John hancock tower residential7/9/2023 ![]() ![]() “The owner of the unit determines whether or not the key fob – the access fob – is to be deactivated,” said David Sugar (left), a partner at Saul Ewing Arnstein & Lehr. Kobzarev says building personnel have been checking every day to see if the shooter’s key fob has been used but they are not allowed to deactivate it.Īccording to the condo association’s attorney, the unit from which the gunshot originated was occupied at the time of the incident by someone who was not the unit owner. She says police remained at Hancock Center until about 1:30 a.m. “In retrospect now, I wish we had sent the first notice earlier because I started getting emails from the residents asking what was happening.” “I was hesitant to give wrong information,” said Kobzarev (right) at the meeting. by email and automated telephone messages. Residents were notified of the incident at 10:28 p.m. Surveillance video was found, showing the suspected shooter leaving the building through a loading dock soon after the gun was fired. When the SWAT team finally entered the unit, the occupant was no longer there. She says residential management offered to let police into the unit where the gun was fired, but they declined, choosing instead to wait four hours for a search warrant. ![]() Kobzarev, a vice president of Sudler Management Company, says she kept in touch with police, management of Hancock Center’s commercial property, and the commercial property’s chief of security, who was at the building at the time of the incident. (Left) Residential lobby of 175 East Delaware Place on the north side of John Hancock Center. At 9:23 p.m., the Chicago Police Department’s SWAT team arrived. Paramedics arrived at 9:15 p.m., though there were no reports of any injuries. She said when police arrived at the Hancock Center residences at 8:19 p.m., they first met with the residents of the unit in the lobby and then went up to the unit with the building’s chief engineer and a maintenance worker. When maintenance workers arrived at the unit, they found bullet holes in two walls.Īt an emergency meeting of 175 East Delaware Place Homeowner Association on February 8, property manager Jennie Kobzarev gave a detailed report on the incident. 16-Feb-21 – A gunshot heard on the 57th floor of John Hancock Center on January 29 left two bullet holes inside a condo unit and a condo association scrambling to get information to frightened owners.Īt about 8:00 p.m., a resident of a unit on the 57th floor called down to the building’s doorman to report “a loud noise” the resident believed was a gunshot. ![]()
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