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Tag: Chicago Transit Authority

  • Man faces federal terrorism charges for allegedly setting woman on fire on Blue Line train in Chicago

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    Federal charges were filed on Wednesday against a man accused of setting a woman on fire on a CTA Blue Line train in downtown Chicago this week.

    Lawrence Reed, 50, was charged in a criminal complaint with committing a terrorist attack or other violence on a mass transportation system — a federal offense rather than a state offense.

    Andrew Boutros, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois, said the 26-year-old victim was minding her own business and reading her phone on an O’Hare-bound Blue Line train around 9 p.m. Monday when Reed came up and set her on fire with no provocation whatsoever.

    “The surveillance video is difficult to watch, and very disturbing, as a young woman was set ablaze, and tried to put herself out, while other passengers got out of the way or watched,” Boutros said.

    Chicago police investigators obtained surveillance footage from Chicago Transit Authority Blue Line train car No. 3236, which showed the victim sitting on a seat in the middle of the train car, according to a federal court affidavit. Reed was sitting in the back of the same train car.

    Lawrence Reed, and a woman he is accused of setting on fire, both seen seated on a Blue Line train car.

    U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois


    The surveillance footage showed Reed standing up with a bottle in hand, walking up to the victim — who was seated with her back toward him — and pouring a liquid from the bottle all over her body. Reed then tried to ignite the liquid, the affidavit said.

    cta-blue-line-fire-attack-2.png

    Lawrence Reed stands up and approaches a woman he is accused of setting on fire on a Blue Line train car.

    U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois


    cta-blue-line-fire-attack-3.png

    Lawrence Reed pours liquid on a woman he is accused of setting on fire on a Blue Line train car.

    U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois


    cta-blue-line-fire-attack-4.png

    Lawrence Reed pours liquid on a woman he is accused of setting on fire on a Blue Line train car.

    U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois


    At first, the victim fought off Reed and ran to the front of the train, the affidavit said. But Reed chased her and dropped the bottle on the floor, the affidavit said.

    The victim then ran to the rear of the train car, the affidavit said.

    cta-blue-line-fire-attack-5.png

    Lawrence Reed comes at a woman with a flaming bottle on a Blue Line train car. He is accused of setting the woman on fire.

    U.S. District Court, Northern District of Illinois


    Reed then picked up the bottle, which was now on fire, the affidavit said. He approached the victim, set her on fire using the bottle, and stood and watched as he body was engulfed in flames, the affidavit said.

    The woman, who was almost fully engulfed in flames, tried to put out the fire by rolling on the floor of the train car, the affidavit said. When the train stopped at Clark/Lake, the woman was still on fire.

    The woman exited the train at the station and collapsed on the platform.

    “She was running off the train towards the middle of it, completely engulfed in fire,” said witness Christopher Flores.

    On the platform, bystanders attended to the woman, the affidavit said.

    “I went over to see what’s going on, said Flores. “She’s on the ground crying. Burnt to a crisp.”

    In an affidavit, U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms & Explosives Special Agent Adam Fitzgerald said investigators found the woman lying on her back with severe burns to her face and body.  

    Sources said more than half of the woman’s body was burned. CBS Chicago obtained video of the aftermath, which shows a woman with significant burns on her head.

    The victim was taken to Stroger Hospital of Cook County, where authorities said she remained in critical condition as of late Wednesday.

    Meanwhile, Reed also got off the train at Clark/Lake and left the scene after the attack.

    Investigators found a partially melted bottle, a lighter, the ignitable liquid, and the burned remains of the woman’s clothing in the train car, the affidavit said.

    Investigators also found surveillance video from a Citgo gas station at 3537 W. Harrison St. about 20 minutes before the attack. In this video, Reed is seen wearing the same clothing as he was wearing when he allegedly attacked the victim, the affidavit said.

    Reed is seen in the video making a payment to a cashier and filling a small container with gasoline, prosecutors said. He is then seen getting on the Blue Line at the Kedzie-Homan station along the Eisenhower Expressway, a short distance away from the gas station, the affidavit said.

    At 11:29 a.m. Tuesday, Reed was arrested at 140 W. Washington St. downtown, the affidavit said. He was still wearing the same clothing, and he had fire-related injuries to his right hand, the affidavit said.

    Around noon on Wednesday, 24 hours after he was arrested by Chicago police, Reed was taken into federal custody by the ATF.

    Multiple outbursts during initial court hearing

    Reed appeared for an initial hearing before U.S. Magistrate Judge Laura K. McNally at the Dirksen Federal Courthouse on Wednesday afternoon. He entered the courtroom in handcuffs and a spit guard around his mouth.

    During the hearing, Reed made multiple outbursts. One line he repeatedly stated was, “I am guilty, and I will be my own attorney!”

    But the judge did not accept the plea, as the hearing was intended just to establish the basis for the federal charges.

    When the judge started talking with Reed, he said, “Don’t talk to me!” and screamed, “La, la, la,” to prevent the judge from talking. He also said, “I don’t want an attorney,” and, “I’ll be my own attorney.”

    Judge McNally told Reed he had a right to remain silent.

    Federal prosecutors said in court that they were seeking to have Reed held in custody until trial because he is a danger to the community and a flight risk. Prosecutors said Reed could face life in prison if convicted. He could also face the death penalty if the victim dies.

    When Reed heard he was facing terrorism charges, he was taken aback as he said: “Terrorism? What is this all about?”

    He also claimed to be a citizen of China and asked the judge to notify the Chinese Consulate of his arrest.

    Lawrence Reed had been released on electronic monitoring

    Reed has a long criminal record. CBS News Chicago found 49 arrests — including 10 felony cases. Three cases were later dropped, six ended up with convictions ranging from probation to 30 days in the Cook County Jail — and in the case of one drug conviction from 2003, two years in Illinois state prison.

    Among them was an active aggravated battery case from just this past August.

    In that incident, Reed is accused of hitting a social worker at MacNeal Hospital Psychiatry and Behavioral Health in west suburban Berwyn. The attack caused loss of consciousness, ER visits, lasting memory issues, headaches, and daily nausea for the social worker, the Cook County State’s Attorney’s office said at the time.

    Cook County prosecutors asked a judge to keep Reed in custody until his trial for the August battery, but the judge placed Reed on electronic monitoring, and then a different judge modified the monitoring hours.

    Still, this latest incident happened at a time when Reed would have been under active monitoring.

    “Frankly, there’s a presumption of release, but that can be overcome easily with someone like this particular defendant,” said CBS News Chicago Legal Analyst Irv Miller.

    Miller said the SAFE-T Act, which eliminated cash bail in Illinois, allows judges the discretion to decide if someone is detained. But this latest case is in federal court, as the U.S. Attorney’s Office vows to take a stronger stance on CTA crime.

    “You know, both the State of Illinois and the United States government has jurisdiction over certain crimes, particularly when it comes to a crime that occurs on a public transit system,” Miller said. “In that case, both jurisdictions have legitimate rights to charge.”

    CBS News Chicago also found Reed has been accused in other high-profile crimes, including a fire that was set outside the Thompson Center in April 2020, on a day that Gov. JB Pritzker was supposed to make an appearance. The felony charge in that case was later dropped.

    Just two months prior, Reed was suspected of punching four women outside the Harold Washington Library downtown.

    Reed is also suspected of lighting a fire outside Chicago’s City Hall just last week.

    In 2019, he pleaded guilty to breaking windows on a CTA Blue Line train at O’Hare International Airport.

    “Lawrence Reed had no business being on the streets, given his violent criminal history and his pending criminal cases. Reed had plenty of second chances by the criminal justice system, and as a result, you have an innocent victim in the hospital fighting for her life,” said ATF Special Agent-in-Charge Chris Amon. “Because of the swift action of CPD, ATF, and our law enforcement partners, there will be no more chances for Mr. Reed.”

    CBS News Chicago reached out to the Cook County Chief Judge’s office, which monitors the ankle monitoring system, to ask if they could explain any questions about the case — including whether he might have been violating court orders when he allegedly set the woman on fire. Chief Judge’s office representatives said they could not comment on pending or potential litigation.

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    Jermont Terry

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  • Man arrested after allegedly punching Chicago woman as ‘Loop puncher’ videos go viral on social media

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    Yara Afaneh was scrolling through her phone on the platform at the Loyola CTA Red Line station Tuesday afternoon when a man approached and said “excuse me miss.” 

    Afaneh, 23, didn’t look up, but when she noticed he wasn’t wearing shoes she said she got a bad feeling and started walking away. That was when she said the encounter allegedly turned violent.

    “Out of nowhere he just punched me in the back of the head,” Afaneh told the Tribune Wednesday. “I still have a headache right now.”

    A police spokesperson said the man — later identified as Derek Rucker, 37, of Blue Island — struck Afaneh with a closed fist. He was arrested Tuesday about 1:15 p.m. in the 1200 block of West Loyola Avenue and charged with two misdemeanor counts of battery, police said. 

    He is at least the second man in recent months to have been accused of randomly punching people in Chicago. Numerous people claim to have been victims of a “Loop puncher” in posts across social media, including Instagram, Reddit and TikTok, though it’s unclear how many perpetrators there are.

    The video Afaneh posted on TikTok of the arrest of Rucker was viewed hundreds of thousands of times. Afaneh said she heard about similar assaults on social media, but didn’t expect it to happen to her.

    “But once (the attack) happened, I guessed it was definitely (the Loop puncher),” she said.

    Last month, CBS Chicago shared a story about two women who, in separate instances, had been allegedly punched by William Livingston in Lincoln Park and the Loop. Livingston was ordered held in Cook County Jail pending trial. Records show he’s pleaded not guilty to felony battery charges.


    A Chicago Transit Authority spokesperson said in a statement that the “safety and security” of riders and employees is “top priority.”

    “When CTA was alerted to this incident, we immediately pulled surveillance images to assist the Chicago Police Department with their investigation,” the statement said. “We also issued a bulletin to our security staff and law enforcement to be on the lookout to identify the suspected individual.”

    So far this year, about 230 cases of assault or battery have been reported at CTA train platforms, according to city data. They are reported most frequently at Clark/Lake, 69th St. Red Line and 79th St. Red Line stops.

    Cook County court records show Rucker has been arrested more than two dozen times in the last 20 years. Several judges have ordered mental health evaluations.

    Rucker has faced charges of attacking police officers, Cook County jail personnel and hospital nurses, records show. 

    In 2014, he pleaded guilty to aggravated battery of a police officer and was sentenced to three years in prison. He pleaded guilty in 2023 to resisting a police officer and was sentenced to another year in prison. 

    Rucker pleaded guilty in 2024 to aggravated battery of a nurse, records show. In November, he was sentenced to a year of probation, but he was arrested again two weeks later after CPD officers allegedly saw him attacking a 62-year-old man in River North. Rucker was charged with battery, though the disposition of that case was not immediately clear.

    The public defender’s office said it hadn’t been appointed to represent Rucker for the recent battery charges, as of Wednesday afternoon. It wasn’t clear if he had obtained another attorney. Rucker couldn’t be reached for comment. 

    After the punch, Afaneh said she immediately called 911, while her assailant went and sat on a nearby bench alone. She said the police showed up within about 10 minutes and arrested him. She decided not to go to the hospital, but still has a headache a day later, so that she might go for a check-up soon because she doesn’t “want to risk anything.” 

    Afaneh added that police later informed her that while Rucker was currently in the hospital, he would be released until his upcoming court date on Oct. 30. It was an update that Afaneh said made her “uncomfortable.” 

    “It kind of sucks because it’s like multiple people have said they went up to the police when he got arrested, and they told him I’ve seen him around Loyola, I’ve seen him around this neighborhood,” she said. “I stay around there, and I take the train every day to go to work, and now I just feel really uncomfortable.” 

    Savanna Wood, 30, also posted a now-viral TikTok video after she was allegedly punched in the face by a man at the Addison Red Line stop on Sept. 20 about 2 p.m. while on her way to Wrigleyville. Wood didn’t report the attack to the police. She said she was repeatedly disconnected when she called the non-emergency number.

    When she stepped off the train and looked left to find the stairs to exit, a man punched her in the face, near her right eye. Wood’s siblings and boyfriend, who were with her, saw her fall backward and were “stunned for a moment,” she said.

    Wood said she immediately left the platform because she didn’t want to provoke a further attack. The man — who was wearing a “bright yellow shirt” and “really baggy pants” and Wood described as “scruffy” and “very tall and large” — got on an incoming train. She was left with a black eye.

    No one has been charged in her attack.

    “It was the quickest and most subtle way of being attacked I probably could have ever dreamed of,” she said. “But it could have been significantly worse.” 

    While she encourages women to be alert, she wants people to understand that there’s sometimes not a lot someone can do to prevent an attack. Wood moved to Chicago a few months ago for a new job at Northwestern University.

    “When you’re in crowded situations and someone’s walking toward you, it’s not even as if they’re approaching you, it’s that they’re walking past you. And that’s how easy it is for something like this to happen,” she said. “I’ve replayed this moment in my head 100 times, and there’s not a single thing I could have done to prevent it.”

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    Rebecca Johnson, Sam Charles

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  • Lawmakers push for transit reform, funding despite delayed fiscal cliff

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    (The Center Square) – Illinois lawmakers say they hope to pass transit legislation during the fall veto session next month, even though the fiscal cliff is not as near as previously reported.

    Four legislators participated in a virtual event hosted by Lincoln Forum and the Union League Club Transportation Subcommittee on Thursday.

    State Sen. Seth Lewis, R-Bartlett, said new revenues and Regional Transit Authority transfers have pushed back the estimated $770-million fiscal cliff. Lewis said Pace would not implement a cliff until 2027.

    “We have time,” Lewis said.

    State Sen. Ram Villivalam, D-Chicago, agreed that the regional cliff had pushed back six months to a year, but he said systemic issues have not changed. Villivalam said a massive fiscal cliff would get worse in 2028 if the issues were not addressed.

    Villivalam proposed a retail delivery tax, real estate transfer tax and environmental impact fees in a transit-funding bill that failed to clear the Illinois House before the 2025 spring legislative session ended.

    Lewis said there’s no need for a tax increase this fall. He said lawmakers could reform transit governance and save funding for the spring.

    “We can start that now. We can get that process going in veto so we can understand our potential cost savings, potential operating costs,” Lewis suggested.

    State Rep. Kam Buckner, D-Chicago, said cities grow when they invest in transit.

    “In our state, Illinois, Abraham Lincoln made his name not just in courtrooms and cornfields, but he rode the rails. He rode the circuit by train, and he argued for railroads in court. He understood when he ran for the House in 1832, that internal improvements, infrastructure through transportation—it was a different transportation back then—but transportation was how you move a state forward and how you make it a place that people want to live,” Buckner said.

    Buckner and Villivalam both predicted that the General Assembly would pass transit legislation during the fall veto session. Villivalam said he wanted legislation to pass, and he did not want to kick the can down the road.

    Villivalam said it is inefficient to have four different transit agencies and 21 different appointing authorities.

    “It’s not working. We have seven different apps. We have three different service plans, three different capital plans. It’s not where we need to be, and it causing us not to have the efficiencies and meeting the performance metrics that we need to have,” Villivalam said.

    State Rep. Brad Stephens, R-Rosemont, said it is important to look to the future. Stephens said the transit situation is not as dire as some people believe.

    “We need to have some input from the governance board on how they’re going to find efficiencies before we start throwing a bunch of money at them. You know the billion and a half that’s been talked about? While, yes, it could be needed, we also need to find out what the efficiencies can be and how we can manage this better,” Stephens said.

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