3 people found slain in Little Village apartment
All were bound and gagged, police say
The sound of gunfire has become so common in this neighborhood that when the downstairs residents of a two-flat in Little Village heard shots above them, they didn't call police.
Later, when they heard the sounds of banging and rummaging, they still weren't alarmed. It wasn't until a young woman from the building decided to check on her new neighbors and discovered a door ajar that police were called to the home in the 2800 block of South Kildare Avenue.
At about 6:40 a.m. Wednesday, police found the bodies of two men and a woman bound and gagged. They had been shot dead.
Police think the killings are drug-related. They found money counters, plastic bags and scales in the home, sources said, leading officers to think narcotics were being dealt there.
"We believe this is a targeted and associated act of violence," Ogden District Cmdr. Roberto Zavala said outside the two-story home Wednesday morning.
The couple living in the apartment had been there only a little more than two weeks, said a source and the building's owner. They had moved there from California with a son and had not yet signed a lease. Authorities have not released their identities.
A police source said that authorities are looking for a red Chevrolet Silverado sports-utility vehicle with California plates.
Zavala said the home was ransacked, but the door did not appear to have been forced open.
"We believe there is an association between the offender and the victims," Zavala said.
Neighbors said the house was notorious for having visitors at all hours of the night, and they speculated about illicit activity happening behind its doors. Others said that they hadn't seen any police attention or unusual activity since the three people had moved in.
Building owner Domingo Garcia said that the couple had been living at the apartment for only about 15 days. They paid him $300 in cash to remove the "For Rent" sign so they could move in and were planning to sign a lease Wednesday. He said they appeared to be in their 50s, and he thought that because of their age, they would be quiet tenants.
But on Monday, Garcia said, the couple told him they were going to move out Wednesday because there were too many gangs in the area. He said he didn't know anything about them and knew the man by only his first name, but he said they may have come from California. Police towed two cars from the block Wednesday, including an older-model Saab with California plates.
The couple had a son living with them who was a truck driver, he said. Yesterday, he didn't see the son's car there, he said.
Jessica Saldana, 22, a mother of three children, said that the increasing swell of violence made her more concerned than ever about their safety.
"This is the same block where they go to school," she said Wednesday morning. "We all worry about our kids, we can't even walk in the street. We always have to be careful."
Denise Buenrostro, 17, said that the neighborhood was mostly made up of quiet, good people, but that a few bad houses were bringing trouble to the area.
"There's good working people, and there are people who will make money whatever it takes," Buenrostro said. "I'm careful who I hang out with. People around here can get you killed or in trouble."
Rev. Marco Mercado, a priest at Good Shepherd Catholic Church, a block away from the scene of the homicide, said the neighborhood had been relatively calm of late. He added, though, that the community was concerned about the increasing gang presence. "There are lots of concerns among families and parents in the area, we try to keep our eyes on the kids," Mercado said. "It's an unfortunate reality. With the pressure that kids are under, it's hard for them to say no to gangs."
Mercado said he had been in the house where the shooting occurred about a month ago, bringing communion to an elderly couple that lived on the first floor. He said they were not worried at the time about anyone living in their building.
Neighbors pointed out that there had been another fatal shooting in the neighborhood last fall, at 30th Street and Kildare Avenue, steps away from the scene of Wednesday's homicide.
The discovery of the bodies comes a week after five people were found slain several miles away in Chicago's Chatham neighborhood. Those five, three men and two women in their 20s, were found April 23 with gunshot wounds inside a home in the 7600 block of South Rhodes Avenue. Police said they don't think the incidents are connected.
Late last week, Mayor Richard Daley held a meeting with Police Supt. Jody Weis and civic leaders to talk about the recent increase in violence, which included more than two dozen people shot two weekends ago.
Police have stepped up patrols, put SWAT officers and specialized units on the street in a show of force and are considering arming some officers with semi-automatic weapons.
Tribune reporters Angela Rozas and David Heinzmann and freelance reporter Wendy Normandy contributed to this report.
csadovi@tribune.com
rmitchum@tribune.com
Get breaking news | Most popular stories | Dining and Travel deals all via e-mail!
Copyright © 2008, Chicago Tribune
Explore Long Island
Our cameras, your faces.
• Robert Moses Beach
• Montauk Festival
• Strawberry Festival
• Pirate Festival
Search Classifieds
| JOBS | SHOP | CARS | HOMES | |||||||||
Listings, directories and deals
|
||||||||||||
Popular stories
- Friends: Teen car crash victim was always smiling
- Huntington Station girl, 2, drowns in pool
- 55 fugitives arrested on Long Island in sweep
- Psychiatrist: Brinkley should get the kids, not Cook
- NYC health dept uses MySpace to help teens
Special Projects
Local leaders, then and now, reflect on doing their part to push for equality.
A daughter with a deadly disease, an extraordinary chance to save her...create the perfect sibling.
They Failed to Act
Since 1995, the Long Island Rail Road has logged nearly 900 gap incidents at stations from Penn to Bridgehampton.
Born to Serve
Michael P. Murphy's actions in June, 2005 earned him,
posthumously, the nation's highest military award.
Fire Alarm
The only comprehensive look at the last large public
service on Long Island impervious to outside scrutiny - the
fire system.
Remembering Flight
800
On the beach at Smith Point County Park is a monument with
the names of the 230 passengers and crew from Flight 800.
Our
Fallen
Soldiers from Long Island killed in uniform reflect the
face of our communities. Newsday remembers their
sacrifice.
NEW! Newsday's Vlog
Impact of high gas prices
With record fuel prices on LI, drivers and businesses try to cope as best they can.
Share your story.
Find cheap gas




