$3 million bond for man charged with Ford Heights double homicide

SHARE $3 million bond for man charged with Ford Heights double homicide

(FORD HEIGHTS) Bond was set at $3 million on Thursday for a man charged with shooting two people to death last month inside a van in south suburban Ford Heights.

Ladarius Harris, 22, faces two counts of first-degree murder, according to a statement from the Cook County sheriff’s office.

Harris was arrested Tuesday at a home in Chicago Heights after sheriff’s police identified him as the shooter in a double homicide, according to the statement.

Two people were found shot to death inside a 2001 white Ford van about 1:25 a.m. on Nov. 2 in the 1500 block of Park Lane in Ford Heights, authorities said.

Ephram Nelson Jones, 17, of the 1100 block of Park Avenue in Ford Heights, and 19-year-old Cyrus Johnson, who lived on the same block as the shooting, were both pronounced dead at the scene, according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Autopsies found both Jones and Johnson died of multiple gunshot wounds and their deaths were ruled homicides.

The sheriff’s office did not provide a motive for the murders.

A judge on Thursday set Harris’ bail at $3 million, according to jail records.

Harris, of the 100 block of Hickory Street in Chicago Heights, is next scheduled to appear in court at the Markham Courthouse on Dec. 19.

The Latest
The man was shot in the left eye area in the 5700 block of South Christiana Avenue on the city’s Southwest Side.
Most women who seek abortions are women of color, especially Black women. Restricting access to mifepristone, as a case now before the Supreme Court seeks to do, would worsen racial health disparities.
The Bears have spent months studying the draft. They’ll spend the next one plotting what could happen.
Woman is getting anxious about how often she has to host her husband’s hunting buddy and his wife, who don’t contribute at all to mealtimes.
He launched a campaign against a proposed neo-Nazis march at a time the suburb was home to many Holocaust survivors. His rabbi at Skokie Central Congregation urged Jews to ignore the Nazis. “I jumped up and said, ‘No, Rabbi. We will not stay home and close the windows.’ ”