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Gun that went missing after buyback in 2023 linked to 3 separate Chicago shootings
Gun that went missing after buyback in 2023 linked to 3 separate Chicago shootings

Yahoo

time03-05-2025

  • Yahoo

Gun that went missing after buyback in 2023 linked to 3 separate Chicago shootings

CHICAGO — Gun buyback programs aim to take firearms off the streets by offering cash for guns, but one weapon has reportedly ended up back on the street, raising concerns. It's estimated that the Chicago Police Department has taken thousands of guns off the street. There's a system in place to log and destroy the guns that are turned in. The Illinois Answers Project and Sun Times led an investigation into what happened at a south side gun buyback in 2023 when the gun went missing. A group of reporters have been able to match the missing gun to shell casings at three different Chicago shootings. Casey Toner with the Illinois Answers Project says the internal affairs investigation into the gun was closed. 'They closed it and basically said there was a Sargeant responsible for overseeing it. That officer was given a one-day suspension,' Toner said. 'But that's not the case. Now we are learning the investigation is ongoing.' A short audio clip details part of the questioning by investigators trying to piece together how the .45 caliber Glock disappeared. Investigator: Again, in your opinion, you think it was lost in the station? Officer: Yes Investigator: Okay and when you found it, when you discovered the error, who did you tell? Officer: I told everyone in the office. I asked, 'where's the Glock?' Toner has unraveled details about the moments before the gun went missing. 'The investigation said there may have been a cleaning lady there as well, but it was almost all police officers,' Toner said. 'Those were the people that were processing the gun, those are the people who were admiring the gun when it came in.' Crystal Reynolds who spoke with the Sun Times discovered that the gun was used during a shooting outside her building. The bullets luckily missed her. 'I was kind of shocked and disappointed… how many more guns have been put on the street again,' Reynolds said in an interview with the Sun Times. It's not clear how the gun wound up back on the street. Since then, there have been some changes to the way guns are recorded once they are turned in. It may be some time before the full investigation into what happened is done. WGN did reach out to the Chicago Police Department about the Illinois Answers Project report that was released. They have not yet responded. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

Guns turned in to buybacks turn up at crime scenes, joint investigation shows
Guns turned in to buybacks turn up at crime scenes, joint investigation shows

Yahoo

time05-04-2025

  • Yahoo

Guns turned in to buybacks turn up at crime scenes, joint investigation shows

CHICAGO (WGN) — The Chicago Police Department has used gun buybacks to get thousands of firearms off the street, but at least two of them have resurfaced at crime scenes, a joint investigation between the Illinois Answers Project and the Chicago Sun-Times found. One high profile case involved a Glock that was turned in at a St. Sabina Church event in 2023. 'When that gun was on the desk, and it was surrounded by police officers, police officers were looking at it, and talking about good this Glock looked, and then the Glock disappeared. And then one year later it turned up in the hands of a teenaged boy, and that is the center of the story we wrote that takes a longer look at buybacks in Chicago,' reporter Casey Toner with the Illinois Answers Project said Friday on the WGN Evening News. A second instance involved a gun that was turned over in 2007 but appeared five years later at a deadly police shooting in Cicero. Toner said the Chicago Police Department has acknowledged the problem but did not say 'how they planned to improve the process.' Watch Toner's full conversation with WGN's Patrick Elwood and Lourdes Duarte in the video attached to this article. The investigation is published on the websites of the Illinois Answers Project and the Chicago Sun-Times. Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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