Shootings across Chicago have left four dead and 19 others injured over the Thanksgiving weekend, including a teenage boy who was shot during an armed robbery on Thanksgiving Day, Nov. 22.
The second boy, a 17-year-old patted the officer down and found another wallet that contained his Chicago Police Department badge, Nagode said. The other teen then pointed his gun at the officer, who was not named, and told him to not move.
Somehow, the officer shot the 16-year-old, and the other teen ran away with the officer’s belongings, the paper reported.
The shot teen was sent to St. Francis Hospital in Evanston, and was pronounced dead right after he arrived. The teen was identified as Sarge Junior, the Cook County Medical Examiner’s office stated.
The other teen was arrested and was charged with armed robbery and other charges, said police.
The latest deadly shooting in Chicago occurred on Nov. 25 on the West Side, the report said. A man in his 20s was found dead in the 3600 block of West Lexington. Officials said he was shot in the chest, but other details are not clear.
A man was shot dead and another wounded on the day after Thanksgiving in the Back of the Yards neighborhood on the South Side, said the report. They were sitting in a vehicle when a white Porsche SUV drove by them and someone inside opened fire, hitting both.
Violent Crime Down in 2017
In September 2018, the FBI said Americans committed fewer violent and property crimes in 2017, according to statistics. The violent crime rate—including offenses such as murder, robbery, and aggravated assault—dropped by almost one percent and is still about 4 percent above the 2014 rate. The murder rate dropped by 0.7 percent.“After historic increases in violent crime in 2015 and 2016, we are beginning to see encouraging signs,” Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in a statement at the time. “But our work is not done. While we have made progress, violent crime and drug trafficking continue to plague our communities and destroy the lives of innocent, law-abiding Americans.”
Of the estimated 17,284 murders in 2017, more than half occurred in larger cities—with populations of more than 100,000.