Four people were shot to death Monday morning on a Blue Line train in west suburban Forest Park.
Around 5:30 a.m., officers responded to the Forest Park Blue Line station at 711 Desplaines Ave. and found four people shot, Forest Park police said.
Three people died at the scene, and a fourth was taken to Loyola University Medical Center in Maywood, where they later died, police said.
“It’s a horrible situation, it’s definitely something that you don’t want to wake up to,” Forest Park Deputy Police Chief Christopher Chin told reporters outside the station. “Everyone’s supposed to be enjoying their time off … it’s horrible.”
The shooting happened as the train was in motion and those shot were all passengers, Chin said.
It’s unclear if anyone witnessed the shooting, according to communications over police radio from early Monday morning.
“We got multiple shell casings … several passengers appear to be deceased,” someone could be heard saying on the radio. “… Appears to be three individuals unresponsive on the same rail car. … Doesn’t appear to be any witnesses. No one reported it.”
Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins at the scene. Hoskins called the shooting an “outlier” and asked Springfield to invest more resources in transit security for small communities like his.
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
Forest Park Mayor Rory Hoskins called the shooting an “outlier” and asked for leaders in Springfield to consider investing in additional public safety resources as part of any CTA mass transit reorganization to “support a small community like Forest Park.”
“Forest Park is the only community in Cook County … with two major train lines that end in Forest Park.” Hoskins told reporters. “It’s a horrible tragedy that four people are dead on Labor Day weekend.”
Forest Park police worked with CTA security to put together a description of the suspected shooter, and Chicago police arrested someone matching the description on a Pink Line train. A firearm was also recovered.
Forest Park Deputy Police Chief Christopher Chin (right) said, “It’s a horrible situation, it’s definitely something that you don’t want to wake up to,”
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
“Although this was an isolated incident, this heinous and egregious act of violence should never have occurred, none the less on a public transit train,” the CTA said in a statement. “As soon as this matter was reported, CTA immediately deployed resources to assist the Forest Park Police in their investigation into the matter, including review of all possible security camera footage, which proved to be vital in aiding local enforcement.”
The ages and genders of the victims weren’t immediately known.
Police from Elmwood Park, Berwyn and Cicero joined Forest Park police and Chicago officers at the scene of Monday’s mass shooting. A possible suspect was identified using security camera footage. The suspect was taken into custody on a Pink Line train. A gun was also recovered.
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times
Officials believe the suspect in custody was the only shooter, and the shooting was an “isolated incident.”
“It could happen anywhere, obviously there is a little bit more concern because it was on a mass transit system, but understand that there are security measures in place,” Chin said.
Blue Line service was still suspended between Forest Park and Austin early Monday afternoon.
The Forest Park Blue Line station entrance was blocked off by crime scene tape as police investigated the scene. By 11:45 a.m., the scene was quiet aside from investigators working and some members of the media.
CTA buses serving as a Blue Line shuttle waited near the entrance to transport passengers to and from the Austin Blue Line stop, with stops at Harlem and Oak Park, as the train stood still on the platform.
Anyone with information on the shooting is asked to contact the Forest Park Police Department Criminal Investigations Division at (708) 366-2425 or by emailing Detectives@ForestPark.net.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Commuters wait for a bus outside the Forest Park Blue Line train station in Forest Park, Ill., which remains closed, after four people were fatally shot on the train early Monday, Sept. 2, 2024.
Pat Nabong/Sun-Times