Community mourns West Loop doorman killed over the weekend: 'He's the sweetest man to walk this earth'
Apr 14, 2025
Family members and West Loop residents are mourning the death of John Flemister, a beloved area doorman, who was fatally shot in the neighborhood over the weekend.“He loved his job to death. The residents loved him to death,” his niece Sabrina Holton told the Sun-Times Monday. “He was the best
person ever … and I hope that we can find a funeral place that's big enough for the love that he's going to receive, because everyone loves him.”Flemister, 61, worked the front desk at several area residential buildings and was heading home after work Saturday when he was shot and killed near the UIC/Halsted Blue Line station. Holton said she can't understand why anyone would want to harm her uncle. “He helps everyone,” she said. “He's not confrontational. He's the sweetest man to walk this earth.”Flemister lived in the same West Loop building as his niece, in the unit right below hers. When police called to tell her about the shooting she didn't believe them. She ran to knock on his door, which he kept open when he was home for anyone who wanted to stop by. She knew something was wrong when she found the door locked.“I don't even know how I'm gonna survive,” she said. Exchange of gunfireThe shooting occurred just after 6 p.m. Saturday on a pedestrian bridge in the 400 block of South Peoria Street, Chicago police said.John Gorey was walking his dogs near the bridge when he saw three people arguing. He told the Sun-Times he could not tell if there was any animosity. The argument continued for several minutes, then Gorey heard loud pops. He turned and saw a younger man, who appeared to be wearing a neon CTA vest, firing shots at Flemister.“He was probably about 5 feet away from the victim, and he was just firing shot after shot after shot,” Gorey told the Sun-Times.Police reported there was “an exchange of gunfire” between Flemister and the 24-year-old gunman. Flemister was struck in his head and taken to Stroger Hospital, where he was pronounced dead.The 24-year-old remained at the scene and was taken into custody. As of Monday afternoon, he had not been charged. ‘Just a gentle, kind soul’Neighborhood residents rattled by the shooting were shocked to learn that Flemister was the victim.“If you run into John, you could not have a bad day,” Jody Persky a resident of one of Flemister’s buildings, told the Sun-Times. “Just a gentle, kind soul. There's so many people that he touched in such a big way.”Persky said Flemister was always going above and beyond what was asked of him, and sometimes she would have to remind him to stop working when his shift was done."He always was trying to do something good, helpful," Persky said.Bruce Butler, another resident in the West Loop building, had no idea what could have led to Saturday's attack. He said Flemister was like family to everyone in the neighborhood. "He's just one of those guys that just didn't seem to have a bad bone in his body," Butler told the Sun-Times. "Just one of those people that you would think nothing bad would ever happen to. We're just devastated. He just turned 61, and he deserved to be retired and enjoying life." Flemister’s twin sister, Janice Flemister, said her brother had had other close calls in the city in recent years and was almost robbed several times. “Chicago needs to do something, because it's a struggle, day in and day out, for all of us working people trying to go to work and the things that we endure,” Janice Flemister told the Sun-Times. “He had dodged death several times.”Flemister was an Army veteran who was born and raised in the city and had worked in the West Loop and downtown areas for many years, his sister said.He did not have children of his own but helped raise his sister and his niece’s children. He bought a popcorn machine and mini golf green for the kids to use at his home, and his door was always open.“He had no kids. He wasn't married, but he took to other people's kids,” Janice Flemister said. “He was just a workaholic, and he just took pride in what he did for his job, and he loved his family.” ...read more read less