SAD: 9-year-old boy executed in Chicago over father's gang ties
9-year-old Tyshawn Lee was walking on Chicago's south side
when he was lured into an alley and killed, but his father, whose alleged gang
ties are believed to have played a role in the boy's murder, won't talk,
according to disgusted police who on Friday pleaded for the community to help
identify Tyshawn's killer.
Tyshawn, an elementary school student, was walking to a
relative's home at approximately 4:30 p.m. Monday when the killer or killers
lured him from a nearby park and into a neighborhood alley on the 8000 block of
S. Damen Ave., where he was shot in the head and back.
Authorities have called on the child's father, Pierre
Stokes, to cooperate with them in solving the murder Monday that they described
as "absolutely hateful."
"Let me be clear that Mr. Stokes is a parent who lost
his son," Anthony Guglielmi, chief spokesman of the Chicago Police
Department, told FoxNews.com. "But he potentially knows who did this. He
potentially knows the background of the feud he was involved in."
As of Friday morning, according to police, stokes was not
cooperating. "He emphatically communicated he has nothing to tell
us," Guglielmi said.
"It’s so heinous that a criminal enterprise would
target the child of another gang member." said Anthony Guglielmi, chief
spokesman of the Chicago Police Department. "It's gone to another level
that, frankly, Chicago hasn’t seen in a very long time."
Guglielmi's remarks come a day after the Chicago Police
Department released chilling details about the child's murder. Police
Superintendent Garry McCarthy told reporters during a press conference Thursday
that Tyshawn was targeted because of recent violence between two gangs, one of
which his father is a member.
Guglielmi said investigators initially thought the boy might
have been "in the wrong place at the wrong time." But the shock of
the child's murder prompted members of the community to come forward with
information about his father's gang affiliation.
Guglielmi said he knows the gangs involved but, "We
need more people to come forward."
"This case is going to break on community
intelligence," he said, noting a 35,000 reward that is being offered for
any information leading to an arrest. "We are going to find out who did
this. We are going hold them accountable."
A local Catholic priest has also said he's committed to
justice for the boy and offered to pay money out of his own pocket to help
anyone with information move from Chicago.
The Rev. Michael Pfleger, pastor of Chicago's St. Sabina
Church and a well-known anti-violence activist said:
"This was not a drive-by. This was not a spray of
bullets. A baby was executed," Pfleger told Tthe Associated Press.
"We have gone to a new low that's removed what used to be some codes, some
barriers, some lines that used to be drawn in the community, some things in our
city that were not acceptable."