logo
Disturbing new video shows what happens when unarmed cops are made to patrol Chicago's subways

Disturbing new video shows what happens when unarmed cops are made to patrol Chicago's subways

Daily Mail​10-07-2025
A Chicago police officer was attacked by raging subway riders while patrolling a station, new video showed.
An unidentified officer was seen standing alone next to the 69th subway station placard while three riders screamed at him in a verbal altercation that turned physical on an unknown date.
One of the men swung at the officer, who managed to duck, but was knocked off his feet after taking a punch to the ribcage.
He was able to get up, but was immediately surrounded by the three men who swung at him multiple times.
The officer was hit again and was struck so hard he fell against the stopped Red Line subway before hitting the concrete.
The officer managed to slip to safety while his comrades kept his attackers at bay until they walked away.
Other videos showed K9 units and their officers being attacked on the platform.
Daily Mail has reached out to the Chicago Police Department for comment.
It doesn't appear that the transit cops were armed, leaving them vulnerable to attacks in a city where crime is up 42 percent over a four-year period, police statistics showed.
It doesn't appear that the transit cops were armed, leaving them vulnerable to attacks in a city where crime is up 42 percent over a four-year period, police statistics showed
Crime is, however, down 14 percent compared to 2024 between January and June.
And it's not just officers who are fearing attacks, as a 56-year-old man was beaten to death in a different subway station on July 4.
The man was involved in a late-night brawl at the Clark/Lake station around 10:30pm, where he suffered a head injury. He was taken to the hospital, where he was pronounced dead, according to People.
More than 2,200 crimes have taken place in the Windy City's subway system, with nearly 650 battery cases, 238 assaults, and 29 sex offenses.
A crime happens on the transit system once every three hours, the Illinois Policy found.
And every one ride out of 100,000 will result in a crime. The system has around 765,566 rides per weekday.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Long lost ‘Chappaquiddick' tapes found by son of reporter investigating Ted Kennedy crash
Long lost ‘Chappaquiddick' tapes found by son of reporter investigating Ted Kennedy crash

The Independent

time8 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Long lost ‘Chappaquiddick' tapes found by son of reporter investigating Ted Kennedy crash

The son of the investigative journalist who literally wrote the book on Senator Ted Kennedy's Chappaquiddick car crash scandal has discovered his father's long-lost investigation audiotapes, according to a report in PEOPLE. Nick Damore, the son of investigative journalist Leo Damore, has been searching for his father's audiotapes for years. His father, Leo Damore, is the author of the 1988 blockbuster book Senatorial Privilege, which explored Kennedy's 1969 car accident in Martha's Vineyard that resulted in the death of his passenger, Mary Jo Kopechne. Kennedy waited 10 hours before alerting the police about his crash and the death of his passenger. Why he did so is still unknown. 'Leo Damore's book went on to sell more than a million copies. It took him eight years to produce the book and required more than 200 interviews, many of which were recorded on audiotapes. In 1995, Leo Damore died by suicide, and many of his documents and tapes disappeared in the aftermath. Among the Chappaquiddick tapes that disappeared were interview recordings of Joe Gargan, Kennedy's cousin, who was at a reunion party with the senator on the night Kopechne died. Nick Damore, who teaches middle school in Connecticut, was only 10 when his father died, and has spent years trying to track down his father's tapes. In 2021, he received a call from an attorney telling him that one of his father's lawyers, Harold Fields, had found a briefcase belonging to his father. 'They'd been cleaning out his house," Nick told PEOPLE, "and they found a briefcase under a bed that said 'Leo Damore vs. Ted Kennedy' and that had all the tapes.' The case contained nine bundles of tapes that included interviews with attorneys, investigators, and other figures closely associated with the case. "It's fascinating to hear Leo in his element," Nick said of his father. "It's like you're watching a master at work." The Gargan interviews are among the tapes located in the briefcase. At the time of the incident, Gargan claimed that he, attorney Paul Markham, and his cousin, Kennedy, had traveled to the bridge where Kennedy's car had gone off the road and into the water below in an attempt to rescue Kopechne. Gargan later changed his story and claimed that Kennedy had instructed him to lie about the events of the night and to claim that Kopechne was driving at the time of the crash. He said he refused to blame the woman. "They were interested in protecting the senator, there's no question about that," Gargan told Leo Damore in one of the interviews. "And they let us fend for ourselves. As well as everybody else." Most of what's contained on the tapes never made it into Leo Damore's book, so his son is doing his best to listen to all of the newly discovered audio logs and make sense of the story his father spent so many years working to tell. 'I'm just scratching the surface," Nick Damore said.

Cops' shocking blunder left monster free to murder innocent gran on dog walk – he had all the traits of a serial killer
Cops' shocking blunder left monster free to murder innocent gran on dog walk – he had all the traits of a serial killer

The Sun

time9 minutes ago

  • The Sun

Cops' shocking blunder left monster free to murder innocent gran on dog walk – he had all the traits of a serial killer

"LAZY" police made a shocking blunder which allowed an evil monster to murder a grandmother while she walked her dog, a top cop claims. Roy Barclay was on Suffolk Police's list of most wanted criminals but he was able to avoid being recalled to prison for two years before killing defenceless Anita Rose in Brantham, last July. 17 17 17 Ex-Met cop Peter Bleksley told The Sun: "This was an utterly avoidable and preventable murder." Barclay, 56 - who was convicted of the gran-of-13's murder last week - had been living off-grid in makeshift camps, thus breaching his licencing conditions which stated he should remain at a fixed address. He had been jailed in 2015 for the violent, unprovoked assault on 82-year-old Leslie Gunfield in Walton-on-the-Naze, Essex, before being released on parole in 2020. Despite his nomadic existence, Barclay left a sizeable digital footprint, including using his bank card to order items online, and leaving hundreds of reviews on Google Maps, showing he was in Suffolk and Essex. But, crucially, police failed to act and arrest him for the breach for two years before it was too late. "He clearly should have been a priority," continued Mr Bleksley. "His previous violent offending - not only should he not have been released halfway through his sentence, I think he pulled the wool over the eyes of the Parole Board - but a man with that kind of violent history, should be a priority. "These people should not be walking the streets of Britain." Barclay stalked Anita, 57, on the morning of July 24 2024 before kicking and stamping on her so viciously her injuries were akin to the victim of a head-on crash. He fled the scene, leaving loyal dog Bruce by his owner's side. She died in hospital four days later. Mr Bleksley said: "This man could and should have been arrested. With the right amount of officers, with the necessary experience and expertise, this should have taken days and not weeks because he was leaving a significant footprint." He went on to say: "It is possible to find and arrest virtually any wanted person, so long as sufficient resources and expertise are deployed." He added "the harsh reality" is that so many more people are being released early from prison or given non-custodial sentences "that huge numbers" are breaching orders and probation. But overrun forces are simply kicking the can down the road, in the hopes such people turn up after committing further crimes, preferably in other force areas, he claims. Mr Bleksley said: "Wanted people are not pursued like they should be. The files are put away, they're put on the police computers and left to collect dust in the hope they are picked up for a lesser crime. That's the reality. "That's what a current working detective told me just days ago." He added: "That is the harsh, contemporary reality because of resources and such like. "The harsh reality of increasingly dangerous and lawless Britain, and women are losing their lives." 17 17 He compared Ms Rose's murder to that of 35-year-old Zara Aleena, who was sexually assaulted and murdered by Jordan McSweeney as she walked home in Ilford, East London, in June 2022. In 2010, when he was a teenager, McSweeney was convicted over an attack on a young woman he had left with a swollen eye. Eleven years later, he was made the subject of a restraining order that barred him from contacting another female victim, but breached his probation and was not picked up before attacking Ms Aleena. "With the right resources he would have been picked up quickly, and Zara Aleena would be alive today, just like Anita would be alive today," Mr Bleksley said. He went on to explain an analyst would be able to "pinpoint" the areas Barclay was active in without much issue - as happened once he became a suspect in Ms Rose's murder. "Proper analytical examination of his postings, of his behaviours, his lifestyle, should have meant he could have been found. "Like he was eventually, sadly, once he's committed murder and sufficient resources were deployed to it. "Once you put the resources into it, you find these people. "Tragically, it took a woman's life to be taken before resources were deployed." Mr Bleksley said various police services clearly prioritise "where they see fit", adding: "Policing is a numbers game, to a certain extent. 17 17 "Many chiefs argue for more funding, and they do have a point." He compared UK policing to Italy, where he recently visited, saying: "It's got 10 million less than the UK but twice as many officers and half the amount of crime. It's basic, simple numbers." Three months after the Ms Rose murder, Barclay's final few Google reviews were about Flatford, a historic area on the Essex-Suffolk border famed for inspiring iconic paintings. He was camping just a mile away from the murder site. Mr Bleksley said he was essentially goading cops. "By the time he started putting those posts, after this dreadful murder, he clearly thought they're not going to find me." He said the descriptions of Ms Rose's murder are "particularly galling", and added he believes Barclay would certainly have killed again if he wasn't caught. He said his "trademark" of leaving a dog lead wrapped around the victim's leg was also done in his previous assault offence. Asked if he could have become a serial killer, Mr Bleksley said: "Of course, without any doubt whatsoever. "He takes trophies, he leaves trademark wrapping of the leads twice round the leg, he attacked an elderly vulnerable man beforehand. 17 17 "This is an absolute monster and danger to the elderly, a coward because he picks on the elderly. Picks on a lone female. Absolutely revolting waste of space." He went on to say: "The cases that grab people's attention and frighten them to their very core are when the ordinary becomes extraordinary, and that is exactly what happened in this case. "This wonderful woman, mother of six, grandma of 13, much loved partner, should of course have been free to walk her dog as she chose." Asked why someone like Barclay would target random strangers, Mr Bleksley continued: "It is often a complete and utter waste of time trying to rationalise the workings of an irrational mind. "That said, his similar behaviour in the past went some way in helping to convict him. "As for his mentality, deal with what's in front of you, and there should have been plenty in front of detectives to have arrested him before he murdered and not after he'd murdered. "That didn't happen. It's 2025 we're talking about, when analysis, geographical analysis, geographical patterns, the science is so far advanced, crimes these day are solved by mobile phone evidence, digital footprints, CCTV. "These things could quite easily have been utilised to find him, they weren't and a woman is dead as a result, needlessly." Mr Bleksley added: "There'll be more cases. In the current situation, if this is allowed to go on, there'll be more and more cases. "There are too many dangerous people out there and not enough prison places for them." 17 17 17 A chance meeting with a Suffolk Police officer near White Bridge, between Brantham and Manningtree, finally led to Barclay's arrest in October last year. Barclay gave the officer, Det Con Simpson, a fake name, coming across as "quite nervous and quite anxious", the detective said. Six days later, at Ipswich County Library, Barclay was arrested and was subsequently charged with Anita's murder, which he denied. After his conviction, the Crown Prosecution Service described Barclay as "an individual that… has a history for acting violently so we knew that this was somebody that could act unprovoked in a very violent manner". Assistant Chief Constable Alice Scott said: 'Following the conviction resulting from the trial of Roy Barclay for the murder of Anita Rose last summer, a voluntary partnership review will now be conducted under the MAPPA* process involving the police and the probation service. 'It will look closely at the information sharing processes and how the organisations collaborated in terms of Barclay who was wanted on recall to prison when he murdered Anita. 'This review will be a thorough assessment and scrutiny of the processes concerning Barclay. "It will be expedited as soon as possible so we can provide clear and definitive answers for Anita's family. "Our thoughts remain with Anita's family and friends as they reflect on the past year, and our force Family Liaison Officers will continue to remain in close dialogue with them as the review progresses.' A Suffolk Police spokesperson told The Sun: "As this review is ongoing, it would be inappropriate to comment further." 17

Tipton school lockdown after shot fired
Tipton school lockdown after shot fired

BBC News

time9 minutes ago

  • BBC News

Tipton school lockdown after shot fired

Police are investigating a shooting near a school in the West were called to reports of a shot being fired on Sandgate Road in Tipton at about 15:30 BST on Friday, West Midlands Police said."Thankfully no one was injured," a spokesperson force said it understood the concern in the community, given the proximity of Glebefields Primary School. "Students, parents and staff were kept on school grounds whilst police attended and made the area safe," it force has called on anyone with relevant information or footage from dashcams or doorbell cameras to get in contact. Follow BBC Birmingham on BBC Sounds, Facebook, X and Instagram.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store