CHICAGO -- One Chicago police officer was killed and another was seriously wounded during an exchange of gunfire with at least one suspect during a traffic stop Saturday night in the South Side’s West Englewood neighborhood.
The officer who died was a 29-year-old woman who worked as a Chicago cop since April 2018, officials said. She was the first Chicago cop to be shot and killed in the line of duty since Mayor Lori Lightfoot took office in 2019.
The other officer is fighting for his life in critical condition at the University of Chicago Medical Center.
“Our hearts ache for the loss of life,” Lightfoot said at a news conference early Sunday outside the hospital.
The shooting happened just after 9 p.m. Saturday near West 63rd Street and South Bell Avenue when the officers conducted a traffic stop on three people in a vehicle, First Deputy police Superintendent Eric Carter said at the news conference.
During the stop, someone opened fire on the officers and the officers returned fire, Carter said. Two officers and one of the suspects were shot.
The officers were taken to the U. of C. Medical Center while the wounded suspect was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn. He and one other male suspect were in custody; a female suspect who had remained at large after the shooting was arrested later Sunday, police officials said.
Both the officer who died and the one who was critically wounded were members of the community safety team, a citywide unit formed last summer under police Superintendent David Brown to respond to crime hot spots.
Brown had been in his hometown of Dallas, where his mother died late last week, and returned to Chicago Sunday morning, speaking at a news conference about the shooting a short time later. He provided limited information about the deceased officer, though officials acknowledged she was survived by a mother, brother and other family members. Brown also praised the courage of his 12,000-strong department continuing to work after one of their brethren was killed.
“They come to work willing to run toward danger, toward gunfire,” said Brown, flanked by Lightfoot and other police officials, at police headquarters. “And they’re willing to sacrifice their lives to save the lives of perfect strangers.
“They went to work today after last night’s tragic, tragic events,” Brown continued. “Others are at work now, right now, continuing this brave, courageous work of protecting the people of Chicago.”
Lightfoot, meanwhile, lamented the pro-law enforcement world who complains that society doesn’t do enough for cops, who feel there’s been roadblocks for them in doing their jobs effectively, and she also lamented critics of the police who have long chided officers’ harsh treatment of neighborhoods of color.
“Stop. Just stop,” Lightfoot said in a stern message to the opposing voices on policing issues. “This constant strife is not what we need in this moment.”
“The police are not our enemies,” she said. “They’re human, just as we are.”
“We have a common enemy. It’s the guns and the gangs,” Lightfoot said. “Eradicating both is complex. But we cannot let the size of the challenge deter us. We have to continue striking hard blows every day.”
Brown said a third suspect wanted in the case was arrested Sunday morning. She and the two other suspects — one of whom believed to have shot the officers and was struck by an officers’ gunfire in return — were being questioned by investigators.
Brown provided no specifics about the traffic stop, including why the officers stopped the vehicle to begin with. He also said the three suspects collectively don’t have extensive criminal backgrounds. But the alleged shooter, who was believed by police to be a passenger in the vehicle, has a robbery conviction from around 2019. Brown said that case was adjudicated through the court system, and he may have been sentenced to a probationary-type term, but he provided no further details.
An overnight email from top Chicago police officials urged the department to “keep the families and friends of these officers in your prayers. Please continue to look out for each other on and off duty as we process this heartbreaking tragedy.”
At the scene, numerous marked and unmarked police vehicles, with their lights flashing, blocked off traffic along West 63rd Street for four blocks between Damen and Western avenues, as well as on side streets all around the site of the shooting. Cook County Sheriff’s Police also were on the scene helping with traffic control.
Outside the ambulance entrance to U. of C. on Cottage Grove Avenue, dozens of Chicago police officers and Cook County sheriff’s personnel stood outside. Both 57th Street and Cottage Grove near the hospital were lined with squad cars.
Officers there exchanged hugs with each other. Some women walked up to the entrance in tears as an officer escorted them.
A Jeep pulled up to the intersection and a passenger rolled down his window and yelled out to a woman on the sidewalk, “What happened over here?”
“Two officers were shot,” she replied.
“Oh, wow,” he said as he shook his head and rolled up the window.
The Fraternal Order of Police Lodge #7, the city’s largest police union, tweeted “Lord, please look over these two Officers, keep them and every Officer out in the 8th District safe tonight. This career of service we all chose is one of sacrifice, but please Lord, not tonight. Not tonight.”
Early Sunday on the Near West Side, dozens of police officers stood along Harrison and Leavitt streets outside the Cook County medical examiner’s office as the female officer’s body was slowly escorted into its dimly lit parking lot by a musical group playing the bagpipes — a tradition for a Chicago cop who dies in the line of duty.
With the roaring of a parked firetruck in the background, scores of officers saluted Chicago Fire Department Ambulance 36 as it moved slowly with its emergency lights flashing.
Some firefighters and paramedics paid their respects, too. Firetrucks stationed across Harrison from one another had their ladders hoisted in midair to the point where they were nearly adjoining, so they could together drape a large American flag in front of the procession for the ambulance.
Dozens of police vehicles, their blue emergency lights flashing, gave the initial escort for the ambulances to the medical examiner’s office from U. of C. hospital, where the officer was pronounced dead.
In 2020, the police department deemed the deaths of four Chicago cops who succumbed to COVID-19 as in the line of duty deaths. Before Saturday night, though, the last line-of-duty deaths of Chicago cops who were killed while pursuing a suspect were in December 2018, when Officers Eduardo Marmolejo and Conrad Gary were fatally struck by a train as they looked for a man wanted for illegally possessing a gun. That suspect, Edward Brown, was sentenced this past April to a year in prison for a felony weapon violation in the case.
Also before Saturday, the last female Chicago police officer to die in the line of duty was Alane Stoffregen who drowned in June 2000 during a training exercise in Lake Michigan while working in the police department’s marine unit. And the last female Chicago cop to be shot and killed in the line of duty was Irma Ruiz, who died in Sept. 1988 when she was shot inside an elementary school on the Near West Side.
Chicago Tribune reporter Annie Sweeney contributed.
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