A neighborhood street should never become a launchpad for a deadly weapon.
Yet, that is exactly what happened on a warm Monday evening along a notorious stretch of asphalt on the West Side.
A vibrant Chicago woman is dead because an unidentified driver prioritised their own freedom over human life.

The Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office confirmed that 45-year-old Lisa Barber passed away on Sunday at Accent Care at Macneal in Berwyn.
Her death comes exactly two weeks after a driver slammed into her and left her bleeding on the concrete.
The catastrophic encounter took place around 7:56 p.m. on May 11 in the 3100-block of Franklin Boulevard.
Barber stepped into the street, completely unaware that a speeding, eastbound vehicle was barreling directly toward her path.
The impact was sudden, violent, and loud enough to shatter the evening quiet of the residential neighborhood.
The driver of the maroon-colored vehicle did not tap the brakes, pull over, or call for an ambulance.
Instead, the criminal pressed down on the gas pedal and sped away into the Chicago twilight.
First responders rushed to the scene and found Barber clinging to life with severe, multi-system trauma.
Paramedics stabilized her as best they could before rushing her to Mt. Sinai Hospital in critical condition.

Doctors fought for fourteen agonizing days to repair her broken body, but her injuries ultimately proved too severe to overcome.
Here is the heartbreaking reality that numbers on a police report will never properly capture.
Barber was not just a statistic; she was the comedic anchor of a tight-knit, ten-member local book club.
Her close friend, Katie, shared a beautiful and raw tribute detailing the massive void left in the wake of this senseless crime.
“We’re all in shock over how suddenly this happened, how abruptly Lisa could be here one minute, so full of life, so hilarious, and making plans for the future,” Katie told ABC7 Chicago
The tight-knit group of friends had spent years sharing stories, debating literature, and planning upcoming travel adventures together.
Now, those shared dreams have transformed into a heavy mixture of profound grief and absolute anger.
The scene told a different story the very next morning as neighbors stepped outside to find remnants of police tape drifting in the wind.
Carolyn Harvey, who lives directly across the street from the impact zone, recalled the terrifying sight of flashing emergency lights illuminating the boulevard when she returned home from work.
Other residents say they did not need a flashing blue light to tell them that Franklin Boulevard is an active hazard.
The long, wide stretch of the boulevard regularly invites reckless drivers to treat a residential zone like a drag strip.
“Cars don’t stop, and pedestrians try to walk across the street, but there’s no help to help them across,” local resident Angel Rodriguez warned.
Community members complain that the lack of highly visible crosswalks, traffic-calming bumps, and flashing pedestrian signals leaves walkers completely exposed.
But Humboldt Park residents refuse to let Barber’s tragic death be swept under the rug by city bureaucracy.
Her book club members are actively channeling their intense sorrow into direct, boots-on-the-ground pedestrian safety advocacy.
They are already drawing up plans to pressure city officials for immediate infrastructure changes at the exact location where Barber was struck.
Safety experts urge Chicago residents to take extreme care when crossing multi-lane boulevards during the high-risk twilight hours.
Always look multiple times in both directions, make direct eye contact with oncoming drivers, and wear brightly colored clothing if you walk after dark.
If you ever find yourself witnessing a pedestrian crash, memorize the vehicle’s color, make, and license plate number immediately instead of focusing on your phone.
Detectives with the Chicago Police Major Accidents Investigation Unit are currently handling the intense manhunt.
Investigators are searching for a maroon-colored vehicle that likely features substantial, fresh front-end body damage.
They need the eyes of every single Chicagoan to help them track down the coward who hid behind the wheel.
If you saw this specific vehicle near Franklin Boulevard on that fateful Monday night, you must contact Chicago police immediately to deliver justice for Lisa Barber.











