'Some people don't deserve to walk the streets:' Suspect charged with murder in death of CPD commander



CHICAGO — A man with a long criminal history that includes a conviction for armed robbery has been charged with first-degree murder in the fatal shooting of a Chicago police commander, authorities announced Wednesday afternoon.

Shomari Legghette, 44, was also charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm, armed violence and possession of narcotics after police discovered he was carrying heroin, crack cocaine and marijuana.

At an emotional news conference Wednesday, Police Supt. Eddie Johnson talked about both the suspect who was carrying a semi-automatic handgun with a 30-round magazine, and wearing body armor under a heavy black jacket, and the man he's accused of killing Tuesday afternoon, Cmdr. Paul Bauer.



"When Paul heard the radio call, he didn't turn the other way to let someone else worry about it," said Johnson. "He didn't worry about his rank or the fact that he wasn't in his own district. He just ran towards where he was needed without hesitation."

On Wednesday, police said the 53-year-old Bauer, wearing his police uniform, was in his car after having lunch near the James R. Thompson Center, a downtown government building, when he heard the call. Tactical officers had approached Legghette in an area where there had been reports of drug sales but before they reached him, Legghette ran away.

Bauer, a 31-year department veteran, jumped from his car and ran after Legghette, who matched the description that he heard on his radio. Police said Bauer chased Legghette to the top of a stairwell, where the two fought, before Legghette grabbed him and the two of them fell down the stairwell.

Area Central Detectives Commander Brendan Deenihan said witnesses said — and an audio recording from a nearby taxi confirmed — that seven shots were fired at the bottom of the stairwell. All the shots, said Deenihan, came from the gun that Legghette was carrying and officers later recovered. He said Bauer did not draw his weapon.

Police officers arrested Legghette a short time later in the stairwell.

Officials did not discuss it at the news conference and the medical examiner's office only said that Bauer was shot to death, but a person who was briefed on the investigation but was not authorized to speak said Bauer was shot multiple times in the head. The person spokes on the condition of anonymity.

Legghette has been arrested repeatedly and, according to the Illinois Department of Corrections, he has several felony convictions on his record dating back to the 1990s that have landed him in prison. Most of them are drug-related, but his record also includes crimes that show a willingness to use a gun.

According to the department of corrections, he was sentenced to prison in 1999 for armed robbery and after he was released, he was arrested again and sentenced to prison for possession of a firearm with a defaced serial number. Legghette was released from prison in 2008 before returning the next year after being convicted again for possession of a firearm with a defaced serial number.

Shortly after he was placed on parole, he returned to prison after it was revoked when he tested positive for drugs. He returned to prison again in 2015 after he was convicted for possession of a controlled substance.

One arrest in particular struck Johnson as a chilling prelude to what unfolded on Tuesday.

"In 2007, he was arrested for unlawful use of body armor, unlawful use of a weapon, armed violence and drug possession," he said.

Johnson, who as repeatedly urged lawmakers to pass tougher laws to keep repeat gun offenders locked up, pointedly said Legghette's record should have forfeited his right to freedom.

"Some people don't deserve to walk the streets of Chicago," he said. "He was one of them."

It was a similar message that Bauer himself shared at a gathering of business professionals just a few months before he died.

"Even when we catch somebody, there's still a long way to go to get them off the street," Bauer said at the Nov. 14 gathering, according to a report in the Loop North News. "We're not talking about the guy that stole a loaf of bread from the store to feed his family. We're talking about career robbers, burglars, drug dealers. These are all crimes against the community. They need to be off the street."

Deenihan said Legghette has refused to talk to police. He is in custody and is scheduled to appear in court on Thursday.