Somebody killed a policeman today
And a part of America died...
A piece of our country he swore to protect
Will be buried with him at his side.
The beat that he walked was a battlefield, too,
Just as if he had gone off to war;
Though the flag of our nation won't fly at half-mast
To his name they will add a gold star.
The suspect that shot him will stand up in court
With counsel demanding his rights,
While a young, widowed mother must work for her kids
And spend many long, lonely nights.
Yes, somebody killed a policeman today...
Maybe in your town or mine,
While we slept in comfort behind our locked doors A cop put his life on the line.
Now his ghost walks the beat on a dark city street,
And he stands at each new rookie's side:
He answered the call . . . of himself he gave his all,
And a part of America died.. (author unknown)
Bod Bless you and your family and friends PO Clifton Lewis EOW 29DEC2011.
OFF-Duty police officer fatally shot during robbery at grocery store
BY MITCH DUDEK, STEFANO ESPOSITO, ADESHINA EMMANUEL
AND TINA SFONDELES
Staff Reporters
Last Modified: Dec 30, 2011 10:51AM
Chicago Police Officer Clifton Lewis, slain Thursday night while working a security sidejob at a West Side store, was being remembered Friday morning as a good guy and a good neighbor.
“I felt much safer with him on the block,” neighbor Derry “Blue” Chambliss said. “He went to work. He came home and he walked his dogs — two pit bulls, a black one and a white one. He was a good neighbor. ... Man, he was OK.
“I saw him yesterday getting his mail in the afternoon. I said, ‘Hey, Cliff.’ He said ‘Hey, Blue.’ ”
Lewis, 41, lived on the West Side with his fiance, about a mile from the M&M Quick Foods at Austin and Division where he was slain at about 8:30 p.m. Thursday. The Austin District tactical unit officer was off-duty at the time, working security at a store that had been robbed just weeks before.
Lewis, an eight year veteran, died at Stroger Hospital, officials said. Several of Lewis’ family members, including his mother, were at Stroger.
He was shot multiple times and police have not located his gun, officials said.
No one was in custody Friday morning, police said.
John Waynes, 18, was inside the store with his friend, Darrell Davis, moments before Thursday’s shooting. Waynes said he heard shouting between what appeared to be security and a customer.
“We saw the guy — he was arguing with the officer, but we just wanted to get out,” Waynes said.
Waynes said he and Davis feared for their safety.
Moments after the two left the store, they heard gunshots. Waynes described it as “automatic gunfire.”
Jerod Dent, 25, who lives near the store, said the officer had just been hired about a week ago after the store was robbed about three weeks earlier.
Several neighbors living near the store, which is near Oak Park, described the area as generally safe.
“We’ve never had any problems,” said Keller Weiss, who lives in a nearby condo with her husband, Steve Weiss. “This isn’t that bad. It’s actually very quiet.”
On Lewis’ block, neighbor Tony Ray, a 35-year-old musician, said Lewis was a big Bulls fan — and a big Derrick Rose fan.
Ray and Lewis lamented the NBA lockout that dragged out through the summer, and Ray said Lewis was excited when it finally ended, meaning his beloved Bulls would be back.
“It’s sad that the lockout just ended, but now his life is over,” Ray said.
Lewis and his fiance moved into the 1 1/2-story white stucco home over the summer and fixed it up. Ray said Lewis decorated it for Christmas — the red and silver tinsel still lines the black wrought iron fence guarding the front of his home.
A sign in Lewis’ front window reads: “Don’t be afraid of the dog. Be afraid of the owner.”
Ray said Lewis was a likable, good neighbor.
“He didn’t come off like ‘I’m the police,’ make himself known as an authority. He was not arrogant or anything. He was a cool guy,” Ray said.
Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy went to Stroger Thursday night after the shooting.
He did not address the media, but the department said in a statement that McCarthy and the entire force “extend their sincere condolences to the officer’s family and friends, and ask that he and his family be remembered in your prayers.”
The last Chicago officer shot and killed was Michael Flisk, who was killed Nov. 26, 2010, while processing a crime scene from a burglary.
Contributing: LeeAnn Shelton
Copyright © 2011 — Sun-Times Media, LLC
In this everlasting battle, sometimes the beast wins and one of our own falls. We quickly close ranks and quietly mourn the fallen, but we continue the fight. Nobody knows when it started or when it will end but the Lord, God.
God Bless you PO Clifton Lewis.
Condolences to your family and your brothers and sisters in 015th District and the Chicago Police Department for this great loss.
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