GREAT FUCKING JOB COOK COUNTY STATES ATTORNEY KIM FOXX - Joshua Noah fired gun into restaurant ceiling while on electronic monitoring for more than 27 felonies including home invasion, carjacking, and kidnapping: Cook County Prosecutors


“Electronic Monitoring Appreciation Week” continues at CWB Chicago. Our team has been flooded with so many new stories about people being arrested while on EM lately, we decided to make a week of it. You can see all of our EM Appreciation Week coverage at this link. Here’s the latest:

Joshua Noah was supposed to be on electronic monitoring for two separate felony cases. He is charged with 27 felony counts in one case, including home invasion, kidnapping, carjacking, armed robbery, residential burglary, aggravated battery, and more. Charges in the other case include Class X armed violence, narcotics, and gun counts.

So where was Joshua Noah around 11:30 p.m. Saturday? Shooting a gun into the ceiling of a Mexican restaurant near Midway Airport and threatening five of its customers with his firearm, according to prosecutors.

“Mr. Noah is an extremely violent individual and should have never been out on bond or electronic monitoring,” retired Riverside Police Chief Tom Weitzel said Tuesday night. “He was the ringleader in an armed home invasion that took place in Riverside in 2019.” Weitzel was still chief then.

“In Cook County, bond court judges use electronic monitoring (EM) for reducing the jail population and saving dollars,” Weitzel continued. “The notion that this is somehow criminal justice reform and public safety is not affected by violent criminals on electronic monitoring is simply ridiculous.”

A violent home invasion and kidnapping

In 2020, prosecutors said Noah and two other armed men broke into a Riverside family’s home, beat a man who owed them drug money, and dumped him in an alley on the 4300 block of West 47th Street in Chicago. While they were in the house, the crew allegedly pistol-whipped the man’s mother and threatened the family.

A judge allowed him to go home on electronic monitoring by posting a $15,000 bail deposit. Details about the other felony case were not immediately available.

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