Crime & Safety
Woman Pees in Public, Drunk Punch Damages Bar Window: Police Blotter
Forest Park police reports, June 1-2

Sunday, June 2
Woman Caught Peeing in Public
Melissa Gonzales, 29, of Villa Park, was arrested for public urination and a liquor-related warrant out of DuPage County. Police said they saw Gonzales peeing in the public way around 12:15 a.m. in the 7300 block of Madison Street. She was processed on the warrant and given a ticket for public urination.Like Forest Park Patch on Facebook
Saturday, June 1
Disorderly Conduct, Obstruction
A Chicago man faces disorderly conduct, village ordinance violation and obstruction charges after he was kicked out of Shortstop Lounge around 1:15 a.m.Police arrested Qudell Davis, 29, when he refused to stop yelling obscenities outside the bar, drinking from a bottle of Beringer moscato and "breaching the peace" of people walking by on Madison Street, police said.
Police said Qudell yelled "No," and "Make me shut my mouth!" at officers when they told him to lower his voice before he physically resisted arrest. Police said he continued to act belligerent and yell all the way to the booking room.
He was processed and charged with three counts of resisting, obstructing and disarming an officer, two village ordinance violations and one count of disorderly conduct, police said. He was given a July 2 court date.
Oak Park Man Punches Bar Window
Kylon Hartzog, 21, of Oak Park was arrested for punching a window around 2:30 a.m. at Shortstop Lounge, 7425 Madison St. Hartzog told police he was intoxicated and that it was the first time he'd been drunk since he turned 21, police said.He was processed and charged with criminal damage to property and given a July 9 court date.
Ordinance Violation for Loud Music
Sharon Walker, 38, of Bellwood, was arrested and given a village ordinance violation for playing loud music in her car around 3:45 p.m. near the intersection of Madison Street and Washington Boulevard in Oak Park.Are you a fan of true crime? "Like" the Crime-n-Shame page on Facebook and get clued in on mischief making and weird crime throughout the Chicago area.
Police Blotter information is provided by local law enforcement agencies. Charges are not evidence of guilt. They are a record of police actions taken on a given day, and persons charged with a crime are presumed innocent until proven guilty in court. If you or a family member are charged or cited and the case is subsequently adjudicated, we encourage you to notify the editor. We will verify and report the outcome.
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