Chicago is reeling once again after a hail of bullets tragically ended the life of a young police officer who would have celebrated three years on the job next month.
Officer Enrique Martinez barely got a chance to demonstrate his potential, just like the seven other early-career cops who have lost their lives in the line of duty since 2016.
And so yet once again, Chicagoans — most importantly, other members of the Chicago Police Department and the officers’ family and friends — are left to wonder “What if?” There’s the uncertainty of what a promising rookie officer could have achieved, as well as the certainty that our city’s gun violence will, sadly, continue.
“This work is unpredictable, and we never know what’s in store for our officers when they’re out there trying to keep the public safe,” as Chicago Police Supt. Larry Snelling put it.
While many details of Monday night’s shooting have yet to emerge, the circumstances surrounding Martinez’s murder were reminiscent of the summer evening when Officer Ella French was killed during a traffic stop in West Englewood in 2021.
Martinez, 26, was also felled by “rapid fire” from a gunman riding in the car that Martinez and his fellow Gresham District officers had pulled over in Chatham, police said. Another passenger inside the vehicle was also killed.
A semiautomatic weapon with an extended magazine was recovered, as well as a second handgun. It’s a reminder of the terrible toll caused by high-capacity ammunition magazines and “switches” — if that’s what was involved in this case — that convert an ordinary handgun into a rapid-fire machine gun.
Two suspects were arrested after they tried to flee.
An officer discharged a weapon during the deadly attack in the 8000 block of South Ingleside Avenue, according to Snelling, who also noted that one of the suspects had been on electronic monitoring but had cut off his tracking bracelet.
Martinez gave “his life for this city,” Snelling said. Martinez — in fact, no officer — should have to make that sacrifice.
Mayor Brandon Johnson described Chicago’s latest loss as cutting “deep.” “The wound is severe,” Johnson said.
The healing will take time. The best way Chicago can honor Martinez, and the other young officers who gave their lives to serve and protect, is to find a way to end the bloodshed.
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