SubX.News® Street Report

On Chicago’s primary election day, March 17, 2026, while political leaders focused on turnout numbers and control of public spending, two young men were shot—one fatally—and multiple stolen vehicles tore through city streets, injuring civilians and damaging property.
Live monitoring of Chicago Police Department (CPD) radio traffic and Citizen app alerts revealed a pattern of violence largely absent from mainstream election coverage: a 19-year-old shot in a West Side alley, an 18-year-old shot in the head on the Far Southeast Side, and carjackers and car thieves turning city streets into high-risk corridors.
West Side: 19‑Year‑Old Shot in Alley off Van Buren
Shortly after 1:30 p.m., CPD and EMS responded to reports of a shooting in an alley in the 2500 block of West Van Buren, in the 11th District on the West Side. A 19-year-old male was struck multiple times in the abdomen while standing in the alley.
The location is part of a long-troubled zone near Oakley Square Apartments, previously the site of other high-profile shootings. Early radio and social media chatter described the incident as occurring inside “Oakley Courts,” but later confirmation placed it in the alley, not inside the complex.
The victim was transported in critical condition to Stroger Hospital. Area 4 detectives are investigating. Surrounding the alley are boarded-up scattered-site housing units, standing vacant despite repeated city claims of a “housing shortage.”
Stolen Gray Acura: Three Carjackers, Civilian Injured
Later in the afternoon, CPD issued a citywide alert for a stolen gray Acura SUV, license plate Frank Tom 15977, reported in connection with an attempted robbery or carjacking. Radio traffic tracked the vehicle moving north from the Van Buren area, including along Oakley and Madison.
In coordination with Illinois State Police, officers forced a stop in the north alley of Madison just west of Leavitt, near a CFD firehouse.
The resulting maneuver led to a multi-vehicle crash: the stolen Acura collided with a civilian’s silver car and an unmarked CPD squad. A civilian was injured after being struck by the squad during the chaos. Ambulance 44 responded to treat and transport the injured party.
Officers took three alleged carjackers into custody at the scene. According to radio descriptions, one wore a white hoodie, and weapons were suspected.
The incident illustrates a recurring pattern: stolen vehicles used for violent crime and escape, with bystanders paying the physical and financial costs.
Stolen Vehicles Across the City: U‑Haul, Sonata, Volkswagen
In the same window of time, CPD channels reported multiple additional stolen vehicles, including:
U‑Haul box truck eastbound on I‑290 from Kildare, bearing Arizona plates;
Black Hyundai Sonata traveling southbound on I‑57;
Volkswagen associated with a tow and “hot car” check in the 4445 S. Wells area.
These incidents form part of a broader trend of stolen cars and carjackings that often escalate into high‑speed collisions.
Recent cases include the fatal T‑bone crash of a woman on Oakwood and Drexel, killed while returning home from work after a stolen vehicle slammed into her car and the offenders fled.
Stolen vehicles are therefore not simply “property crimes,” but frequently function as moving weapons, endangering motorists and pedestrians citywide.
Far South‑East Side: 18‑Year‑Old Shot and Killed on Avenue M
In the early evening, attention shifted to the Far Southeast Side. At approximately 7:00 p.m., CPD received a call of a “person shot in the head” near 10006 South Avenue M in the East Side neighborhood.
Responding officers established a perimeter with crime scene tape around the block. Multiple marked and unmarked units and detectives converged on a two-story residence, focusing investigative activity on the upper floor of the second house on the block.
Subsequent information confirmed that an 18-year-old male had been shot in the head and was later pronounced dead, turning the incident into a homicide investigation.
Circumstances—whether domestic, interpersonal, or otherwise—remain under investigation by CPD and Area detectives.
The Avenue M killing occurred on the same day as the non-fatal alley shooting off Van Buren, underscoring the continued vulnerability of young people in neighborhoods far from the political spotlight.
Political Celebration vs. Street Reality
While these incidents unfolded, election coverage focused on:
Governor JB Pritzker’s unopposed Democratic primary for re‑election;
Crowded Democratic primary for U.S. Senate to replace retiring Senator Dick Durbin;
Competitive congressional and county races, including assessor and board president;
Reported citywide turnout near the low‑20% range by evening.
Analysts framed turnout as typical for a midterm-style primary.
Chicago’s preliminary turnout was 25% by night’s end (396,028 ballots cast out of 1.55 million registered voters), but the overall low engagement and lack of competitive races underscored limited voter choice and suppressed participation.
Approximately 52.38% of seats were uncontested on the Democratic ticket.
Total spending in the 2026 Illinois primary election—when fully tallied—is likely to exceed $100–150 million, driven by record-breaking outside money and high-stakes races.
Partial figures already show over $50 million in PAC/super PAC spending statewide, nearly $62 million in four Chicago-area Democratic congressional primaries, and around $70 million for the U.S. Senate race cycle alone.
The Chicago Tribune called the election “unprecedented” and described it as “highest bidder” politics.
Engineered low participation, with complex rules, extended mail-in voting periods, and entrenched party machinery using millions of dollars and resources to get their people elected rather than letting the general population decide.
Media Silence and the Case for Street‑Level Reporting
Several of the incidents referenced—especially the Avenue M homicide and the alley shooting off Van Buren—received little to no immediate coverage in mainstream outlets on election night.
They join a growing catalog of underreported cases, including an earlier off-duty officer shooting near 123rd & Halsted, in which an off-duty police officer was reportedly wounded with rifle rounds at a gas station and disarmed of his service weapon.
The incident occurred on or across the border in Calumet Park, so it largely stayed off Chicago’s official crime books and received minimal mainstream coverage, even though violence spilled over into Chicago.
This mirrors how Illinois State Police and county sheriffs routinely handle incidents inside city limits: the work gets done and arrests are made, but the crimes often don’t count toward Chicago’s statistics.
A growing pattern of underreporting has driven the rise of citizen journalism and live scanner-based reporting. Independent field reporters and residents using tools like the Citizen app and publicly accessible radio traffic have stepped into gaps left by traditional media.
Unresolved Questions and Policy Implications
The incidents of March 17 highlight several unresolved issues:
Persistent hot spots: Areas like the Van Buren–Oakley corridor continue to see shootings despite repeated pledges of reform and investment.
Stolen vehicles as violent crime: Policy and sentencing for car theft and carjacking lag behind the real‑world lethality of these offenses.
Vacant housing stock: Boarded‑up units and abandoned public facilities sit idle while officials invoke “housing crises” to justify new spending rather than repurposing what already exists.
Support for first responders: High‑risk vehicle stops and urban chases continue under restrictive pursuit policies, with helicopters and patrol units bearing the burden.
On the streets covered in this report, voters and residents were more immediately confronted with gunfire, stolen vehicles, and repeated crime at unchanged hot spots—conditions at odds with celebratory rhetoric around “historic investments” and “transformational spending.”
The day ended with two young men shot, one dead, multiple stolen vehicles in play, and yet another reminder that the most consequential events in Chicago often unfold far from podiums and victory speeches.
While the social justice advocates spent hundreds of millions of dollars on themselves … HiHo
Image: Homicide scene 18 year old shot in the head and killed far southside Chicago … 10000 block of S. Avenue M., on Mar. 17, 2026, at approx. 6:57 p.m. SubX.News®
Editor’s Note: This report is based on a live feed video (3:31:38) drive on March 17, 2026, covering Michigan Ave, West Loop, Westside, far Southside Chicago, live broadcast radio, police traffic, and independent scanner feeds: https://youtu.be/6m27Tp6kA4I
[ there was an error of shooting location yesterday regarding teh Oakley Courts Apartments shooting happening hours earlier in a different location across the street ]
19-year-old shot … 2500 block of W. Van Buren, on March 17, 2026, at approx. 1:30 p.m. https://facebook.com/share/p/15imDMUyNdE/
19-year-old shot … 2500 block of W. Van Buren, on March 17, 2026, at approx. 1:30 p.m. 19-year-old male victim was…
Posted by Substance News on Tuesday, March 17, 2026
Three Individuals Detained by Police 516PM Carjackers in a Stolen Car Leavitt & Madison Mar 17 2026 https://youtu.be/fXPb3GrsFy8
Police Activity westside car thieves 4400 W Van Buren St 7:10:04 PM March 17th 2026 https://youtu.be/BL-sJnrN6cQ
Teen Fatally Shot 10006 S Avenue M Southside Chicago 7:32:06 PM CDT March 17 2026 https://youtu.be/tvIIIPWi1oU
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