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Chicago ambulance hit by bullet while transporting patient

A bullet lodged itself in the passenger side door as medics were treating a patient whose family became irate when they weren’t allowed in the rig

By Hannah Leone and Peter Nickeas
Chicago Tribune

CHICAGO — A 19-year-old woman was charged in connection with an attack on two Chicago Fire Department paramedics in the back of an ambulance that was also struck by a bullet during the episode in Englewood early Sunday, police said.

Latorya Thigpen, of the Parkway Gardens neighborhood, is accused of hitting, punching, kicking, scratching and spitting at two uniformed paramedics as they tried to treat her in the 2700 block of West 68th Street in the South Side’s Marquette Park neighborhood about 4 a.m, police said.

The paramedics suffered scratches, abrasions, bruising, and loss of consciousness, police said.

During the incident, a bullet lodged itself in the passenger side door of the ambulance as medics were treating a patient whose family became irate when they weren’t allowed in the ambulance.

Ambulance 75 initially was sent to 68th Street and Damen Avenue about 3:45 a.m. to treat a woman who was having a medical issue, police said.

Paramedics found an unresponsive woman around the age of 19 on the ground with her mother there, Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford said.

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As medics got the woman into the ambulance and started treating her, the mother and several other family members started banging on the windows and doors, trying to get inside, Langford said.

Once the woman regained consciousness, she became “unruly and then combative, fighting the paramedics,” police said.

Paramedics heard a loud fireworks-like burst, with one especially loud “firework” that turned out to be shooting, Langford said. As responding officers went to investigate where the shooting came from, Langford said the medics drove away and made it to 69th Street and Bell Avenue — where there’s a fire station — to keep treating the patient.

The shooting appeared to be coming from a house about eight lots down 68th Street from the ambulance, Langford said. Fire and police officials said they did not have information about the caliber of the bullet or gun used.

The coppery slug remained lodged in the ambulance door, slightly below and center of the handle. While the ambulance is not an armored vehicle, Langford said the bullet hit an area in front of a compartment with an extra wall, which meant it would have had extra layers to go through before making it into the ambulance.

“My gut tells me, after talking to everybody … the ambulance probably was not shot at,” Langford said. “It might have been from the altercation down the street.”

As medics struggled with the combative patient, her mother followed the ambulance to 69th and Bell, where she kept trying to get to her daughter inside, Langford said.

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The patient repeatedly kicked one of the paramedics in the head, and a police officer got in the ambulance and handcuffed her to subdue her, Langford said. She has since been treated at Holy Cross Hospital and released to Chicago police, he said.

The paramedic she kicked also was taken to Holy Cross and was expected to be treated and released, Langford said.

About the same time as the shooting, ShotSpotter — police technology used to detect shootings in the city — picked up the sound of gunfire nearby and police found a car with shell casings inside.

Allowing a loved one in the back of an ambulance with a patient would be problematic for several reasons, including that there’s already limited space with two medics and the patient and it’s more difficult to treat someone with an emotional parent there, Langford said.

The ambulance returned to the firehouse, where it was taken out of service. It had been “trashed,” with items off shelves and in disarray, Langford said. Meanwhile, he said the department was not allowing it to be photographed in the firehouse.

“Being a firefighter or doing emergency medicine on the street is a dangerous job,” Langford said. “When you’re on the street, you never know what’s going to happen.”

Thigpen, of the 6300 block of South Martin Luther King Drive, was charged with two counts of felony aggravated battery, police said. Shec is expected to appear in Cook County bond court on Monday.

Copyright 2018 Chicago Tribune

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