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Illinois
Related: About this forum'Bullets just came from nowhere': Fourth of July weekend gun violence kills at least 17
Bullets just came from nowhere: Fourth of July weekend gun violence kills at least 17, including 7-year-old-girl
By PAIGE FRY, JEREMY GORNER, SOPHIE SHERRY and JAVONTE ANDERSON
CHICAGO TRIBUNE | JUL 05, 2020 AT 9:10 PM
As many Chicagoans were celebrating the Fourth of July with barbecues and after-dinner fireworks, relatives of Natalia Wallace were experiencing the worst day of their lives.
The 7-year-old girl was one of at least 80 people shot, at least 17 of those fatally, across the city during the violent holiday weekend, starting Thursday afternoon. Gunfire erupted outside her relatives home Saturday on the West Side, and she became the latest in a horrific string of children whose lives have been taken away by gun violence in Chicago.
Bullets just came from nowhere, Natalias grandmother, Linda Rogers, said Sunday afternoon from the site of the shooting in the Austin community. Whoever did it, I wish theyd come forward.
I came out here and my grandbaby (was) lying on the ground, Rogers said as she started to cry. I couldnt do nothing. My baby was lying on that ground. It didnt take a minute.
{snip}
https://twitter.com/paigexfry
Paige Fry is an overnight crime reporter for the Chicago Tribune. She graduated from the University of Florida, where she was the editor-in-chief of the student-run paper The Independent Florida Alligator. She has also previously written for the Tampa Bay Times, The Palm Beach Post and The Gainesville Sun.
https://twitter.com/JeremyGorner
Jeremy Gorner is a beat reporter for the Tribune's Metro staff, covering the Chicago Police Department. He joined the Tribune in 2006 to cover breaking news for its online news desk. Before joining the Tribune, Gorner covered crime at the now-defunct New City News Service, formerly known as the City News Bureau of Chicago.
https://twitter.com/sophiepsherry
Sophie Sherry is an intern with the quick response team. She recently graduated from The University of Michigan where she majored in public policy. Before The Chicago Tribune, Sophie interned at CNN, Michigan Radio and The Invisible Institute.
https://twitter.com/JavonteA
Before coming to the Tribune, Javonte worked at The (Toledo) Blade, where he covered K-12 and higher education. Previously, he was a general assignment reporter at the Post-Tribune in northwest Indiana. Javonte hails from Gary and is a proud Indiana University graduate.
By PAIGE FRY, JEREMY GORNER, SOPHIE SHERRY and JAVONTE ANDERSON
CHICAGO TRIBUNE | JUL 05, 2020 AT 9:10 PM
As many Chicagoans were celebrating the Fourth of July with barbecues and after-dinner fireworks, relatives of Natalia Wallace were experiencing the worst day of their lives.
The 7-year-old girl was one of at least 80 people shot, at least 17 of those fatally, across the city during the violent holiday weekend, starting Thursday afternoon. Gunfire erupted outside her relatives home Saturday on the West Side, and she became the latest in a horrific string of children whose lives have been taken away by gun violence in Chicago.
Bullets just came from nowhere, Natalias grandmother, Linda Rogers, said Sunday afternoon from the site of the shooting in the Austin community. Whoever did it, I wish theyd come forward.
I came out here and my grandbaby (was) lying on the ground, Rogers said as she started to cry. I couldnt do nothing. My baby was lying on that ground. It didnt take a minute.
{snip}
https://twitter.com/paigexfry
Paige Fry is an overnight crime reporter for the Chicago Tribune. She graduated from the University of Florida, where she was the editor-in-chief of the student-run paper The Independent Florida Alligator. She has also previously written for the Tampa Bay Times, The Palm Beach Post and The Gainesville Sun.
https://twitter.com/JeremyGorner
Jeremy Gorner is a beat reporter for the Tribune's Metro staff, covering the Chicago Police Department. He joined the Tribune in 2006 to cover breaking news for its online news desk. Before joining the Tribune, Gorner covered crime at the now-defunct New City News Service, formerly known as the City News Bureau of Chicago.
https://twitter.com/sophiepsherry
Sophie Sherry is an intern with the quick response team. She recently graduated from The University of Michigan where she majored in public policy. Before The Chicago Tribune, Sophie interned at CNN, Michigan Radio and The Invisible Institute.
https://twitter.com/JavonteA
Before coming to the Tribune, Javonte worked at The (Toledo) Blade, where he covered K-12 and higher education. Previously, he was a general assignment reporter at the Post-Tribune in northwest Indiana. Javonte hails from Gary and is a proud Indiana University graduate.
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'Bullets just came from nowhere': Fourth of July weekend gun violence kills at least 17 (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jul 2020
OP
I live in the Chicago media market, and the news from there is horrendous. Every day.
Midnight Writer
Jul 2020
#2
frazzled
(18,402 posts)1. This has been going on for weeks now
Too many innocent children, too many babies. I will remember their names too. It makes you weep to read the paper every day.
Midnight Writer
(23,073 posts)2. I live in the Chicago media market, and the news from there is horrendous. Every day.
And I don't have a clue as to a solution. Many of these are just random attacks, with no apparent motive.
Heartbreaking.
Progressive Jones
(6,011 posts)3. I grew up in Austin.
It was a great area of the city until the drug gangs began shooting the place up in drug turf wars.
That's what it's all about. Drive by shootings aren't robberies. They are targeted attacks. They are acts of war.