Puneet Varma (Editor)

Lane Bryant shooting

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Weapons
  
.40 S&W Glock handgun

Perpetrator
  
Unknown

Total number of deaths
  
5

Attack types
  
Robbery, Mass murder

Non-fatal injuries
  
1

Start date
  
February 2, 2008

Location
  
Tinley Park

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Video offers new clues in lane bryant shooting


The Lane Bryant shooting was an incident of mass murder and armed robbery at a Lane Bryant clothing outlet in the Brookside Marketplace in Tinley Park, Illinois, a suburb of Chicago, that occurred on February 2, 2008. The shooting resulted in five deaths and one injury.

Contents

Police do not know the identity of the shooter. Police released a sketch of the suspect on February 11, 2008, receiving two dozen leads the first day.

Lane Bryant shooting The Lane Bryant Shooting Crime Scene Database

Details

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Four customers, a part-time employee, and the store manager were taken to the back of the store and shot. Five of the women were killed; the part-time employee was wounded but survived. Police found the victims shortly after receiving an emergency call at 10:45 a.m. The gunman was described as a black man with thick, cornrowed hair and a receding hairline, along with one braid lying over the right side of his face at cheek level and decorated with four light-green beads on the end. Police believe it was a robbery "gone awry."

The victims are:

Lane Bryant shooting Lane Bryant Shooting Motive still a mystery 5 years later

  • Connie R. Woolfolk, 37, of Flossmoor;
  • Sarah T. Szafranski, 22, of Oak Forest;
  • Carrie Hudek Chiuso, 33, of Frankfort;
  • Rhoda McFarland, 42, of Joliet, the store manager; and
  • Jennifer L. Bishop, 34, of South Bend, Indiana.
  • The identity of the survivor is protected by police and has not been released to the media.
  • Aftermath

    Lane Bryant shooting Lane Bryant Murders 5 years later WGNTV

    The shopping center was closed and locked down while being searched. It was reopened after police found that the gunman had left the immediate area.

    Then-U.S. Senator Barack Obama, who was elected President in November that year, released a statement following the killings:

    A $100,000 reward, half of which was donated by Lane Bryant's parent company, Charming Shoppes Inc., was offered for information leading to the gunman's arrest. On February 6, 2008, Lane Bryant announced the establishment of The Lane Bryant Tinley Park Memorial Fund in honor of the five women who were killed. Lane Bryant also offered to pay for the victims' funerals.

    The Steve Wilkos Show, being taped in Chicago, profiled the suspect of the shooting at the end of one episode since the incident.

    The store building itself remained unused until November 2013, when T.J. Maxx took it over for use as a retail outlet.

    References

    Lane Bryant shooting Wikipedia