A weekend of bloodshed in Chicago left 11 people dead, including a nine-year-old boy, as police struggled to contain the gun violence plaguing the city.
The boy was killed while travelling in an SUV with a 31-year-old man.
Police said that a car pulled up alongside their SUV and someone inside began shooting.
The boy died of a gunshot wound to the back, while the man is in a critical condition after being struck in the back, face and chest.
The two were among 56 shot in the period between Friday afternoon and Monday morning, according to the Chicago Tribune newspaper.
The paper keeps a running tally of the shootings, which have been mostly gang-related and concentrated in a few economically struggling neighbourhoods.
Eleven people in total were killed, the Tribune reported.
Chicago police, which does not include in its tally incidents that occur in the city but outside the department's jurisdiction, yesterday reported 35 shootings and ten murders over the same weekend period.
Warm summer months often bring higher levels of violence to Chicago streets.
Over the 4 July holiday, 101 people were hit by gunfire and 14 killed, according to the Tribune. The youngest of the victims during that four-day period was 13, the newspaper said.
The violence has drawn a great deal of media attention because it is where former US president Barack Obama worked as a civil rights attorney and law professor.
Mr Obama still maintains a high profile in the city, where his presidential library is to be built.
Other US cities such as St Louis or Baltimore have even higher murder rates relative to the size of their populations, but the sheer number of shootings in Chicago gets it noticed more.
The Drug Enforcement Agency recently announced that more agents would be sent to aid Chicago law enforcement, by forming a task force to battle the illicit drug trade, which fuels gun violence.