Person shot and wounded inside Union Station, fire officials sayCindy Hernandezon August 25, 2021 at 1:41 am

A man traveling from California on a Chicago-bound Amtrak train was shot and wounded Tuesday evening at Union Station, fire officials said.

Amtrak police were notified by authorities in California that an individual on the train heading for Chicago had multiple pending warrants, including one for murder, Amtrak spokesman Marc Maggliari said in Chicago on Tuesday.

When the train arrived, Amtrak police were waiting in uniform on the platform for the man, Maggliari said. The man ran, injuring an employee, then opened fire on Amtrak officers, according to Maggliari.

Amtrak police turned, fired and struck the man, Maggliari said.

About 5:30 p.m., paramedics responded to a call of a man who was shot at Union Station, 225 S. Canal St., according to Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Merritt.

The man was transported to Northwestern Memorial Hospital in traumatic arrest, Merritt said. His condition was not immediately known, Maggliari said.

The Chicago Police Department is investigating.

Another man was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was stabilized with unknown injuries, Merritt said. Two other men, with unknown injuries, were also transported to Rush University Medical Center, where they were stabilized.

Train traffic was temporarily halted because of “ongoing police activity” but has resumed moving with residual delays as of 6:30 p.m., according to an Amtrak Alerts Twitter account.

No other details from authorities were immediately available.

Train passenger Alicia Gainey said she heard people running inside the station shouting, “‘Get out. There’s an active shooter.'”

Gainey, who was boarding a train to Elkhart, Indiana, after the incident Tuesday, described the atmosphere shortly after the disturbance: “Everybody is scared.”

Stephanie Bommarito, of Rochester Hills, Michigan, was in the restroom when she got a string of harried texts from her husband, Philip.

“It was awful,” she said. ” ‘Get out … active shooter,’ and I’m trying to get out of the stall,” said Bommarito, whose husband had left the train station with their two children, Mia, 9, and Leo, 7.

She met her family on the street, and they waited outside, missing their 5:50 p.m. train to Detroit.

“I was just worried about my kids and what kind of trauma they might be experiencing,” Stephanie Bommarito said.

Check back for more updates on this breaking news story.

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