March 11, 2024

On Sunday evening, July 30, at around 8:00, I was in a supermarket near Roosevelt and Canal in Chicago’s South Loop, an upscale shopping, health club and movie hub on the edge of downtown. The area has been regarded as safe and on the upswing since the late 1990s and is even being considered for a new White Sox park or Bears stadium.

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While entering the store I noticed scores of African American teenagers lining the street. At first, I thought that there was some kind of festival or parade. But there was already a city policeman guarding the entrance. I asked him what was going on. He replied that something called a “teen takeover” was beginning, and that the Chicago Police Department had been monitoring it but that they were so far outnumbered.

After my purchase I drove out from the parking garage, only to see a mob approaching. I changed direction immediately, away from the crowd, and proceeded several blocks to the opposite end of downtown until I could exit onto a roundabout route home. 

I had heard of previous flash mob events in Chicago and elsewhere during which teenagers had been playing chicken with the police or pursuing dangerous encounters such as fighting, throwing things, jumping on cars, and looting. 

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On my drive home I switched on Chicago’s twenty-four hour radio news station, WBBM, and not a word was said about the growing crowd, even though WBBM is known for its traffic reports and for announcing “police incidents” that may affect drivers. Here was a clear obstruction — and possible danger — to drivers in real time, and there was no radio warning to them!

After the much longer trip home due to the unexpected detour, I called WBBM and its affiliated CBS2 Chicago to complain about the failure to alert the public. The person who answered told me that she was unaware of the event. Were they really clueless?

Then I determined to call the other news desks. The person at ABC7 told me they were “keeping an eye on it.” Fox News Chicago said they were “waiting for some activity” (for a shooting?). WGN9 (the local CW station) was holding off until they could send a person there. NBC5 was on voice mail.

I checked the local Fox and WGN 9:00 news and there was no mention of the takeover. A report at 9:00 could have still alerted people to avoid the area. There was no mention on the other stations’ ten o’clock news. Yet all of them had some story in place by 6:00 p.m. the next day (Monday, July 31)

The local news bureaus I called were all certainly informed by nine o’clock the same evening, if only by me. But they made a decision not to alert the public. What could justify such dereliction of duty to inform and to warn?

I tried to imagine possible reasons for that decision. What if, for example, the mayor’s office or police department had discouraged publicizing what was happening.  (I have no reason to believe that this was the case; I present this only as a hypothetical.)  Suppose that there had been an administrative concern that publicity would bring more than the three to four hundred youths who did show up at the bidding of whatever internet inciter instigated the gathering. Even under such circumstances I would say that the press’s first duty would have been to the unaware public. Drivers needed to be warned. Family members listening to television or radio could have alerted relatives on the road.