Chicago's gang violence catches highway
drivers in crossfire
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[January 05, 2017]
By Timothy Mclaughlin
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Jonathan Ortiz and
other members of his rap group, No Nights Off, stepped onto the stage at
Chicago's House of Blues in mid-September for a concert they hoped would
propel their young, promising careers.
Less than two weeks later, the 22-year-old Ortiz, who forebodingly
rapped under the stage name "John Doe," was fatally shot as he drove on
an expressway in Chicago. His girlfriend Alexis Garcia also got a bullet
lodged in her back.
Ortiz and Garcia were victims of the 38th shooting on Chicago-area
expressways in 2016, a record-high number for a city stung by a murder
rate not seen in two decades.
“It is overwhelming that this is the reality in Chicago, that you can
drive on the expressway now and get shot at," said Tanue David, a family
support specialist with the outreach group Chicago Survivors, who is
working with the Ortiz family.
Officials say gang violence is increasingly spilling over onto Chicago's
expressways, with innocent drivers sometimes caught in the crossfire,
while the state police force is shrinking.
The Illinois State Police, which has jurisdiction over the expressways,
blamed gang warfare for the increased highway shoot-outs in 2016 that
pose "an extreme danger to the motoring public."
Ortiz was shot on Interstate 290, one of five expressways within city
limits where shootings took place.
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PERSISTENT INCREASE
Ortiz and Garcia were shot on the morning of Sept. 29 while Ortiz drove
her SUV not far from his mother's home.
Chicago police said Ortiz had no criminal record and several family
members and friends said he was not affiliated with a gang. He and
Garcia met three years ago on the shores of Lake Michigan.
"He was calm, that's how I knew that God took him fast," Garcia, who
grew up in a suburb of Chicago, said of the moments after Ortiz was
shot.
In 2011 and 2012, there were nine shootings on city expressways,
according to state police, which had no data prior to that.
That number jumped to 16 in 2013 and 19 in 2014. It nearly doubled the
next year to 37 and climbed again in 2016 to 47. Three shootings last
year were fatal.
The rise in highway shootings came as Chicago suffered a broader surge
in violence that saw 762 people murdered in 2016, a 57 percent increase
from 2015, and the highest number since 1996.
The number drew the attention of President-elect Donald Trump, who said
that Chicago's mayor must ask for U.S. government help if the city fails
to reduce its murder rate. [nL1N1ES0LX]
Chicago police cite a number of factors, including splintering gang
structures and police drawing back from confrontation out of fear of
increased scrutiny for their actions.
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Jacqueline Ortiz (C), is
comforted as she cries during a vigil for her son John Ortiz, who
was shot and killed while driving on the Eisenhower Expressway in
Chicago, Illinois,
U.S., December 6, 2016. REUTERS/Jim Young/File Photo
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Chicago police Superintendent Eddie Johnson has vehemently blamed
lax regulations for gun repeat offenders. "The people committing
these crimes think the consequences for their actions are a joke,"
he said last month.
DIFFICULT CRIME SCENES, DEPLETED RESOURCES
State police launched the Chicago Expressway Anti-violence Surge in
February 2016 after the seventh freeway shooting, deploying
aircraft, undercover officers and unmarked vehicles.
But the shooting numbers remained high and arrests were made in only
one of last year's expressway shootings. Uncooperative victims and
expansive crime scenes hamper efforts to solve the cases, state
police said.
Political gridlock in Springfield is also a factor, said Joe Moon,
president of the Illinois Troopers Lodge 41 Fraternal Order of
Police, the union representing state troopers.
Feuding between Republican Governor Bruce Rauner and Democrats who
control the legislature has kept the state without a full operating
budget since July 2015. That meant no cadet hires in 2015 and 2016,
and 2017 remains in limbo as well, state police said. [nL1N1DF1XU]
Since 2000, the number of sworn officers has declined steadily to
just over 1,600 from around 2,100, Moon said.
State police said the budget impasse had no impact on the force's
work. Governor Rauner's spokeswoman, Catherine Kelly, declined to
comment beyond what state police said.
At a December vigil, friends and family gathered by a roadside
memorial of flowers and photos as one of Ortiz's songs thumped from
a nearby sports car.
"Chicago I beg of you ... this needs to stop," Ortiz's friend Sharee
Washington, 29, said. "You are destroying people.”
(Reporting by Timothy Mclaughlin in Chicago; Editing by David
Gregorio)
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