2 killed in latest Chicago police officer-involved shooting

By Greg Botelho

Chicago police -- under intense scrutiny in recent months over officer-involved shootings -- were involved in another on Saturday morning, an incident that left two people dead, police said.

The latest officer-involved shooting happened around 4:30 a.m. (5:30 a.m. ET) Saturday near West Garfield Park, Chicago police spokeswoman Ana Pacheco said.

In a later press release, police explained that officers had gone to the location for "a domestic disturbance."

"Upon arrival, officers were confronted by a combative subject resulting in the discharging of the officer's weapon, fatally wounding two individuals," the police said.

The department did not indicate what, if anything, the two had to do with the reported disturbance.

But a Chicago fire dispatcher reported that a man and a woman were transported from the area after the shooting.

Later Saturday, the Cook County Medical Examiner's Office said the people killed were 55-year-old Bettie Jones and 19-year-old Quintonio LeGrier. The coroner's officer said autopsies would be completed Sunday morning.

Janet Cooksey, the mother of LeGrier, told CNN affiliate WLS that her son died of several gunshot wounds.

"I went to the hospital; my son has seven bullet wounds in him," Cooksey said. "And that's too much."

Cooksey added that her son had been in college studying engineering.

WLS reported that LeGrier's father called 911 saying his son was holding a metal baseball bat and acting erratic.

"He was having a mental situation. Sometimes he will get loud, but not violent," Cooksey told the station, referring to her son.

Jones was a downstairs tenant in the building, according to WLS.

Follows protests against Chicago police

The shooting came two days after protests against Chicago police officers' actions -- including the killing of black teenager Laquan McDonald -- shut down parts of the so-called Magnificent Mile, a well-known high-end shopping district in the city.

"Sixteen shots and a cover-up!" the Christmas Eve protesters chanted.

They were referring to the fact it took 13 months before authorities released surveillance video of the 17-year-old's shooting. Jason Van Dyke, the white Chicago police officer who killed the teenager, was charged with first-degree murder. Van Dyke -- who has a history of complaints against him, mostly for excessive force -- has pleaded not guilty.

That case contributed to Garry McCarthy losing his job as Chicago's police superintendent and spurred calls for Mayor Rahm Emanuel to resign. The graphic nature of the video, in which Van Dyke is shown shooting McDonald not long after arriving on the scene, didn't help, nor did the fact that this footage didn't square with other officers' accounts on the scene.

Homicides overall, not just officer-involved shootings, have been a major issue in Chicago, dealing with more homicides the past few years than even New York and Los Angeles, two more populous cities.

Emanuel acknowledged the public discontent in a speech earlier this month, saying his city needs "a painful and honest reckoning into what went wrong" in the McDonald case and beyond.

The mayor has already welcomed a U.S. Justice Department investigation into whether Chicago police have made a habit of violating the law.

"We will be a better city for it," Emanuel said. "It is in our self-interest, because we need [federal] assistance to make the fundamental and necessary changes."

CNN's Chuck Johnston contributed to this report.

The-CNN-Wire
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