The Story
On April 25th, a Chicago officer was fatally shot by a black repeat offender while receiving treatment at a hospital while in police custody. The officer killed was 38-year-old and 10 year veteran of the force, John Bartholomew.
Bartholomew was pronounced dead just before 1 p.m. Saturday after being shot at the Swedish Hospital, according to the Cook Country Medical Examiner’s office. A second officer was wounded and still remains in critical condition. Police have not said how he was able to get a gun.
Chicago Police Superintendent Larry Snelling (Black), told reporters on Saturday that the wounded officer, 57-years-old with 21 years of service, was “fighting for his life.”
The officers had transported the suspect, Alphanso Talley, 26, who had been arrested for suspicion of robbery, to the hospital for observation. The suspect fled from the hospital after the shooting and was apparently running naked, with electrodes on his chest.
According to the police, Talley had been “wanded upon arrival,” following protocol. He had been escorted by law enforcement for the entire duration.
However, Superintendent Snelling has stated that police investigators had uncovered three weapons.

It has been reported, Talley and another person rode electric scooters to an Albany Park dollar store, where they snatched $110 during a violent robbery.
After he was taken to Swedish Hospital, where he killed Officer John Bartholomew and injured another officer, he began to terrorize the hospital staff. Then Talley escaped by shooting out a glass door, where he ran naked through the neighborhood, before he was ultimately found hiding under a porch.
How Talley was able to acquire this gun is still a mystery, however, he was captured on police car video fidgeting and adjusting himself during his transportation.
It is reported that days later, Talley was in court smiling at family members as a group of deputies escorted him into Judge D’Anthony Thedford’s courtroom.
When prosecutors laid out the convicted felon’s length criminal history, Thedford admonished Talley for giggling.
Thedford called Talley, “dangerous,” nothing he had been free on electronic monitoring for other violence crimes when he robbed the store and shot the officers.
“No conditions that I can impose can keep the community safe from you,” the judge said.
As Talley was being taken from the courtroom, he yelled to his family: “I love you.”
The Details
When Talley and his accomplice showed up at that Family Dollar store at 3239 W. Lawrence Ave., around 8 a.m. Saturday, Talley was already free on electronic monitoring.
Talley and his accomplice were masked, and Talley pulled a gun from his waistband when the store clerk told them to leave one of their bags at the front of the store.
Talley then decided to take the 55-year-old woman to the back of the store and he smashed the butt of his gun into her face before demanding that she open the cash register and the safe. When the clerk, dazed from the first blow and scared for her life, stated that she did not have the keys to open the safe, Talley pistol-whipped her again. He broke her nose and gave her two black eyes.
So Talley dragged the clerk back to the cash register and forced her to open it. Talley and his accomplice made off with $110, the clerk’s keys and her wallet.
As Talley and his accomplice fled on electric scooters, the clerk was able to called the police. Talley was captured on video tossing the clerk’s wallet into a garbage can, and he was taken into custody just a short time later. The police found a bundle of cash in his pocket, soaked with blood.
He was arrested and he gave the police a fake name and a fake ID. Once handcuffed and placed in a police car, video showed him fidgeting as if he were manipulating something near his back. As he was being transported to the local police precinct, he lied and told the officers that he had swallowed 5 bags of drugs and that he needed medical attention.
At the hospital, Talley asked if he could keep his pants on. He was told no, however, he was instead given privacy to undress, and he was given a gown and a blanket. The last surveillance footage again showed him fidgeting, this time under the blanket.

Officer Bartholomew then took the handcuffs off Talley’s hands and legs. Talley reached under the blanket, pulled out the handgun and shot Officer Bartholomew right in the head. Then he turned and shot the second officer in the face, before bending over the wounded officer.
As soon as the shots went off, a hospital staff members pulled an alarm. The hospital exit doors to the automatically locked. So Talley aimed his gun at an employee and stole an ID badge. Talley tried to use the badge to open a glass door, but when he couldn’t, he shot the door out.
Talley, who was completely naked and carrying his hospital gown, then chased down another innocent person while demanding their car keys. When he couldn’t catch up to that person, he tried carjacking a postal worker, who was able to drive off. Talley wasn’t found for over an hour as he was hiding in the 2600 block of West Carmen Ave, under a porch.
Talley’s public defender, Julie Koehler, argued there were “many reasons” that Talley had previously been granted pretrial release late last year, and there were “many reasons” for Judge Thedford to consider releasing him.
Koehler tried to claim that Talley was a ward of the state until he was 18, has been diagnosed with anxiety and depression and had been hospitalized throughout his childhood for suicide attempts, and he is not responsible for his decisions.
Koehler then said that Talley is “not a person that we should throw away,” because had pursued a high school equivalency certificate and worked for a construction firm.
“If you’re out you’re dangerous,” Thedford said of Talley. “You’ve been given every opportunity that the law affords so that you could fight your cases out of custody. Every time you have violated.”
After the hearing, Talley’s stepsister maintained his innocence.
“If he did anything, he was in a matrix or he went insane,” she said. “He’s a very loving person.”
But Fraternal Order of Police John Catanzara condemned the courtroom behavior of Talley and his family, saying he’s not buying the argument that Talley “was not in the right mind.”
“He had enough calculating effort to decide what he was going to do; try and get to the hospital, shoot his way out of the hospital,” Catanzara said. “Once the handcuffs came off, he had enough wherewithal to figure out he could not get out of secure locations without robbing the janitor of his badge. There was multiple really calculated efforts.”
The Decree
Chicago is Negro run city. They have a Negro Police Superintendent, a majority Negro mayoral office staff, a Negro mayor, and nearly half are female. And these are the direct results of that.1 Not to mention, the Illinois Governor, J.B. Pritzker, is a jew.

Talley was always given a slap on the wrist for his crimes. His criminal history goes back almost a decade, with seven felony convictions, including four robbery convictions.
At the time of the shooting, Talley was on electronic monitoring for armed carjacking and armed robbery. Why was this the case? These are violent crimes and he shouldn’t have seen the light of day until proven innocent in a court of law. When he was charged with those crimes, he was on pretrial release for battering a correctional officer and possessing a stolen vehicle, and he was initially held in custody. So why was he let out to begin with?
Well, it was because Judge John Lyke Jr., a Negro, decided to release him against the prosecutions objections. And the reason why Lyke decided to do this, was because he said he had seen a positive change in Talley since he first appear before him in 2023.
Lyke stated in December:
“This court has had an opportunity to watch him. I have seen attitudes adjustments. He came in this court in 2023 extremely angry.”
After Lyke released him, Talley was paroled in the two earlier cases, in which he was convicted of attacking the officer and possessing the stolen car. Because Talley did the bare minimum by showing up to court, he was allowed more leniency so he could go to school and the dentist.
Earlier this year, Talley missed curfew and his monitoring device shut off a few days later. By March 11th, warrants were issued for his arrest when he missed court. And yet, he remained free until Saturday when he was picked up for the Dollar Tree robbery where he beat the 55-year-old clerk senseless.
And why was he actually released? It’s because he is a Negro and so is Lyke. That’s why. When their people commit crimes, they stick to race no matter what. When our people commit crimes, we hold them accountable. And we should continue to hold our people accountable, but do not expect these animals to hold their own accountable.
Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke told reporters the following:
“We make sure that we put every bit of information in front of a judge to establish why we believe this person presents a danger, as we did in this case. We established that he had four pending violent felonies, and in spite of that, he was placed on electronic monitoring.”
Republican lawmakers in Springfield, Illinois again slammed the cashless bail law, the SAFE-T act.
House Minority Leader Tony McCombie (R-Savannah) stated:
“This law is not working the way Democrats promised. Releasing somebody with that kind of criminal history does nothing to protect our communities.”
Republicans want to amend the SAFE-T Act by revoking the eligibility for pre-trial release for individuals under electronic monitoring if they commit another, similar crime before trial.
And these is what we should come to expect from any political party in a government that allows elections. Instead of arguing that any violent criminal or person suspected of a violent crime should be ineligible for electronic monitoring, they are willing to compromise by allowing proven violent offenders or those suspected of violent crimes the opportunity to be free, so long as they do not commit another crime. But what if they commit a crime and get away with it?
At a news conference Wednesday, jewish Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker argued the blame falls on the Negro, Lyke, not the SAFE-T act.
“It’s a tragedy what’s happened, awful. And as you’ve seen in most of the cases where Republicans have complained about the SAFE-T act, it’s actually been a bad decision by an elected judge in Illinois or no hearing at all, because the prosecutor didn’t bring it to the judge. A judge can make this decision. A judge should have made the decision to keep that person in jail.”
So the sacrificial goyim gets all the blame for the decision that the jew supported as a way to shield himself from any responsibility. They’re both to blame. And the prosecution did bring the fact that Talley was a violent offender up to Lyke, and he chose to allow Talley out on the streets because of racial solidarity.
If I were leading this country, I would have ended the SAFE-T act and taken away any chance of Talley ever stepping outside of a prison cell ever again. He’s already proven that he is a detriment to society, just like the other Negroes. They always choose their tribe over what is Christian.
There is no united racial coalition, there is only The New Way.











