"It's a hot spot," Police Capt. Anita Amaro said Monday, the day after yet another shooting near the restaurant, in a tiny strip mall near where Concord Avenue slices into Kerlin Street. Others have occurred across the street, including one earlier this month in which the city controller was wounded.
In the last decade police have responded to trouble calls at J&S 59 times - mostly between 2:30 and 4:30 a.m. - according to Police Commissioner Joseph Bail, including three times for killings.
In the most-recent incident, police say a Chester woman was killed and two others critically wounded early Sunday by Edwin Soto Jr., who turned the gun on himself.
Soto was in critical condition at the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. Police on Monday charged Soto, of Chester, with murder, aggravated assault, and other offenses.
Amaro identified the other two gunshot victims as Magina "Maggie" Slowe, 22, and Darryl Moore, both also of Chester, and both in critical condition at Crozer-Chester Medical Center.
Bail has said that he believed that the shooting occurred after a domestic dispute flared inside the restaurant.
Efforts to reach the J&S owner were unsuccessful. A yellow sign taped on the front door announced that the city has closed the restaurant indefinitely. The phone evidently has been disconnected.
One reason the restaurant has been so popular is that its location near downtown draws young people from the east and west ends, said Elijah "Wellz" Foster, of the Brothers of Concern, a Chester group that is working to curb violence in the city. But he said the shop's hours might be a recipe for problems.
"I wouldn't want to be there at 2 in the morning," he said.
The corner was peaceful two summers ago, recalled Jamil Post, part owner of a clothing shop in the strip mall. That's when police were stationing a car in the area in the early-morning hours when the city had a "state of emergency" in effect after a rash of shootings.