change. Nothing change.”

    The afternoon activation of the initiative took place on the city’s Near West Side, where there’s been several recent incidents of gun violence, including a shootout last week that left a 74-year-old woman and seven others wounded.

    “I think this was a great first step, but what happens when everyone leaves?” resident Mario Godfrey said.

    The initiative, which aims to create a partnership between the government and residents to foster safer communities, was launched by Mayor Johnson in collaboration with the mayor’s office of community safety. However, some residents complained it’s too little too late for a community felt forgotten about.

    “None of these people that was listening to the mayor, none of these people live down here,” resident Annette Hutchins said.

    RELATED | Community leaders renew commitment to Chicago violence prevention programs, $100M raised

    Mayor Johnson defended his call for a unified governmental approach to support impacted communities while acknowledging the skepticism of some.

    “No other mayors can talk about doubling the amount of young people we hire for summer jobs, because they took those jobs away from our young people and we are showing we are hiring young people,” Johnson said. “27,140 students have jobs now because of this administration. All I can say is what I am doing.”

    So far, the city of Chicago has made a $1.25 billion investment in housing and economic development, the biggest one in the city’s history.

    READ MORE | City hires 27,000 through ‘One Summer Chicago’ youth jobs program

    Representatives from city departments along with community and outreach groups were in attendance at the activation Friday. People there said they need jobs and resources.

    “We’ll be back out here knocking on doors. I got a lot of phone numbers today,” Centers for New Horizon CEO Lakisha McFadden said.

    “Take Back the Block” will be held on select Fridays throughout the summer in neighborhood blocks experiencing high levels of violence.

    Despite a lukewarm reception, the mayor and his supporters are hoping the idea catches on as neighborhoods take more ownership in efforts to stop the violence from continuing.

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  • 3 people shot dead overnight following apparent argument in Grand Crossing neighborhood, police say

    3 people shot dead overnight following apparent argument in Grand Crossing neighborhood, police say

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    CHICAGO — An apparent argument ended in three people shot dead early Sunday morning in the Grand Crossing neighborhood on the city’s South Side.

    According to preliminary information from Chicago police, three adults were walking in the 500 block of East 76th Street at about 2:15 a.m. Sunday when they got into a verbal altercation with two unknown offenders, who then got into a silver SUV, pulled up to the three adults and began shooting in their direction.

    A male and female victim were taken to an area hospital with multiple gunshots wounds and pronounced dead, police say, and a third victim was taken to another area hospital and also pronounced dead there.

    According to police, the silver SUV fled eastbound after the shooting, and no other injuries have been reported. Nobody is in custody, and Area Two detectives are investigating.

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  • Friends mourn 14-year-old boy killed in Fuller Park shooting 1 year later: ‘Missing from my heart’

    Friends mourn 14-year-old boy killed in Fuller Park shooting 1 year later: ‘Missing from my heart’

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — It has been one year since a teen was killed in a shooting on the city’s South Side. Another teen was arrested after allegedly shooting at Chicago police officers who were responding to the initial shooting.

    Despite a mountain of evidence at the shooting scene, with some 80 shots fired by multiple offenders and witnesses present, one year later no one is in custody for 14-year-old Pierre Johnson’s murder.

    Friends, teammates and loved-ones gathered Saturday to share pizza and memories of Johnson, whose death still leaves a void.

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    “I don’t think it ever gets less intense,” said Chris Cozzi, who cared for Johnson. “You know, you get better at getting through each day.”

    Pierre was shot and killed on June 1, 2023 in the 4200 block of South Wells Street while sitting on a neighbor’s porch in the Fuller Park neighborhood. Four others were wounded in the shooting.

    “I don’t really like to think about it,” Johnson’s friend Josh Martinez said. “It’s just hard to think about.”

    Johnson lived with his family in Fuller Park, but spent summers and weekends during the school year with Cozzi and her family at their Southwest Side home, in part to escape the violence in his neighborhood. His brother, years earlier, was also a shooting victim.

    Before his death, Johnson was thriving and playing travel baseball with teammates who were more like brothers.

    “I feel like something’s missing from my heart, you know. It’s sad,” Johnson’s friend Blake Heyer said. “You know, I remember all the good times I had with him, remember how much he meant to us, how much of a joy he was to be around.”

    SEE ALSO | 11th annual ‘Party 4 Peace’ honors life of teen Chicago gun violence victim Hadiya Pendleton

    One year later, Johnson’s family is still waiting for justice.

    Police had charged a 16-year-old boy for opening fire on responding officers, but one year later no one is in custody for Johnson’s murder. His loved ones are still hoping for a break in the case.

    “Not so much to make someone accountable and put someone in jail, but to make sure this behavior is called out and is as shocking to everybody else as it was to us and stops,” Cozzi said.

    Cozzi is now working to set up a nonprofit to give at-risk youth opportunities to play baseball. She hopes to name it “Pierre’s Way.”

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  • Old Town vegan bakery targeted in second burglary | VIDEO

    Old Town vegan bakery targeted in second burglary | VIDEO

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    ByABC7 Chicago Digital Team

    Thursday, March 21, 2024 3:57AM

    Burglar breaks into vegan bakery in Old Town | VIDEO

    The owner of Sweet Vegan Bakes on North Avenue in Old Town is concerned after a burglar targeted her small business for a second time.

    CHICAGO (WLS) — After being targeted in a second burglary, the owner of an Old Town bakery is dealing with thousands in losses and damages.

    Surveillance video from “Sweet Vegan Bakes” on West North Avenue shows the recent.

    A burglar shatters the glass door before making off with the cash register and other equipment.

    The bakery’s owner says she’s frustrated.

    She said she plans to keep the business doors locked during operating hours moving forward, and she will be letting customers in as they arrive.

    No further information from Chicago police about the crime was immediately available.

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  • Burglar smashes patio door, takes cash, merchandise from 2d Restaurant in Lakeview

    Burglar smashes patio door, takes cash, merchandise from 2d Restaurant in Lakeview

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    ByABC7 Chicago Digital Team

    Tuesday, March 19, 2024 3:38AM

    Burglar takes cash, merchandise from 2d Restaurant in Lakeview

    2d Restaurant in the 3100 block of Halsted Avenue in Lakeview was hit by a burglar who smashed a patio door and stole nearly $1,000 of cash and merch.

    CHICAGO (WLS) — A burglar made off with hundreds of dollars in cash and merchandise from 2d restaurant in Lakeview, and it was all caught on video.

    The man broke into the restaurant in the 3100-block of North Halsted overnight, smashing his way in through a patio door. He then took cash from the register and merchandise, which the owner said totaled up to a little under $1,000.

    The restaurant was closed Monday for repairs, and is expected to reopen Tuesday.

    A burglar made off with hundreds of dollars in cash and merchandise from 2d restaurant in Lakeview, and it was all caught on video.

    It had previously been broken into in November 2023. No arrests were made in that incident.

    No one is currently in custody for the overnight break-in.

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  • Our Chicago: After School Programs

    Our Chicago: After School Programs

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    CHICAGO (WLS) — Last month, at least four Chicago high school students were killed in shootings that happened as they left school.

    As the city works to expand violence prevention efforts, programs and organizations are working to engage young people across the city.

    After School Matters got started in downtown Chicago as a summer arts program for teens.

    Our Chicago: After School Programs Part 1

    “What we really want to do is engage teenagers to find something that they love,” After School Matters CEO Mary Ellen Caron said. “Or maybe something that they don’t love, so they don’t pursue it.”

    Over the years, the after school program has expanded to nearly every neighborhood across the city. The programs have grown to include the arts, communication, leadership, sports and STEM.

    RELATED: Chicago police searching for gunmen who killed 2 students outside of high school in Loop shooting

    “We started out as sports and arts, and that was because at the time they were cutting sports and arts in the schools and so that’s what we really started as,” Caron said. “But now we’ve added leadership and communication because that’s what the teens tell us they want. And they’ve also told us they want STEM.”

    After School Matters Chief of Strategy Melissa Mister told ABC7 Chicago the program depends on demand from teens.

    “Teens want and need, and deserve programs, to support them to pursue their interests,” Mister said.

    The students also learn intangible skills.

    “Across all of the programs, young people are learning how to collaborate with one another, they’re learning a personal mindset that says we’re going to keep pushing through when we hit a bump, that kind of thing,” Mister said. “They’re learning to communicate effectively with many different audiences. So all of these are intangible skills that are critically important no matter what it is they decide to do in their future.”

    Youth Guidance celebrates 100 years in Chicago this year. It began in 1924 as the Church Mission of Help, providing assistance to girls in need of shelter, financial help as well as educational and vocational opportunities.

    These days, Youth Guidance provides programs for children helping them overcome obstacles so they can focus on their education and succeed in the classroom and in life.

    Our Chicago: After School Programs Part 2

    “We think it’s really important that families, students, teachers, communities are involved because they play such an important role in the well-being of the student. So we want to make sure they all have an input in what is happening in the school, they’re able to share their concerns. And then we’re able to cater those programs that we offer after school, to those needs,” said After School Programs at Youth Guidance community director Jeethu Samuel said.

    Stipends are available for students that are eligible.

    “Community In Schools program is a partnership with Chicago Public Schools and 21st Century Funding,” said Youth Guidance Program Manager Dr. Lolita Cleveland. “And we provide a community base. So we bring in all the community resources in order for the total child to have the things that they need. So when we partner we have not just the parents, the students, the kids, we have contracted vendors that bring in enrichment programs, cultural programs. Dance, arts, creativity to be able to provide that information and then we partner with the community when they can bring health support from local clinics. They’re also able to come in and bring mental health support for social emotional learning.”

    Parents are also included in the after school experience Youth Guidance offers.

    “We want to make sure the parents are also gaining from this experience, it’s not just for the students,” said Samuel, “So we offer workshops, we offer family events. They go out into the community, they go out into the city and they see different things. And we want them to also gain so they can be leaders within the student’s education and involved in their schools.”

    With violence in the city, involving teens the work of Youth Guidance is even more important.

    “It is a need,” said Cleveland, “There’s definitely a need for that. Students need to be heard. Staff have to be trauma informed. We have to understand social-emotional learning. And everybody’s situation is not yours, so we definitely have to be unbiased to realize our kids are faced with a lot and we have to have a listening ear and an open heart to hear.”

    For more information:

    https://afterschoolmatters.org/

    https://www.youth-guidance.org/

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