How Fox News’ Gianno Caldwell sought justice for his murdered brother

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The day my little brother was murdered in 2022, he was standing with friends on a street in the Morgan Park community on the South Side of Chicago when a black SUV pulled up and several men got out with various guns and opened fire indiscriminately. For a heartbeat, time seemed to pause, the world holding its breath in confusion.

Then came the recognition — the burst of defensive moves and noise; the staccato crack-crack-crack, harsh and unnatural against the night. People screamed, the sound primal and raw, as the crowd scattered. 

The SUV now sped away, its engine roaring, leaving behind more cries and glittering fragments of shattered glass. Some 50 shell casings were found on the street, and bullets went through the windows of nearby houses. Three in the crowd were rushed to the hospital; only two survived. Christian had just turned 18 years old. 

He loved school and sports and was excited about starting college. So much so that he and I had taken the tour at the University of California, Los Angeles, when he was just 16. His future was very bright.

The police tell me Christian was not the intended target. He just happened to be standing in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was part of a legacy now. Slaughtered. Another innocent victim of America’s ongoing violence. And my family was now part of this terrible escalating pattern. “Heartbroken” isn’t enough. My family’s hearts were shattered.

I was — and remain — devastated and beyond understanding. My grief was quickly accompanied by a burning need to learn more, to uncover why things like Christian’s murder happen far too often. To know how our laws, institutions and societal values perpetuate tragedies like his. To ensure that others never experience the same loss my family has and that justice truly serves the people it should protect.

I met with hundreds of other experts on these issues as I wrote the book “The Day My Brother Was Murdered.” From district attorneys and congressmen to community organizers, gang members and families, like my own, too often left behind in the wake of violence. I’ve traveled our country, the world even, to uncover the roots of the violence that claimed my brother’s life and to explore all avenues for meaningful reform.

The name George Soros came up often in my conversations.

Soros — who made billions as an investor and financier — is a prominent supporter of progressive causes and the number one political donor in the United States. In total, he has contributed more than $30 billion to liberal causes and candidates. Nearly 10 years ago, Soros first began to channel millions into local district attorney campaigns across the county. These sums far exceeded the total spent on the 2016 presidential campaign by all but a few superdonors.

Soros understands that focusing on local politics will eventually bring about the national changes he and his collaborators champion: drug legalization, open borders and mass immigration, the erosion of national sovereignty, the demise of capitalism as we know it and, of course, soft-on-crime policies and bail reform.

His efforts have negatively impacted my family at a personal level. The former Cook County state’s attorney Kim Foxx, for instance, has been funded by Soros — and her far-left, soft-on-crime policies have contributed to the death and violent crime epidemic in Chicago. I hold her and former mayor Lori Lightfoot responsible for my brother’s murder. In 2023, I testified before a House Judiciary Committee focused on Chicago’s crime problem. Afterwards, Foxx told the press she was sorry for my brother’s murder. She should be sorry. Not just about Christian, but the countless others who are being slaughtered.

 And it’s not just Foxx.

It’s Larry Krasner in Philadelphia. It was George Gascón in Los Angeles. Chesa Boudin in San Francisco. It was Kim Gardner in St. Louis. It’s Alvin Bragg in New York. They are all around the country — and they all have one thing in common: they were all financially supported by George Soros. 

Interesting how people like Soros, Fox, Lightfoot, Newsom, Pelosi, Biden . . . all have these grandiose ideas on making America “more just” but do so behind professional security guards and gated communities. Security, in many cases, paid for by taxpayers.

Through his primary philanthropy vehicle, Open Society Foundations, Soros has impacted American politics on a national level for years. But the local level is where he has done the most damage. 

An elected prosecutor is an extremely powerful position in this country. Soros very smartly understood you can spend tens of millions of dollars on a presidential race or millions on a US Senate race. But by spending just a fraction of that on a local prosecutor race, you may be able to effect more of the change you seek. And so he poured resources into local prosecutor races all over the country.

We cannot ignore the shadow that crime casts over our everyday lives. It’s not just the statistics, the headlines, or the body counts — it’s the sheer fact that crime strikes at the very foundation of what it means to live freely. It is about good people, minding their business, walking to work, riding the subway, or going to the store in neighborhoods they’ve called home for years — only to find themselves at risk of harm. 

When that happens, when danger creeps into the places we know and love, society itself begins to erode. If we can’t keep crime in check, we lose the glue that holds us together — the trust, the freedom and the simple right to feel safe. A single act of crime reverberates, making us question not just our safety, but our place in the world.

I moved to Miami in the spring of 2020. Los Angeles, where I had lived since 2017, was looking more and more like my hometown of Chicago. The shootings. Carjackings. Homeless camps. Drug dealers and addicts roaming the streets. The gangs. Leadership in LA was far more interested in whether or not you were wearing a mask or standing on a beach than in its rising rates of property and violent crime. I packed up my things.

One of the reasons I chose Florida, and Miami especially, is that the leadership there is doing all the right things when it comes to law and order.

“It’s a tale between two types of cities,” says Miami mayor Francis Suarez, who has held the position since 2017. “Where elected officials believe that the rule of law and public safety are the foundations of a free and prosperous society, versus other types of cities where elected officials fail to uphold the law, refuse to enforce the law, and blame those who follow the law, from police to small businesses, as the causes of crime.”

It helps that the mayor can count on support from Florida’s governor and state attorney general. Gov. Ron DeSantis cautions that prosecutors in his state don’t get to “pick and choose which law that they enforce. If you disagree with a law, run for the legislature and change it, but you don’t get to be a law unto yourself.”

Crime is at a 50-year low in Florida, with overall crime down by nearly 10% compared to 2021. Murder is down by 14%; burglary is down by 15%. It’s one of the few places in the nation that can truly claim meaningful reductions in crime.

While Democrats focus their attention on abortion, transgender rights and condemning Israel, the other party works to make sure I can take my family to lunch downtown without fear of being carjacked or shot. 

“A permissive society is not a civilized society,” Suarez warns of our other once-great cities. “It’s a decaying one.” People here are less likely to commit a crime in Florida because they know they will get caught. They know the police are everywhere — and the prosecutors will lock them up.

Suarez provides the simplest path to our salvation. “If mayors are held responsible for the crime levels in their cities, then we should also hold district attorneys accountable in every local race where it affects their citizens and the quality of life in their cities.”

Fund and train our police. Enforce already-existing laws. Secure our southern border and dismantle the gangs. Focus resources, from money to time, on organizations already addressing the root causes of crime. Treat mental health and addiction as the diseases they are, not as a crime after the fact. These are all solutions that have worked in our past.

We already know the ways to a safer society.

Gianno Caldwell is a political analyst for Fox News channel and the founder of the Caldwell Institute for Public Safety.  He is the author of the new book “The Day My Brother Was Murdered: My Journey Through America’s Violent Crime Crisis” (Broadside Books, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers, copyright 2025 by Gianno Caldwell), from which this essay is adapted.

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