Police arrested and charged him with felony murder in Chicago, after he allegedly shot his wife several times in the parking lot of a Target, resulting in her death. Jennifer Hamilton, a 47-year-old trade unionist with the International Union of Civil Servants, was in the Target parking lot when a man approached her and shot her several times before fleeing, Chicago’s FOX 32 reported. Chicago teen commits suicide after intimidation WHILE ELITE School closed its “blind eye”, claims lawsuit The man was later identified as her husband, Alphonso Hamilton, 50, after being handed over to the Schiller Park Police Department, police said. Jennifer was taken to Loyola University Medical Center in critical condition, where she was pronounced dead, police said. HEAD INJURIES THE HOST “WILD TRAVELS” WAS OBLIGATED AFTER THE ROBBERY ON THE CHICAGO TRAIN The incident was quickly identified as a case of domestic violence, prompting members of the community such as Chicago Mayor Gilbert Villegas to speak out against him, Fox 32 reported. Alphonso Hamilton, 50, was handed over to the Schiller Park Police Department, where he was accused of fatally shooting his wife, Jennifer Hamilton. (Chicago Police) (Chicago Police) “Domestic violence is something that plagues our city, plagues our community, and we have been silent for too long. And there are members of the community who know that such things happen and when they see something, they have to say something. There are resources that exist. “out there,” Villegas told WBBM-TV in Chicago mentionted. THE CONNECTICUT FAMILY HOSTS PARADE FOR THE 6-YEAR-OLD BOY WHO SIT IN AN ALLEGED BULLYING “It’s tragic, there were indications, there were hints that something was going on, but people were silent,” Villegas told FOX 32. he was shot and killed. “ Chicago Police (FOX32 Chicago WFLD) “This could have been prevented,” he added, according to the report. CLICK HERE TO RECEIVE THE FOX NEWS APPLICATION FOX 32 reported that a source said Hamilton had agreed to meet with her husband in the parking lot as she believed the public environment was safe.