A father and his 3-month-old son were shot Saturday afternoon inside a Walgreens parking lot in Little Village, according to a Chicago police report.
The infant, his father, and his mother were driving out of a Walgreens parking lot about 4:30 p.m. Saturday at 3045 W. 26th St. when two armed males exited a brown, older SUV in front of them, the police report said.
The assailants — armed with a green rifle and a handgun — then opened fire into their Chevrolet Camaro, according to the report.
The father, 21, was hit multiple times in the right shoulder, right arm, and grazed in the neck. He fled the Camaro and ran back into the Walgreens. His son suffered a gunshot wound to the upper chest, the report said.
The gunmen then returned to their SUV and fled on Albany Avenue, the report said.
The mother of the infant jumped into the driver’s seat and drove to 24th Street and California Avenue, where she waved down an ambulance while holding the baby in his car seat.
The ambulance brought the infant to Mount Sinai Hospital in critical condition, police said. The baby was then intubated, and his condition stabilized before being transferred to Stroger Hospital for further critical care, the report said.
The father told the Sun-Times the baby was undergoing surgery on Monday.
The father was also taken to Mount Sinai Hospital, where he was in serious condition but has since been discharged.
The parking lot where the shooting occurred serves several businesses including the smaller Discount Mall, Walgreens, Ross, a health clinic and restaurants. Street vendors set up stalls on the sidewalk next to the parking lot.
One vendor who was working Saturday afternoon said she heard “at least 15″ gunshots before she saw people scurrying away from the area.
There were a dozen 9mm casings and nine rifle casings recovered from the scene.
Police have not provided any update on the investigation.
A small group from the community gathered for a prayer vigil Sunday afternoon in the shadow of the Little Village Arch just blocks from the scene of the shooting.
“Our children are traumatized, they’ve been traumatized for generations,” said Baltazar Enriquez of the Little Village Community Council, which organized the vigil. “We have to do something about it, and today we’re going to do something about it.”