By Illinois Review
Chicagoans woke up Monday to the kind of story Gov. JB Pritzker and Mayor Brandon Johnson hope never reaches beyond the local news: a 26-year-old woman nearly burned alive on the CTA Blue Line in the heart of the Loop.
It happened not in some distant neighborhood, not at 2 a.m., but during the evening rush on one of the city’s busiest transit lines – the same system Pritzker and Johnson keep insisting is “safe” as they mock President Donald Trump for calling out the violence in Chicago.
But away from the cameras, away from the carefully staged press conferences, a different Chicago exists – one that ordinary taxpayers and commuters face every day.
On November 17, around 9:25 p.m., the young woman was riding the Blue Line near the 100 block of West Lake Street when she became involved in a verbal dispute with a man believed to be in his mid-40s. What happened next was the kind of depravity most people only see in movies: the man poured a flammable liquid over her and lit her on fire.
Passengers could only watch in horror as she ran from the train, engulfed in flames, before collapsing on the Clark/Lake platform. Witnesses described the smell of burning hair, clouds of smoke, and the victim’s skin charred from her upper body to her scalp – half of it reportedly burned off.
A group of roughly two dozen commuters grabbed anything they could find to smother the flames while others held her hand as she drifted in and out of consciousness.
She was rushed to Stroger Hospital in critical condition. As of November 19, she is alive – but fighting for her life.
Chicago police are treating this as an attempted murder. A person of interest was taken into custody, though charges had not been announced by late Tuesday.
The scene shocked even veteran first responders. Videos circulating online show an army of paramedics and firefighters filling the Loop’s busiest station – a place passed by thousands of office workers and tourists every day.
Yet as residents grapple with the horror of a woman being set on fire inside a moving train, Pritzker and Johnson continue their political talking points. They insist crime is “down.” They insist Chicago is “safe.” They spend more energy attacking President Trump for speaking bluntly about Chicago violence than they do addressing the reality confronting their own citizens.
For the woman now fighting for her life, statistics and press releases offer little comfort. And for the commuters who watched her burn on one of the busiest transit lines in the city, the official assurances of safety feel increasingly disconnected from their daily reality.
Chicago police continue to investigate the attack as an attempted murder. Arson investigators are working to identify the flammable liquid used, and the CTA says it is coordinating closely with law enforcement as additional patrols are deployed across the system.
But the incident has renewed scrutiny of public safety on Chicago’s trains – and intensified questions about the message coming from the city’s most powerful leaders. As Gov. Pritzker and Mayor Johnson publicly downplay concerns and push back against outside criticism, residents are left confronting a far harsher picture: a major transit hub in the Loop where a young woman was set ablaze during her commute.
The investigation remains ongoing, and the victim remains in critical condition. Meanwhile, Chicagoans continue to wait for solutions that match the seriousness of the violence happening far beyond the microphones and staged backdrops of City Hall and the governor’s office.






