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Cook County sheriff's office correctional officer apparently shot to
death his wife, a Chicago police officer, inside their Southwest Side
home Sunday morning before turning the gun on himself, authorities said.
Javier
Acevedo and his wife, Veronica Rizzo-Acevedo, were found dead about 5
a.m. inside their home in the 5300 block of South Austin Avenue,
according to Cook County sheriff’s office spokeswoman Cara Smith.
Chicago police said the deaths are being investigated as aa apparent
murder-suicide but released no other information as of Sunday evening.
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“It is a tremendous tragedy any day, particularly for Easter Sunday,” Smith said.
Smith said the two, both 50 years old, were found inside a bedroom.
Rizzo-Acevedo’s adult daughter heard the gunfire in the Garfield Ridge home and called 911, according a law enforcement source.
Smith said Javier Acevedo was a 25-year veteran and worked at the county jail.
Rizzo-Acevedo
had served as a Chicago police officer for nearly two decades,
Superintendent Garry McCarthy said in a statement Sunday.
“Officer
Veronica Rizzo-Acevedo's death earlier today in a domestic
murder-suicide is an awful tragedy for her family, her friends, her
colleagues in the Chicago Police Department, and the people of this
city,” he said.
A fire department responder discovered a gun lying
under Javier Acevedo's body, and the two were pronounced dead at the
scene, according to the law enforcement source.
Police could be seen saluting as one of the victim’s bodies was removed from the home around 9 a.m.
Rizzo-Acevedo
had worked for the department for 18 years and had worked in the
Shakespeare police district, which covers the Logan Square, Bucktown and
Wicker Park neighborhoods, according to law enforcement sources.
“I've
had people calling all morning saying, ‘Oh my God. What happened?’”
said Lt. Michael Mulkerin, Rizzo-Acevedo’s former supervisor. “She was
well liked.”
Chicago Police Chaplain Dan Brandt, who noted he
wasn’t familiar with the specifics of the case, said being in law
enforcement brings a lot of unique stressors and exposure to the “worst
of humanity.”
“We’re accustomed to losing our (fellow officers) to
violence on the streets,” he said, “but when it’s something like this …
it’s doubly hard to accept.”
Edward Cronin, a priest at St. Jane
de Chantal Roman Catholic Church, said the couple regularly attended
services at the church, about a half-block north of their home.
Cronin said he's known them for a couple of years, though they've been members of the church for some time.
“They
were very committed, dedicated people ... struggling to understand the
mission of their work and trying to cope with the violence,” Cronin
said. “They were both good people and both trying hard to be good
Christian, Catholic people.”
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The
couple's neighbors and parishioners at St. Jane’s were shocked to hear
about the deaths Sunday morning. Many called them both friendly people.
Janis
Misovic lives around the corner from the couple’s home, attends their
church and said she had been meaning to grab lunch with Rizzo-Acevedo
for some time.
“She wanted to make more friends, but everyone
liked her,” Misovic said. “Now I feel bad that I really didn’t get a
chance to go out with her.”
Maryiln Koperniak, another parishioner
and member of St. Jane’s Lady Guild, broke into tears when a fellow
churchgoer confirmed her hunch, that a fellow member of that church
group had died.
“I had a feeling,” Koperniak said. “I didn't know her very well, but she was a very nice lady.”
An
elderly woman who lives across the street from the couple’s residence
and asked not to be named, said they were kind neighbors and seemed like
“delightful people.”
The woman said she was not close with them but would chat with the couple when they were outside.
“Easter Sunday morning, you wake up to this,” said the woman, who also attends St. Jane’s. “We've been crying all morning.”
The woman said she would talk with Rizzo-Acevedo as the police officer tended flowers in the yard.
“It's sad watching those bodies being removed,” the woman said. “It's awful. Not this neighborhood. Not these kind people.”
Tribune reporters Manya Brachear and Jeremy Gorner and photographer Nancy Stone contributed.
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