Chicago man charged in shooting of 2 federal agents, officer
A federal indictment has charged a 28-year-old Chicago man in connection to a drive-by shooting of three undercover law enforcement officers he allegedly said he mistook for rival gang members
CHICAGO -- A federal indictment filed Thursday charges a 28-year-old Chicago man in connection to a drive-by shooting this week of three undercover law enforcement officers, and it says the suspect told authorities he mistook the officers for rival gang members.
Eugene “Gen Gen” McClaurin is charged with one count of using a dangerous and deadly weapon to assault a special agent from the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. Charging documents accuse McClaurin of shooting all three though the charge pertains to one agent. It is likely other charges will follow. A conviction on the one count carries a maximum 20-year prison sentence.
The indictment says McClaurin told investigators a friend had warned him rival gang members were in the area in a vehicle similar to the unmarked vehicle the two ATF agents and task force officer were in. He began following it, then pulled along side and opened fire while driving onto an expressway on Chicago’s South Side.
McClaurin “stated that he had purchased the Glock for personal protection a few months before the shooting,” the indictment says.
McClaurin was scheduled to make an initial court appearance Thursday afternoon in U.S. District Court in Chicago.
The shooting occurred at 5:50 a.m. Wednesday near the 22nd District police station. The officers were treated for their injuries at an area hospital and released later Wednesday. The three officers were on their way to an assignment when they were shot, Chicago police Superintendent David Brown told reporters Wednesday.
The shooting came ahead of a visit to suburban Crystal Lake, Illinois, by President Joe Biden. Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said she planned to discuss gun control and the city’s violence, which has included an increase in shootings this year, with Biden.
A Justice Department spokesperson said Wednesday that Attorney General Merrick Garland was briefed on the shooting and aboard Air Force One on the president’s flight to Chicago.
When Air Force One landed, Biden spoke with Lightfoot, expressing his personal support for the officers who were shot. He reiterated his commitment to working with the mayor and leaders in Chicago in the fight against gun violence, and conveyed that the Department of Justice would soon be in touch about the strike force announced just a few weeks ago that will work with Chicago and other cities.
“I will note, in terms of efforts the president has underway to address the rise in violence we’ve seen over the last 18 months, including in Chicago, there are a number of steps that impact Chicago directly,” White House press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters before Air Force One landed.
At a news conference Wednesday, Brown declined to talk about the work the officers who were shot had been doing. The indictment also didn’t provide those details.
Brown has said one of the ATF agents was shot in the hand and the other was struck in the torso. The Chicago officer was struck on the back of his head but it appeared to be “a graze wound,” he said.
The shooting come a day after police reported that 100 people were shot in Chicago — including two police officers who were wounded while trying to break up a crowd — over the long Fourth of July weekend.
With Wednesday’s shooting, 36 Chicago officers have been shot or shot at this year, Brown said.