Man killed in Calumet Heights crash after beating woman, fleeing officers

Darryl L. Wright was allegedly seen beating a woman at a gas station about 1:55 a.m. in the 9100 block of South Stony Island Avenue and fled when officers responded, police said.

SHARE Man killed in Calumet Heights crash after beating woman, fleeing officers
A teen girl was killed in a crash Dec. 28, 2022, in Plainfield.

A man was killed in a crash after fleeing police Dec. 24, 2019, in Calumet Heights on the South Side.

Adobe File Photo

A man was killed in a vehicle crash Tuesday after beating a woman at a Calumet Heights gas station, then trying to flee police on the South Side, police say.

A 40-year-old man was allegedly seen beating a woman at a gas station about 1:55 a.m. in the 9100 block of South Stony Island Avenue, Chicago police said.

When officers responded, they saw the man driving away in a 2010 Dodge Charger with a woman who was screaming and waving for help as she tried to jump out of the moving vehicle, police said.

Officers quickly lost sight of the vehicle, but soon after found it crashed into three parked vehicles in the 2300 block of East 91st Street, police said.

The man, identified as Darryl L. Wright of Evergreen Park, was taken to the University of Chicago Medical Center and pronounced dead, the Cook County medical examiner’s office said.

An autopsy conducted Wednesday confirmed that Wright died of the injuries he sustained in the vehicle crash, the medical examiner’s office said. His death has been ruled an accident.

The woman, 28, was taken to the same hospital, police said. Her condition was stabilized.

The Chicago Police Department’s Major Accidents Unit is investigating.

The Latest
The Oak Park folk musician and former National Youth Poet Laureate who sings of love and loss is “Someone to Watch in 2024.”
Aaron Mendez, 1, suffered kidney damage and may have to have a kidney removed, while his older brother, Isaiah, has been sedated since undergoing surgery.
With interest, the plan could cost the city $2.4 billion over 37 years, officials have said. Johnson’s team says that money will be more than recouped by property tax revenue flowing back to the city’s coffers from expiring TIF districts.
Director/choreographer Dan Knechtges pushes the show to the outermost boundaries of broad comedy.
Tobin was a longtime Bears executive who served as the team’s de facto general manager from 1986-92.