Chicago Tribune

Carjacking victims’ fears realized as Chicago fights to control the crime

CHICAGO — One woman’s Honda Civic was taken when she was held at gunpoint while picking up her son at a day care center. Another woman lost her Chevrolet Camaro after a day of shopping when she was pulled out of it and thrown to the ground and her key fob was ripped from its chain. A ride-share driver’s Ford Escape was stolen after he struggled with a customer he had asked not to eat in the ...

CHICAGO — One woman’s Honda Civic was taken when she was held at gunpoint while picking up her son at a day care center.

Another woman lost her Chevrolet Camaro after a day of shopping when she was pulled out of it and thrown to the ground and her key fob was ripped from its chain.

A ride-share driver’s Ford Escape was stolen after he struggled with a customer he had asked not to eat in the back seat. After a scuffle, the driver held onto the car as it started moving, his knees scraping the pavement after he let go.

“I was so upset when I saw that car being driven off,” the driver, Phillip Sanchez, told the Chicago Tribune. “My mind was freaking out.”

These were among the hundreds of carjackings in Chicago already this year, brazen crimes that have frightened city residents and frustrated police, politicians and community leaders — many of whom are already preoccupied with intractable violence that has given the city an unflattering reputation.

Through mid-March, there had been more than 370 carjackings in Chicago. Despite a dip during February’s harsh winter weather, that figure was easily the most seen here during the same period in any year since at least 2001, crime statistics show.

And the result is a shaken city, where residents look over their shoulders more than usual and at least one alderman has gone so far as scheduling a special, secure event at a gas station so constituents could safely fill up.

The woman who was thrown to the ground as her Camaro was taken blamed herself for becoming a victim.

“I knew this was happening a lot. I just wasn’t paying attention,” she told the Tribune in the moments after

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Chicago Tribune

Chicago Tribune6 min read
Caleb Williams And Rome Odunze Fearlessly Vow To Raise Expectations For Bears: ‘What’s The Reason To Duck?’
CHICAGO — Caleb Williams arrived at Halas Hall on Friday, his first full day as the new Chicago Bears quarterback, with the same level of excitement and self-assuredness he has been channeling through most of his football life. Williams is nothing if
Chicago Tribune4 min read
Biden Administration Aims To Speed Up The Demise Of Coal-fired Power Plants
Burning coal to generate electricity is rapidly declining in the United States. President Joe Biden’s administration moved Thursday to speed up the demise of the climate-changing, lung-damaging fossil fuel while attempting to ease the transition to c
Chicago Tribune4 min read
‘Challengers’ Review: Tennis, Everyone? Zendaya Keeps A Juicy Romantic Triangle Spinning
A little delirious and a lot of serious, witty, stylish fun, “Challengers” plays a beautiful game of Canadian doubles with its three main characters, on and off the court. It’s a purely enjoyable romantic drama, and the one thing people seem to agree

Related Books & Audiobooks