SubX.News Street Report | August 7, 2025 (Chicago) A four-man robbery crew hit a store near Cermak and Wabash early Thursday evening. One white male with a gun and three Black males in dark clothing fled north through the alleys, heading toward 21st Street and the Red Line.
Photo Caption: Cook County Sheriff units take over the Roosevelt CTA station — the lot and the elevated platform — in a rare display of force where CPD once held the line. Years of defunding and political interference have turned city officers into babysitters and chauffeurs while jurisdiction quietly shifts. The dealers disappeared for a moment. They went Dunkin’ (SubXNews Aug 7, 2025)
It was the same territory that’s been selling dope daily — right outside the Jewel-Osco by the Roosevelt CTA station.
This is the dope spot over there, by the Jewel.
As scanners lit up with updates on the robbery, other incidents spilled across the city. A man with a gun was spotted on 89th and Burley. A 67-year-old man in overalls, reportedly drunk and carrying a knife, was harassing a woman down near 135th and Mandy.
Another call flagged suspicious behavior at 79th Street rail lines.
Two males in blue shorts and tank tops were mentioned among the suspects. One wore all black and carried the gun. Officers began checking alleyways while CPD tried to lock down the Red Line.
By 6:57 p.m., a small child was seen lying on the sidewalk. This was a street migrant beggar exploiting her child.
One block had an armed robbery crew, another had a child left on the ground as part of a begging operation.
That’s not just crime. That’s child abuse and child exploitation.
At State and Madison around 7:10 p.m., a man was sleeping across a CTA bus stop bench. A woman waiting for the bus had nowhere to sit. The CTA has a vendor contract to keep these areas clear, but the bench remained blocked.
No one intervened. Transit riders were ignored again.
The CTA is responsible for keeping these places clean. And there’s a contract in place to do that. The fare increase proposals don’t match the service on the ground. Riders are getting charged more for less safety and fewer seats.
Back at Roosevelt and Wabash, something had changed.
At the Jewel-Osco parking lot near the Roosevelt CTA Orange Line, Cook County Sheriff’s officers staged a coordinated sweep. Deputies were visible on the elevated platforms and throughout the area, clearing out what has long been a well-known open-air drug spot.
The lot was empty. The usual cars and crowds were gone. For once, the scene was clean.
The sheriff’s substation appeared open and active, with multiple marked and unmarked units in place. The sweep was deliberate and organized, the kind of law enforcement presence the area has lacked for months.
But as with past crackdowns, it didn’t end the drug activity — it only moved it.
Shortly after the area was cleared, the same group of dealers and users was seen regrouping outside the Dunkin’ Donuts down the block. The trade picked up again within sight of where it had just been shut down.
The problem wasn’t solved. It was shifted.
At Wabash and 13th, just a few blocks south, half the corner sat vacant. One storefront had a for-lease sign. Across the street, another was empty. Around 60 to 70 percent of the surrounding retail strip appeared abandoned.
Aurelio’s Pizza, a former staple, was closed. A dental clinic remained open, but the commercial core was hollowed out.
This is Michigan Avenue territory — just blocks from the museum campus and downtown hotels. These are not supposed to be ghost corridors. But they are.
Aurelio’s is not remote work. It’s not a tech startup. It’s a pizza shop.
When that closes, it means people either don’t have money to eat or don’t feel safe enough to come down. One of the two.
And neither of those are good signs for a city that got billions in COVID relief, migrant aid, and federal stimulus.
Where did the money go?
A silver Mercedes-Benz with Aurora plates was later found abandoned and still running in the middle of Lake Shore Drive. The doors were open and the engine was hot. The car reeked of gasoline. Something about it didn’t sit right. The owner was listed living in Aurora and the police were trying to contact them.
A lady jumped out of a car on the skyway asking for help. Police initially flagged it as a kidnapping. The driver turned out to be a rideshare operator. The incident was dismissed as a language barrier between the driver and passenger. She ordered another Uber.
Later in the evening, police received a report of a woman dressed in black, yelling and possibly armed near a CTA station.
Simultaneously, multiple people were seen sleeping on sidewalks and benches at several transit stops. One man was spotted digging through trash, his entire life in a plastic bag slung over his shoulder.
Back at Roosevelt, the sheriff presence continued. Tickets were being written. The lot was still cleared. But across the street, the hustle picked up again.
There’s also been a noticeable shift in who’s showing up.
More white drug addicts are appearing downtown — and they’re more aggressive. Most don’t sound local. They look out of place, act erratic, and carry that edge that comes with desperation and distance.
While the city is playing cleanup, the dealers are playing chess.
The collapse isn’t just visible on the streets—it’s engineered from above.
It’s in the halls of power and the press.
On May 30, 2025, Mayor Brandon Johnson’s office told the public: “The Mayor is not pursuing any changes to the voting threshold at this time,” referring to the newly elected Chicago Board of Education. But the Chicago Tribune uncovered that just one week earlier, Johnson’s lobbyist John Arena had already emailed state officials pushing legislation to lower the board’s voting thresholds. The goal: make it easier for mayoral allies to override board decisions — a quiet power grab masked by public denial.
The mayor lied. The agenda was moving behind the scenes while the public was told everything was fine.
Then there’s the media.
On the same day this street report was being documented — August 7 — WTTW ran a story headlined: “CPD Data Shows Steep Drop in Shootings, Homicides in Neighborhoods Where ShotSpotter Was Removed.”
The outlet claimed crime was down because a gunfire detection system was turned off — implying that ShotSpotter itself might have caused the violence.
Imagine a reporter writing that crime drops after the sensors that detect crime are removed. That the detection tool, not the shooters, is the problem.
It’s not just bad logic. It’s bizarre.
It’s narrative laundering — by a journalist who lives in the suburbs writing fiction for a city she doesn’t live in.
Crime didn’t drop. Detection did. That’s how you hide the collapse.
References (7 Aug 2025)
Photo Caption: Cook County Sheriff units take over the Roosevelt CTA station — the lot and the elevated platform — in a rare display of force where CPD once held the line. Years of defunding and political interference have turned city officers into babysitters and chauffeurs while jurisdiction quietly shifts. The dealers disappeared for a moment. They went Dunkin’
Imagine a reporter who writes a story that crime statistics are down in Chicago after the crime detection device was turned off and saying that shot spotter caused crime #bizarre #wacko (6:08pm) https://x.com/SubxNews/status/1953594194964230489