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According to initial reports, 82 people were shot, 19 fatally, in Chicago over the May 30–31 weekend. The weekend surpassed the previous May 23–24 weekend, which was the most deadly Memorial Day weekend in Chicago since 2015 with 49 individuals shot in total and 9 deaths, becoming the most deadly weekend of the year to that date. Over half ...
Sometime before 1:50 PM, Nightengale fatally shot 30-year-old Yiran Fan, a PHD student from China, in the head as he sat in his vehicle in a Hyde Park parking garage. [4] [5] Shortly afterwards, Nightengale entered an apartment building at 4940 S. East End Ave., where he fatally shot doorwoman 46-year-old Aisha Johnson and wounded a 77-year-old-woman in the head as she grabbed her mail.
In Workers Stadium, rioting Chinese fans were silenced by the People's Armed Police. 1986 Montreal Stanley Cup riot [7] 1986: After the Canadiens won the finals, fans took to the streets to celebrate, and ended up rioting. 1990 Detroit riot: June 15, 1990: Widespread rioting occurred in Detroit after the Detroit Pistons won the 1990 NBA Finals ...
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The number of people slain so far in 2024: 177. That’s 36 fewer people killed when compared with 2023. Greater Grand Crossing leads all community areas with the most homicides so far in 2024 — 15.
That’s 41 fewer people killed when compared with 2023. Austin leads all community areas with the most homicides so far in 2024 — 37. Where each homicide has occurred so far in 2024 (through ...
Chicago saw a major rise in violent crime starting in the late 1960s. Murders in the city peaked in 1974, with 970 murders when the city's population was over three million, resulting in a murder rate of around 29 per 100,000, and again in 1992, with 943 murders when the city had fewer than three million people, resulting in a murder rate of 34 murders per 100,000 citizens.
98% of people arrested for felony burglary during the riot were black, while only 69% of those arrested for burglary in 1992 in Chicago were black. Additionally, there was a heavy police presence in Chicago's downtown area, where mostly non-black fans celebrated, but not as many arrests. [2]