Families of 2 teens shot, 1 fatally, by Douglass Park lifeguard in late June file civil lawsuit against Park District, lifeguard

Families of 2 teens shot, 1 fatally, by Douglass Park lifeguard in late June file civil lawsuit against Park District, lifeguard
Families of 2 teens shot, 1 fatally, by Douglass Park lifeguard in late June file civil lawsuit against Park District, lifeguard
CHICAGO — The families of the two teenage boys shot by a Douglass Park lifeguard in late June have filed a civil lawsuit against the Chicago Park District and the lifeguard, Charles Leto, charged in the shooting.

One of the boys, 15-year-old Marjay Dotson, was killed. The other, Jeremy Herred, was critically injured and is now a quadriplegic, according to the lawsuit.

Attorneys for the teen’s families say the Park District knew or should’ve known that Leto was unfit to work as a lifeguard. The families of the teens and their attorneys are scheduled to speak with the media later Wednesday morning.

Charles leto

On June 26, surveillance cameras at Douglass Park, located on Chicago’s Southwest Side, captured two teens later identified as Dotson and Herred approaching the 55-year-old Leto as he worked on his bike.

Moments later, Leto could be seen pulling out a gun and firing, hitting and killing Dotson and critically injuring Herred, a 14-year-old sophomore at UIC College Prep.

Marjay dotson (photo provided by family)
Jeremy herred (photo provided by family)

Prior to the shooting, the lawsuit says, other kids who had been denied entry at the Douglass Park pool had taken Leto’s bike as a prank and rode it from one side of the pool to the other. Court documents say Leto never called police or security for help.

The lawsuit also says the teens were unarmed and never threatened Leto, who’s been charged with murder, first-degree murder and other crimes. Leto, who says he fired in self-defense, is currently being detained until trial.

Leto resigned from the Park District in lieu of being terminated, and a spokesperson with the district told WGN News earlier this summer that Leto is ineligible for future employment with the district.

According to an internal review by the Park District, released in July, Leto had been given several warnings about his behavior toward guests. But those warnings never made it up the ranks of the Park District, which prompted the district this summer to take a hard look at its employee policies.

“Those verbal warnings were never tracked in our central human resource disciplinary file. So that never made its way to headquarters,” Park District Superintendent Carlos Ramirez-Rosa said. “There was no way to be able to track those verbal warnings across different park locations, so we now want to make sure that we’re tracking those types of incidents so that we can then take appropriate action.”

WGN-TV also reported this summer that Leto shot two dogs and killed one in Lakeview in 2023 because he said he felt threatened by the animals. However, that didn’t show up on a background check, because Leto wasn’t criminally charged in the incident, even though he got into a standoff with police after the shooting.


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