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Woman with a bat attacks 8 people on Northwest Side, suspect taken into custody

cigaretteman

HR King
May 29, 2001
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A woman is accused of striking eight women with a baseball bat, five of them within a half-hour Tuesday and the other two Saturday, on the Northwest Side.
Provided



A woman with a baseball bat struck five women in three separate attacks within half an hour Tuesday in Albany Park and Irving Park on the Northwest Side, according to police.
The woman also hit three other women in two attacks Sunday afternoon in the same neighborhoods, authorities said.
A suspect has been taken into custody but no charges have been announced, police said.




Just before 11:30 a.m. Tuesday, a woman got out of a white sedan in the 4500 block of North Mozart Street, walked up to two women and struck them with a bat. She got back in her car and drove away, police said.
Ten minutes later, she chased a 45-year-old woman and her young daughter in the 4100 block of North Campbell Avenue, where she hit the woman with a bat, police said. The child was not injured, and the woman declined medical assistance.
Around noon, in the 3000 block of West Belle Plaine Avenue, about a mile from the scene of the first attack, she struck two other women with a bat, police said. The victims, whose ages weren’t released, refused medical attention.
The attacker then drove two blocks to the 3000 block of West Cullom Avenue and struck a fifth woman around noon, police said. That victim drove herself to Illinois Masonic Medical Center, where she was listed in good condition.

About 3 p.m. Sunday, a woman armed with a bat was driving in the 4200 block of North Richmond Street, where she got out and hit a 33-year-old woman and fled the scene, police said. The victim declined medical attention.
Forty-five minutes later, the woman got out of her car and battered two women who were near the sidewalk in the 4000 block of West Lawrence Avenue. The victims, 19 and 31, declined medical attention, according to police.

 
Through tears after the hearing, Solorzano’s mother said that her daughter was diagnosed with schizophrenia several years ago and has struggled to get medication to treat her condition and take it consistently.



When she would take her daughter to a hospital for treatment, “they just kept releasing her,” Solorzano’s mother said.

Solorzano’s arrest report indicated she told Chicago police she has also been diagnosed with bipolar disorder, which prosecutors said her family had confirmed.

The assistant public defender said Solorzano lives with her mother and had attended some college classes, but was not employed due to “some significant mental health issues she’s dealing with.”

 
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