U. of C. student dies days after being struck by stray bullet on Green Line: ‘He was a ball of light’
Denver native Max Lewis died days after he was shot on an L train. Friends remembered him as an outgoing and welcoming presence.
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Max Lewis didn’t have to make the trek downtown.
The affable 20-year-old University of Chicago junior had the option to work from home for the competitive internship he’d landed at a Loop investment firm, but he
“loved getting to know as many people as he could,” according to his best friend.“He loved the grind,” Zach Cogan said of his classmate and fraternity brother.
Lewis was commuting home during rush hour Thursday when a bullet pierced the window of his train at the 51st Street Green Line station and entered his neck. He died at a hospital Sunday morning.
Police say he wasn’t the intended target. Investigators have yet to provide a possible description of the shooter. It’s not even clear which direction the gunfire came from.
“It’s a senseless tragedy for so many reasons,” Cogan said.
Friends of Lewis remembered him as a gregarious jokester, a hyper-focused student, an avid runner and a car guy — one who went out of his way to make people feel welcome.
“He was so incredibly caring, loyal and genuine,” said Cogan, who met Lewis on their first day at the prestigious Hyde Park campus and roomed with him at Alpha Epsilon Pi, the Jewish fraternity of which Lewis was president. “He loved working hard for other people because he was so damn selfless. And he never wanted people to thank him for what he did.”
The Denver-area native was studying economics and computer science. He graduated in 2019 from the Kent Denver School, a prestigious private school. His 12th grade physics teacher, Dr. Rand Harrington, said in an email “he grew into an exceptional scholar full of good humor, curiosity, drive and a deep passion for technology.”
At the U. of C., Lewis was a leader of Promontory Investment Research, a student group that helps interested undergrads produce and write research reports — a field Lewis was passionate about, his friend Victoria Gin said.
“He was a ball of light,” Gin said, especially in the early dark days of COVID-19, when the group’s meetings were all virtual. “Max would bring his energy like he was in person. He would give 120%, and you felt that through the screen.”
When he wasn’t busy somewhere on campus, he’d be touching base with friends during hour-long phone calls, or while tagging along for a trip to the grocery store.
“He was like this butterfly,” Cogan said.
Lewis also loved talking cars, especially the one he coveted most: the Porsche 911. “But anything that had a stick, he’d drive it, just because he could,” Cogan said.
Only a few weeks before the shooting, Lewis had started interning for Segall Bryant & Hamill, according to his LinkedIn profile. A spokesperson for the firm couldn’t be reached.
And he’d already been looking forward to a big internship he’d just landed for next summer, according to Gin. “My latest conversations with him were so optimistic,” she said.
In a message to students and faculty, U. of C. officials said, “the University is devastated by Max’s loss. During this sorrowful time, our deepest sympathies are with Max’s family, friends, and all who knew him. Max was a talented student and beloved campus leader and friend who will be greatly missed.”
Lewis is survived by his parents and younger brother.
His fraternity launched an online campaign to help cover members’ travel costs to funeral services in Denver. Remaining proceeds will go to the Rivkin Foundation, which funds ovarian cancer research, as well as a to-be-determined anti-gun violence group, Cogan said.
“This happens all the time in Chicago,” Cogan said. “It needs to end.”
That was not a stray bullet, he was murdered
ReplyDeleteParents, don't let your children go to a college in Chicago.
ReplyDeleteHorrible
ReplyDeleteShame on the U of Chicago for failing to warn their students about the danger that lurks to the west of the campus.
ReplyDeleteWhy would they do that when they push CRT........
DeleteWhy take the El when you can take the IC?
ReplyDeleteRandolph Street Station is prolly not close to where he works. Also he may have been living further West.
DeleteWelcome to democratic "leadership", its what the marxist masters want.........
ReplyDeleteRIP young man
ReplyDeleteWhy go to these shithole cities? Nothing there but death and despair. Keep your kids away form these places !!!!!!!!!!!