Archive for the ‘Chicago’ Category

Missing Man Presumed to Have Been Victim of John Wayne Gacy

By Dawn in Chicago, Investigations, Missing Persons Investigations, MSI Detective Services at December 22nd, 2011 | No comments

 

 

 

 

What began as an attempt by investigators to identify eight unknown Gacy victims who were recently exhumed ended with locating a missing man and his reunification with his family.

Ted Szal ran out on his family 35 years ago after the turmoil of a divorce and a bitter family feud. Szal was 24 when he parked his car at Chicago’s O’Hare airport in 1977, threw his keys down a sewer grate and got on a plane to Colorado Springs.

He intended to never look back, Szal said. But it wasn’t that easy. Holidays and birthdays were tough, and his wife pleaded with him to reconnect, he said, but he was too stubborn to make the phone call.

“I threw the keys away and I threw my life away 35 years ago,” Szal said. “I missed them a lot, course I did. But I’m also stubborn. I made up my mind,” he said.

Szal “wandered around the mountains for a while” in 1977. Unable to find work and low on money, he moved to California before migrating to Oregon to help build a new shopping mall in Springfield.

Szal’s older sister contacted the Cook County sheriff’s office in October when authorities asked for tips that might help them identify eight of Gacy’s victims. The sheriff’s office issued a public plea for families of young men who disappeared in the 1970s to submit DNA samples for comparison with the victim’s remains. Read the full article »

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Unlucky: Man Robbed of $10,000 Won at Casino

By Dawn in Chicago, Crime, Investigations, MSI Detective Services, robbery, Stolen Property, Theft Investigations at December 8th, 2011 | No comments

Good luck quickly changed to bad luck for a Chicago man yesterday. Anyone who has ever gambled at a casino knows the odds of winning $10,000 are not good. This man won the jackpot and then lost it in less time than it probably took to win it.

A 62-year-old Chicago man was robbed of more than $10,000 he had won at a casino less than a half hour earlier.

The victim, an immigrant who speaks little English and lives in low-income housing in Chicago’s Chinatown, was returning from a trip to the Horseshoe Casino in Hammond, Ind., just after 2 a.m. on Wednesday morning when the robbery happened, according to his son, William Chan.

“He parks his car in the parking lot. He’s 20 steps from the front door. He gets out of his car, and all of sudden, someone comes rushing out and wraps his arms around his neck,” Chan told msnbc.com. “Then a second guy come up with a gun.”

As he walked to the front door of his Chinatown apartment, the victim said he saw two young men running toward him. The victim wasn’t able to get inside fast enough and was attacked by the two men.

The men who robbed him told him not to move and demanded all of his money, Chan said. They also robbed him of the chips he had won.

Chan said the robbers struck his father in the forehead and then fled. “He’s okay; the cut wasn’t so deep, but there was a small laceration above his forehead,” he said, adding that his father didn’t need any stitches. Paramedics treated the cut on the scene.

It’s not clear why Chan’s father was targeted, but his son doesn’t think it was random.

“There are only two conclusions, one which I think is a higher possibility,” he said. “He was most likely followed from the casino back to his apartment building. The second possibility is it was a random robbery, which I think is least likely.” He added that many Chinese immigrants who visit area casinos, like his father, have long been targets of thieves who prey on them on their  return.

My first thought was this was not random. I think his son’s theory that his father was followed from the casino is a good one. Maybe the casino can view their security cameras and get some leads on who may have followed Mr. Chan.

The son said, “There are building surveillance cameras, but when we spoke with detectives and the building manager, they said the surveillance cameras didn’t work. I find it hard to believe that there’s a low-income housing building with surveillance cameras that don’t work.”

The robbers haven’t been caught. Chan said the money doesn’t matter, but he’s worried about his father’s safety.

Chan said his father, who speaks little English, was sleeping this morning, trying to recover from his ordeal. Father and son are scheduled to meet with detectives later today.

Read more@ msnbc

Also, read story@ chicagotribune

 

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Chicago to Make Public a Decade of Crimes

By Dawn in Chicago, Crime, MSI Detective Services, Politics, Safety at September 19th, 2011 | No comments

Long a city with a reputation for withholding information, Chicago now wants to make public every crime over the past 10 years — a highly unusual move among the nation’s major police departments.

Millions of crime statistics dating to 2001 will be posted online in a searchable database, slated for a Wednesday launch, although a police press official told msnbc.com that could be delayed. It will be updated daily, providing fodder for residents to evaluate their own neighborhoods, academics to study crime and techie types to create websites or apps.

The release is the latest attempt by the administration of Mayor Rahm Emanuel, who took office in May, to make city dealings more open and counter Chicago’s reputation for entrenched systemic corruption and backroom deals. Chicago officials recently posted online the salaries of city employees, city contracts and lobbying data, with more information expected in coming months.

“It’s a whole new era of openness and transparency,” said Brett Goldstein, the city’s chief data officer and former police officer. “You determine your own analysis.” Read the full article »

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Minn. Wildfire Haze Reaches Chicago, Milwaukee

By Dawn in Chicago, fire, Illinois at September 19th, 2011 | No comments

Calmer winds, cooler temperatures and a few moments of sleet and light snow brought encouragement Wednesday as firefighters continued efforts to contain a blaze that was in a “pause mode” — days after it moved at breakneck speeds, swallowing nearly 160 square miles of forest along the Minnesota-Canada border.

The fire in the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness is one of the largest on record in the state, and just under half of the access points into the wilderness were closed to campers by midday Wednesday. Less than 50 buildings — including cabins — had been evacuated.

Plumes of smoke from the fire drifted into Michigan, Wisconsin and northern Illinois on Tuesday, but the plume had largely dissipated by Wednesday because of the drop in heat and wind, and it was less visible because of overcast skies, said Mary Shedd, a Forest Service spokeswoman in Isabella. Read the full article »

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