Monday, August 10, 2020

Widespread looting in Chicago overnight

About twelve hours after Mayor Lori Lightfoot barricaded a beach on the North Side because too many people congregated there, widespread looting hit Chicago downtown, on the Gold Coast, and the Near North Side. Of that threat to civility, on Twitter Saturday Lightweight boasted, "It is being addressed."

As of 8:00 am this morning Lightfoot is silent on the looting on Twitter.

From the Chicago Tribune:
Hundreds of people swept through the Magnificent Mile and other parts of downtown Chicago early Monday, smashing windows, looting stores, confronting police and at one point exchanging gunfire with officers, authorities said.

The shots were fired at Michigan Avenue and Lake Street around 4:30 a.m., nearly five hours into the widespread vandalism. Officers were not hit and returned fire, according to the department, which said it was not known if anyone else was hit.

Earlier, an officer was seen slumped against a building by Grand and Wabash avenues as other other cops tended to him. It was unclear what had happened to him. Down the block, police in camouflage gear and shields briefly stood outside at a shop at Rush Street and Grand Avenue.

The looting began shortly after midnight as people darted through broken store windows and doors along Michigan Avenue carrying shopping bags full of merchandise. Cars dropped off more people as the crowd grew. At least one U-Haul van was seen pulling up. Police made several arrests through the night and recovered at least one gun, officials said. One woman with shopping bags in her hands fell on the sidewalk as an officer was chasing her. Another woman appeared to have been pepper-sprayed. A rock was thrown at a squad car.

The looting seemed to be centered in Streeterville and North Michigan Avenue, but some looting was reported on State Street in the Loop and on the Near North Side. By 3 a.m. police appeared to be getting things under control. But some vandalism continued into the daylight hours, and the CTA suspended train and bus service into downtown during the morning rush, while the Illinois state police blocked off ramps from expressways. Bridges across the Chicago River were raised, except for the one on LaSalle Street for emergency vehicles.
So far none of the media outlets have called the rioting "mostly peaceful." But the day is young. No reports on how many of the rioters were wearing PPE masks or practicing social distancing as they looted stores.

There were some arrests. Surely the accused are free by now, courtesy of Cook County State Attorney Kimm Foxx' revolving door jail policy.




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