With just days before the official end of summer, Chicago has closed out the season with yet more bloodshed.
About 10:15 p.m. on Thursday two gunmen opened fire on a Chicago park, wounding 13 people including a 3-year-old boy. Among the victims were two other minors, one 15 and the other 17.
In all, 23 people were shot in 11 separate shootings within a span of four hours last night. Despite the violent outburst, only one person was killed, a 36-year-old man.
“This right here got me standing out. I’m on my corner every day until the violence stops, because it has to stop,” Semecha Nunn, the 3-year-old’s grandmother told reporters shortly after the shootings.
The mass shooting that left the toddler and two others in critical condition did little to shake the perception of unchecked violence in Chicago–the country’s third most populous city but the highest number of murders last year with 500.
Police say a gunman or gunmen used an assault-style rifle with a high capacity magazine in the park shooting.
“Senseless and brazen acts of violence have no place in Chicago and betray all that we stand for,” Mayor Rahm Emanuel said in a statement in response to the shooting inside Cornell Square Park, in the city’s Back of the Yards neighborhood. “The perpetrators of this crime will be brought to justice and prosecuted to the full extent of the law. I encourage everyone in the community to step forward with any information and everyone in Chicago to continue their individual efforts to build stronger communities where violence has no place.”
According to police, the shootings appear to be gang-related. Witnesses told local news stations that up to three men circled the park in a car before opening fire on a group of people in the park watching a basketball game. The shooters then got out of the vehicle and continued firing.
Mayor Emanuel was traveling on Friday to Washington, D.C., and New Jersey for meetings and political events but cancelled those appearances in the wake of Thursday’s violence.
During a press conference on Friday afternoon, police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said that while shootings and killings are down in the city, 22% and 23% respectively, this is no time for self-congratulation.
“The fact is, we’re doing better. The fact is we have a long way to go,” McCarthy said. “What is needed in Chicago and cities across this country is real action and reasonable gun laws on the state and federal level,” he said. “Military-type weapons like the one we believe was used in this shooting belong on battlefields and not on a street or on a corner or in a park in the Back of the Yards.”
McCarthy said Chicago is expected to end the year with its lowest murder rate since the 1960s.
The rash of violence capped a week of sensational, headline-grabbing gun violence in America, which included the killing of 12 people at the Washington Navy Yard by a mentally disturbed man who went on a shooting spree, before being killed by police. The killing renewed calls for tougher gun laws that would strengthen background check requirements and limit access to guns for those with mental illness.
Gun control back on the agenda
McCarthy said America needs common sense gun laws that include background checks on all gun sales, the requirement to report the transfer of weapons from one person to another, and a ban on assault weapons and high capacity magazines.
“It’s very frustrating because the United States Senate had an opportunity this year to pass universal background checks which are designed to prevent criminals, terrorist and mentally ill individuals from possessing firearms,” McCarthy said. “But just this week we had a mentally ill criminal commit a terrorist act. We can do a lot of really good policing… but until such time that the rest of the components of government, federal, state or local work together we’re not going to have the success that we want.”
Following the massacre at a Newtown, Conn., elementary school and a string of high-profile murders in urban communities including a couple in Chicago, the Obama administration and many Democrats pushed a robust gun safety agenda.









