By Bradford Betz | Fox News
In this Dec. 31, 2016 file photo, The Rev. Michael Pfleger, center, Rev. Jesse Jackson, left, and state Sen. Jacqueline Collins, right, led hundreds in a march down Michigan Avenue, carrying crosses for all those killed by Chicago violence in 2016 and to call for an end to violence in Chicago. (Ashlee Rezin/Chicago Sun-Times via AP)
A group of protesters were planning Saturday to march down a major Chicago highway as part of a broader push to increase pressure on public officials to address the gun violence that's claimed hundreds of lives in the city.
The Dan Ryan Expressway -- a freeway that incorporates portions of Interstates 90 and 94 -- was chosen for its historical significance, having been a symbol of racial segregation in the 1960s.
Chicago police said the city saw 252 homicides and 1,100 shootings in the first six months of this year, a decrease from the same period last year. But those crimes have been heavily concentrated in predominantly black, low-income neighborhoods.
The Rev. Michael Pfleger, a Roman Catholic priest and anti-violence activist on the city's South Side who will lead Saturday's march, said the protesters will carry a banner with a list of demands. They include: more resources, jobs, better schools and stronger gun laws — things Pfleger says they've been seeking for years.
"When people keep ignoring you, you take it up a notch. ... We are going to continue to take it up a notch until we get responses." - The Rev. Michael Pfleger
"When people keep ignoring you, you take it up a notch," Pfleger said. "We are going to continue to take it up a notch until we get responses."
Hundreds and possibly thousands of people, including other clergy, residents and community leaders, were expected to join the march, despite police warnings that any pedestrian who enters the expressway faces arrest and prosecution.
Illinois State Police, which has jurisdiction over expressways, said the march could put lives in "grave danger," including protesters, motorists and people needing access to emergency services who may be blocked or delayed.
"This call to protest on the Dan Ryan, however well-intentioned, is reckless," Illinois State Police Director Leo Schmitz said.
Pfleger and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, who's also leading the protest, argue they've already tried marching through neighborhood streets, outside churches and along downtown's Michigan Avenue, and that nothing has changed.
Jackson said the city still has "ghetto borders" — real or imagined — designed to keep "guns and drugs in and jobs and schools out."
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
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