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2 shot, 1 fatally in Austin: policeSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 6:52 pm

Two men were shot, one fatally, Sunday in Austin on the West Side, according to Chicago police.

About 11:40 a.m., the men, 30 and 62, were standing on the sidewalk in the 5400 block of West Augusta Avenue, when two people approached them and fired shots, police said.

The 30-year-old was struck in the head and chest, and taken to Mt. Sinai Hospital, where he was pronounced dead, police said. He has not yet been identified.

The older man was struck in the buttocks and taken to the same hospital, where his condition was stabilized, police said.

Area Four detectives are investigating.

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2 shot, 1 fatally in Austin: policeSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 6:52 pm Read More »

Mel Tillis: Overcame Adversity and Entered the Pantheon of Country Music.on August 8, 2021 at 6:21 pm

The Quark In The Road

Mel Tillis: Overcame Adversity and Entered the Pantheon of Country Music.

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Mel Tillis: Overcame Adversity and Entered the Pantheon of Country Music.on August 8, 2021 at 6:21 pm Read More »

Anthony Rizzo, who declined vaccine with Cubs, tests positive for COVID-19USA TODAY SPORTSon August 8, 2021 at 4:16 pm

Anthony Rizzo, who as a Cub said he chose not to receive the COVID-19 vaccine because he was “taking some more time to see the data,” tested positive for the coronavirus, New York Yankees manager Aaron Boone said Sunday.

Rizzo, a cancer survivor who is celebrating his 32nd birthday Sunday, was traded from the Cubs to the Yankees on July 29, providing an almost immediate lift to the Bronx Bombers. They have won eight of nine games since his acquisition, moving within 1 1/2 games of a playoff spot, and he’s hit three home runs with a .963 OPS in nine games with the Yankees.

Boone said on a call with reporters that Rizzo was experiencing light symptoms.

The positive test means Rizzo won’t participate in Thursday’s Field of Dreams Game against the White Sox.

A fan favorite in Chicago, where he made three All-Star teams and helped the Cubs to the 2016 World Series title, Rizzo came under scrutiny when he acknowledged in a radio interview that he had not received the vaccine.

“I love my teammates. I love this franchise, and I do everything I can to win here. But with this stuff, this is bigger than baseball,” he said in June. “This is a life decision. This isn’t a career decision right now.”

The Cubs are one of seven major league teams whose Tier 1 personnel have not received the COVID-19 vaccination, and it created the appearance of a divide on the team.

At the time, Kris Bryant, Ian Happ, Willson Contreras, Nico Hoerner, Adbert Alzolay, Javy Baez, Kyle Hendricks and Craig Kimbrel acknowledged they’d been vaccinated, while Rizzo and outfielder Jason Heyward were among those who said they were not.

“We discussed it. If you want to call it ‘we argued about it,’ we did,” Baez said, according to NBC Sports Chicago. “But at the end of the day we … respect each other.”

Now, he will be out more than a week on a Yankees club that’s clawed back into both the AL East and wild-card races despite several COVID-19 issues throughout the season. Most recently, six players — including All-Star Aaron Judge — went on the COVID-19 list shortly after the All-Star break. Judge and pitcher Jonathan Loaisiga were among those refusing to acknowledge their vaccination status. Their July 15 game against was postponed for testing and contact tracing.

The Yankees are among the 23 MLB teams at least 85% vaccinated, allowing for relaxed protocols, but suffered a number of breakthrough positives. Most Yankees received the one-shot Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which has proved less effective than the two-shot Pfizer and Moderna vaccines.

Boone said he did not know if Rizzo had been vaccinated since his June comments.

Read more at usatoday.com

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Anthony Rizzo, who declined vaccine with Cubs, tests positive for COVID-19USA TODAY SPORTSon August 8, 2021 at 4:16 pm Read More »

Florida State football coach Bobby Bowden dies at 91Steve Reed | Associated Presson August 8, 2021 at 4:34 pm

Bobby Bowden, the folksy Hall of Fame coach who built Florida State into an unprecedented college football dynasty, has died. He was 91.

Bobby’s son, Terry, confirmed to The Associated Press that his father died at home in Tallahassee, Florida, surrounded by family early Sunday morning.

“It was truly peaceful,” Terry Bowden said in a text message to The AP.

Bobby Bowden announced on July 21 he had a terminal illness that Terry Bowden later said was pancreatic cancer.

“I’ve always tried to serve God’s purpose for my life, on and off the field, and I am prepared for what is to come,” Bowden, a devout Christian, said at the time. “My wife, Ann, and our family have been life’s greatest blessing. I am at peace.”

Bowden was beloved by Seminoles fans, respected by his peers and throughout his life one of the most accessible stars in college football. His home number was listed in the Tallahassee phone book for years.

With Southern charm and wit, Bowden piled up 377 wins during his 40 years as a major college coach, from tiny Samford — his alma mater, then known as Howard College — to West Virginia and finally at Florida State, where he went 315-98-4. The Seminoles were a force during his 34 seasons as coach, winning 12 Atlantic Coast Conference championships and national titles in 1993 and 1999.

Florida State had an unmatched run of 14 consecutive seasons (1987-2000) finishing ranked in the top five of The Associated Press college football poll under Bowden.

“Florida State University has lost a legend in the passing of Bobby Bowden,” university President John Thrasher said in a statement. “Coach Bowden built a football dynasty and raised the national profile of Florida State University, and he did it with class and a sense of humor.”

Bowden retired following the 2009 season with a Gator Bowl win over West Virginia in Florida State’s 28th straight postseason appearance, a victory that gave him his 33rd consecutive winning season. However, a month after he resigned, the NCAA stripped Florida State of victories in 10 sports because of an academic cheating scandal in 2006 and ’07 involving 61 athletes.

Still, only Penn State’s Joe Paterno is credited with winning more games (409) as a major college football coach. Bowden’s win total ranks fourth across all divisions in college football history.

Bowden was replaced in 2010 by his offensive coordinator, Jimbo Fisher, who had been Bowden’s replacement-in-waiting.

“He’s one of the great human beings that’s ever coached and one of the great coaches that’s ever coached,” Fisher said.

Bowden won the national championship in 1993 with Heisman Trophy-winning quarterback Charlie Ward and again in 1999 with his second Heisman winner, quarterback Chris Weinke, and All-American receiver Peter Warrick.

The Seminoles were a contender to win the title every season for more than a decade. Florida State lost national championship games against Florida, Tennessee and Oklahoma and narrowly missed out on the playing for titles in several other seasons because of losses to archrival Miami.

Bowden once quipped that his headstone would read, “But he played Miami,” a one-liner that came the day after the Hurricanes escaped with a 17-16 win in 1991 when the Seminoles missed a field goal wide right in the final seconds. Miami also won in similar fashion in 2002 when a field-goal try went wide left, much to Bowden’s chagrin.

Both coaches who birthed college football powerhouses in Florida during the 1980s have died this year. Howard Schnellenberger, who led Miami to its first national championship in 1983, died in March at 87.

Florida State dominated the ACC under Bowden, winning championships in 12 of its first 14 seasons after joining the league in 1992.

“Bobby Bowden has meant everything to Florida State athletics and so much to college football in general,” Florida State athletic director David Coburn said. “He is a part of the heart and soul of FSU, but it goes beyond even that — he is a big part of the history of the game.”

Bowden was also the patriarch of college football’s most colorful coaching family. Son Tommy Bowden had a 90-49 record at Tulane and Clemson, and Terry was 47-17-1 at Auburn. Another son, Jeff, served 13 years coaching wide receivers for his father at Florida State and six seasons as offensive coordinator before he resigned in 2006.

Jeff Bowden’s time at Florida State was rocky and emblematic of the program’s fall-off in the early 2000s. Florida State’s offense had slumped to its lowest production in a quarter century and Jeff Bowden was paid $537,500 to resign by boosters.

Bobby Bowden left West Virginia to take over a Florida State program in 1976 that had produced just four wins the three previous seasons. The Seminoles went 5-6 in Bowden’s first year and never again experienced a losing season under a man who said he prepared for football games like World War II generals prepared for battles.

“You face similar tasks of motivation, preparation, teamwork, discipline,” Bowden said. “I probably get the most satisfaction out of putting in the strategies and watching them play out.”

By 1979, Bowden had Florida State positioned for one of the great runs in the annals of college football.

Led by All-American nose guard Ron Simmons, the Seminoles enjoyed an 11-0 regular season but lost to Oklahoma in the Orange Bowl. In 1993, despite a late slip at Notre Dame, Florida State won its first national title after nearly getting there in 1987, 1988, 1991 and 1992.

Bowden’s lone perfect season came in 1999 when the Seminoles became the first team to go wire-to-wire in The Associated Press rankings, No. 1 from the preseason to finish.

“The first championship was more of a relief,” Bowden said. “I think I was able to enjoy the second one a little more.”

Success also brought a glaring spotlight and Bowden’s program was touched by scandal on a few occasions. The school was put on NCAA probation for five years after several players in 1993 accepted free shoes and other sporting goods from a local store. The episode led former Florida coach Steve Spurrier to dub FSU “Free Shoes University.”

Bowden prided himself on adapting to the times and giving players a second chance, but critics said he was soft on discipline with an eye on winning games.

“If short hair and good manners won football games, Army and Navy would play for the national championship every year,” Bowden retorted.

Randy Moss, one of the most talented athletes to attend Florida State, never played a down for the Seminoles and was kicked out of school after a redshirt season for smoking marijuana. In 1999, Warrick was caught in a shopping scam that led to his suspension for two games and probably cost him the Heisman Trophy that year.

“There’s only about 6 inches that turns that halo into a noose,” Bowden was fond of saying during the good days, when he was often called “Saint Bobby” by the Florida State faithful.

The Seminoles won 10 or more games in 18 of Bowden’s 34 seasons at Florida State, but were a relatively mortal 74-42 on the field from 2001-09.

The cheating scandal that led to the loss of a dozen wins from Bowden’s final resume took place in an online music history course from the fall of 2006 through summer 2007. The NCAA said some athletes were provided with answers to exams and in some cases, had papers typed for them.

Despite those tough days near the end of his career, Bowden stayed in the public eye after retirement, writing a book, making speeches and going public with his treatment for prostate cancer in 2007. His fear of retiring from coaching resulted in part from the death of his longtime idol, former Alabama coach Paul “Bear” Bryant, who died within weeks of leaving the sidelines.

“After you retire, there’s only one big event left,” Bowden frequently said.

Bowden stayed active into his 80s, finally slowing down over the last year or so. He was hospitalized in October 2020 after testing positive for COVID-19. The test came a few days after he returned home from a long hospital stay for a leg infection.

Born Nov. 8, 1929, in Birmingham, Alabama, Robert Cleckler Bowden overcame rheumatic fever as a child to quarterback Woodlawn High School in Birmingham, then attended Alabama for a semester before transferring back to his hometown Howard University, where he starred at quarterback.

He married his childhood sweetheart, Ann, and they stayed together for 72 years.

Bowden built the Florida State program by scheduling the toughest opponents he could find, and he’d play them anywhere, usually at their stadium. He was dubbed “King of the Road” in 1981 after playing consecutive road games at Nebraska, Ohio State, Notre Dame, Pittsburgh and LSU — and winning three of the five.

His daring play-calling also earned him the nickname Riverboat Gambler in some quarters. Bowden’s most famous trick play came in 1988 at Clemson. He sent his punt team onto the field with 1:33 left in a tie game with a fourth-and-4 and the ball at Florida State’s 21. Florida State’s punter leaped high into the air and acted as if he were chasing down a high snap while the upback took the ball and slipped it between his legs where LeRoy Butler grabbed it and raced 78 yards to the Clemson 1 to set up the winning field goal.

“We were determined somebody was going to win that game,” Bowden said after the “Puntrooskie.”

Through Bowden’s career, Florida State won games in many of the nation’s toughest stadiums, including at Michigan, Southern California and, of course, rivals Florida and Miami. In 1987, the Seminoles crushed Big Ten champion Michigan State 31-3 at East Lansing and whipped Southeastern Conference champion Auburn on its home field, 34-6.

Bowden also was considered one of the best handlers of great individual talents, recruiting and developing the likes of Simmons, Ward, Weinke, Warrick, Butler and Deion Sanders, who earned the nickname “Prime Time” during his days as a Seminole.

“God bless the Bowden Family, Friends & Loved ones,” Sanders posted on Twitter. “My Prayers are with u. I’ve lost 1 of the best coaches I’ve ever had.”

Florida State’s recruiting classes were nearly always among the top nationally. By the 1990s, the Seminoles poured star talent into the NFL on an annual basis, including four of the top 19 picks in the 2006 draft the same year Bowden was elected to the College Football Hall of Fame.

Florida state said funeral arrangements for Bowden were pending.

Bowden is survived by wife Ann; sons Terry, Tommy, Jeff and Steve; and daughters Robyn Hines and Ginger Madden.

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Florida State football coach Bobby Bowden dies at 91Steve Reed | Associated Presson August 8, 2021 at 4:34 pm Read More »

Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Young’s bat and baserunning propel Smokies to win; Herz dominates early; South Bend breaks out big bats; Nwogu with another multi-hit game; Hernandez hits first career HRon August 8, 2021 at 3:54 pm

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Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Young’s bat and baserunning propel Smokies to win; Herz dominates early; South Bend breaks out big bats; Nwogu with another multi-hit game; Hernandez hits first career HR

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Daily Cubs Minors Recap: Young’s bat and baserunning propel Smokies to win; Herz dominates early; South Bend breaks out big bats; Nwogu with another multi-hit game; Hernandez hits first career HRon August 8, 2021 at 3:54 pm Read More »

Third suspect still sought in fatal shooting of Chicago police officerSophie Sherryon August 8, 2021 at 3:15 pm

The search continued Sunday morning for the third suspect in the fatal shooting of a Chicago police officer and the wounding of another the night before.

Chicago Police Department Supt. David Brown is scheduled to speak to reporters Sunday morning to update them on the incident.

The wounded officer remained at University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was “fighting for his very life” in critical condition, according to First Deputy Eric Carter who talked to reporters outside the hospital early Sunday.

Both officers were shot during a traffic stop shortly after 9 p.m. at 63rd Street and Bell Avenue in West Englewood. They returned fire, hitting at least one suspect, police said.

The other officer, a woman, also had been taken to University of Chicago Medical Center, where she was pronounced dead, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

A Chicago police officer rubs his eyes while standing in line with other officers outside the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office right before a procession for a Chicago police officer who was shot and killed earlier during a traffic stop at 63rd and Bell, Sunday, Aug. 8, 2021.
Chicago police officers gathered outside the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office early Sunday to await the arrival of the body of a fellow officer killed in the line of duty Saturday night.
Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

“We ask the city of Chicago to pray for both officers, their families and their fellow officers who are struggling with the facts of this,” Carter said. “It’s just another example of how the Chicago Police Department and these officers put their lives above that of others to protect this city day in, day out.”

With him was Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who said “obviously our hearts ache for the loss of life.”

Lightfoot said the officer who died was “very young on the job, but incredibly enthusiastic to do the work.”

“We must remind ourselves every day that our officers are fearless in the face of danger,” she said. “It’s a very sad and tragic day for our city.”

Both officers were part of CPD’s Community Safety Team, created last year. The unit is intended to help forge stronger community ties on the South and West Sides. It was started with about 450 officers, and 200 more were added last September.

Brown had been out of town Saturday to finalize details of his mother’s funeral, but released a statement.

“The Chicago Police Department has lost one of our own in an incomprehensible act of violence,” Brown said. “These officers put the safety and lives of others above their own, serving with courage and honor despite knowing the cost.”

Two suspects were taken into custody shortly after the shooting, according to police communications from the scene. The one who was wounded was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn. His condition was not known.

A third suspect, a woman, was being sought by police late Saturday. At least least one weapon was recovered at the scene, Carter said.

Police declined to release more information about the circumstances of the shooting, saying more information would be available later Sunday as detectives continued to investigate.

The incident was part of a violent night in Chicago, which also saw two mass shootings in Gresham and several triple shootings. In all, at least 45 people were shot between 7 p.m. Saturday and 10

Chicago police work the scene where two police officers where shot, one fatally, during a traffic stop in the 6300 block of South Bell in the West Englewood neighborhood, Saturday, Aug. 7, 2021.
Chicago police work the scene where two police officers where shot, one fatally, during a traffic stop in the 6300 block of South Bell Avenue in West Englewood Saturday night.
Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Some of the first police calls from the scene described one officer being shot.

“Officer down,” an officer radioed around 9:10 p.m.

“I got an officer down,” a police dispatcher repeats. “6-3 and Bell, officer down, officer down, shot twice, shot at police, officer down.

“Stay off my air, stay off my air,” the dispatcher continues, asking for no unnecessary calls on the channel. “Everybody stay off the air, I got an officer down, 6-3 and Bell, start rolling.

An officer is heard yelling, in apparent distress, and the dispatcher says, “Give me two ambulances, two ambulances needed for two officers down, two officers down … Get those officers wrapped up going to 6-3 and Bell. I want a perimeter set up three blocks, north south, east, west.”

About a block from the shooting, neighbors looked out cautiously from their front yards on what one resident said was a “quiet block.”

“Be careful, they’re still looking for someone,” a woman warned a neighbor as she walked by.

Dozens of officers could be seen patrolling the neighborhood and blocking streets in the area while a police helicopter flew overhead.

Officers tied blue ribbons to trees shortly before midnight near the medical examiner’s office in preparation for a procession to bring the officer who died to the morgue.

A Chicago police procession for a police officer who was shot and killed earlier during a traffic stop at 63rd and Bell drives by the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office, Sunday, Aug. 8, 2021.
A Chicago police procession early Sunday near the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office for a police officer who was shot and killed earlier during a traffic stop at 63rd Street and Bell Avenue.
Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

Outside the medical center, a large crowd of police officers gathered outside an ambulance bay. They included city, county and state police officials and supporters.

Some in the crowd held a group prayer and others hugged each other and engaged in hushed conversation. Water bottles were passed out by police personnel wearing jackets that read “Peer Support.”

The last Chicago Police officers who died in the line of duty were Conrad Gary and Eduardo Marmolejo, who were chasing a man with a gun on the Far South Side when they were struck by a train and killed in December of 2018.

The last officer shot to death in the line of duty was Samuel Jimenez, who was killed just a month earlier while responding to a shooting at Mercy Hospital. Three other people died, including the gunman.

Contributing: Mohammad Samra

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Third suspect still sought in fatal shooting of Chicago police officerSophie Sherryon August 8, 2021 at 3:15 pm Read More »

Chicago Bears: 3 offensive tackles to sign with injury problems mountingRyan Heckmanon August 8, 2021 at 2:30 pm

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Chicago Bears: 3 offensive tackles to sign with injury problems mountingRyan Heckmanon August 8, 2021 at 2:30 pm Read More »

2 mass shootings, multiple triple shootings, 2 CPD officers shot in violent night across ChicagoSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 11:11 am

At least 45 people have been shot — five fatally, including a Chicago police officer — since 7 p.m. Saturday across Chicago.

So far this month, 155 people have been shot, 23 fatally, in gun violence across the city, according to Chicago Sun-Times data.

Around 2:05 a.m., a 24-year old man opened fire after getting into a verbal fight with another man, 37, at a lounge in the 1800 block of West 87th Street in Gresham on the Far South Side, Chicago Police said.

The 37-year-old was shot twice in the neck and three times in the back and was taken to Christ Medical Center in Oak Lawn where he died to his injuries, police said.

The offender was shot eight times throughout his body and was also taken to Christ where he was listed in critical condition, according to police.

At least five others who were at the lounge were also shot, police said.

A man, 38, was shot once in the abdomen and taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center where he was listed in critical condition, police said.

A 56-year-old man was shot once in his elbow and a 33-year-old in his upper body, police said.

Both were taken to Little Company of Mary Hospital in Evergreen Park where their conditions were stabilized, according to police.

A man, 23 was grazed in his face and a 37-year-old woman was shot in her back, police said.

Both were taken to the University of Chicago where their conditions were stabilized, police said.

About an hour earlier, a gunman opened fire following an altercation with two male security guards who denied him entry to a club about two miles away in the 8300 block of South Halsted Street, police said.

One of the guards, 40, was shot multiple times in his body and the other guard, 42, in the back twice and in his thigh, police said. Both were taken to Christ where the 40-year-old guard was listed in critical condition and the 42-year-old in serious condition, police said.

At least three others who were standing near the altercation were also shot, police said.

Two males, whose ages were unknown, were each shot once in the leg and self-transported to Little Company of Mary for treatment, police said. Their conditions were unknown, police said.

A man, 21, was shot in his chin and was taken to the University of Chicago where his condition was stabilized, police said.

A Chicago police officer was killed and another was seriously wounded in a shooting on the South Side, officials said.

The officers were shot during a traffic stop shortly after 9 p.m. at 63rd Street and Bell Avenue and returned fire, hitting at least one suspect, police said.

Both officers were taken to University of Chicago, where one of them — a woman — was pronounced dead, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

The other officer was “fighting for his very life” in critical condition, according to First Deputy Eric Carter who talked to reporters outside the hospital early Sunday.

Shortly after 7 p.m., Saturday, four men were wounded in a shooting on the Near West Side that left three of them in critical condition, police said.

The group was standing near a park in the 200 block of South Maplewood Street when someone fired shots from a vehicle, police said.

Three of the men, ages 23, 27 and 28, were struck multiple times and taken to Stroger Hospital in critical condition, police said. A 20-year-old man was struck in the ankle and taken to the same hospital in good condition, police said.

Just before 12:25 a.m., Sunday, three people were shot while at a gathering outside in the 11400 block of South Throop Street in Morgan Park on the Far South Side, police said.

A man, 39, was shot in his lower back and woman, 24, was shot in her buttocks, police said.

They were both taken to Christ where their conditions were stabilized, police said.

Another man, 24, was grazed in his leg and was treated and released at the scene, police said.

A man was fatally shot in the South Loop on the Near South Side. Just before 2 a.m., the victim, 24, was shot three times in his abdomen in the 2200 block of South Michigan Avenue, police said.

He was taken to Northwestern Memorial Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said.

A person was found shot to death in a vehicle on the Southwest Side. Just before 1:00 a.m., a man, 47, was found unresponsive with a gunshot wound to his torso in the 3000 block of West 38th Street, police said.

He was taken to Mount Sinai Hospital where he was pronounced dead, police said. He has not been identified.

22 others, including two boys, 16 and 17, were shot in attacks across Chicago Saturday night and Sunday morning.

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2 mass shootings, multiple triple shootings, 2 CPD officers shot in violent night across ChicagoSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 11:11 am Read More »

17-year-old wounded in Roseland shootingSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 11:25 am

A 17-year-old boy was shot and wounded Sunday in Roseland on the Far South Side.

The boy was outside in the 11300 block South Prairie Avenue when he heard gunfire, Chicago Police said.

He was shot in the arm and leg and was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center where his condition was stabilized, police said.

No one was in custody.

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17-year-old wounded in Roseland shootingSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 11:25 am Read More »

2 wounded — including 16-year-old boy — in Little Village shootingSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 11:42 am

Two people — including a 16-year-old — were shot and wounded Sunday in Little Village on the West Side.

The two males, 16 and 25, were standing outside just before midnight in the 3300 block of West 25th Street when someone opened fire, Chicago Police said.

The 16-year-old was shot twice in his abdomen, and the 25-year-old suffered six gunshot wounds throughout his body, police said.

Both were taken to Mount Sinai Hospital where their conditions were stabilized, police said.

One of the victims believed to have seen the shooter open fire from a moving vehicle, police said.

No one was in custody.

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2 wounded — including 16-year-old boy — in Little Village shootingSun-Times Wireon August 8, 2021 at 11:42 am Read More »