A large crowd turned out in Fox Lake, Illinois, Wednesday to honor the life of a police officer who was killed after chasing three suspects the day before — as the manhunt for the men who gunned him down continued.
Lt. Charles Joseph Gliniewicz, 52, a 30-year veteran, was found dead in a marshy area of Fox Lake at 8:09 a.m. Tuesday. Gliniewicz reported he spotted three suspicious individuals at 7:52 a.m.
“Joe was my best friend, my world, my hero, the love of my life for the last 26 and a half years,” his widow, Melodie Gliniewicz, said through tears at a vigil Wednesday, standing on a stage surrounded by their four sons. “He was the most wonderful, caring and loving father to our boys,” she said.
“My world got a little smaller with his passing, and he will truly be missed by all of us. Thank you everybody,” she told the crowd.
Hundreds of people, some wearing police and fire uniforms, others holding American flags, turned out in the vacation town of Fox Lake, located about 60 miles northwest of Chicago, to honor the slain officer.
Meanwhile, the manhunt for three suspects wanted in his death continued.
And in his last police radio transmissions revealed Wednesday and confirmed by NBC Chicago, Gliniewicz says, “I’m going to be out checking the old concrete plant checking on two male whites, a male black.” And he says later, “they took off toward the swamp.”
Asked whether he needed a second unit, Gliniewicz responds, “Go ahead and start somebody.”
Authorities said the call for backup was made at 7:55 a.m. and it arrived at 8:01 a.m. He was discovered with a gunshot wound eight minutes later.
Around 400 law enforcement officers from several departments, as well as the FBI and ATF, scoured a two square mile area after Gliniewicz was found dead.
The intense grid search of that area ended Tuesday night, but the search continued in and around Fox Lake Wednesday. Officials said the manhunt would continue for as long as it takes.
“I have a murdered colleague — a police officer — and we’re not going to stop,” George Filenko, chief of the Lake County Major Crimes Task Force, said Wednesday.








