Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

‘REMARKABLE SUCCESS’ FOR CPD DETECTIVES’

Murders up, but Chicago police have cleared the most killings with arrests since 2005

- BY FRANK MAIN, STAFF REPORTER fmain@suntimes.com | @ FrankMainN­ews

Though the number of killings in Chicago is sharply up, police officials say they’ve cleared more murder cases this year by making arrests than in any year since 2005.

They say two key factors have been teaming homicide detectives with gang officers and the use of evidence from surveillan­ce cameras and cellphones.

The fatal shooting of a transgende­r woman in June was one of the cases in which video helped solve a murder case.

Orlando Perez, 18, confessed to killing 37- year- old Selena Reyes- Hernandez after going home with her and learning she was transgende­r, according to prosecutor­s.

Surveillan­ce video showed him leaving her Chicago Lawn home, returning in half an hour with his face covered, taking out a gun, hopping a gate and then leaving minutes later, authoritie­s said.

It was one of the 329 murder cases the police department has closed this year as of Monday — 195 with at least one arrest. The arrests involved killings that occurred in 2020 and also in previous years.

For all of 2019, the police cleared 265 murder cases — 113 of them by arrest.

The rest were cleared “exceptiona­lly,” meaning the suspect was dead or the police decided there were other barriers to prosecute the case, such as uncooperat­ive witnesses. Through Monday, the department has cleared 134 murders exceptiona­lly this year compared with 152 for all of 2019.

Despite the rise in murder arrests, the department’s clearance rate is worse than in 2019 because the number of killings has soared, with 739 through Monday, compared with 495 for all of last year.

To determine the clearance rate, the number of cases cleared is divided by the number of killings in the current year.

The rate through Monday was 44% compared with 50% for the same period last year,

41% in 2018, 34% in 2017 and 29% in 2016.

“I would say that this year has been a remarkable success for the detectives,” said Brendan Deenihan, chief of detectives since February.

He said he has followed the recommenda­tions of the Police Executive Research Forum, a Washington think tank that in a report last year called for an overhaul of the detective bureau to boost the number of murder arrests.

The think tank said the department

should create a designated homicide unit, increase the number of detective headquarte­rs around the city from three to five, have sergeants and lieutenant­s whose only role is to supervise murder cases and have detectives take the lead on no more than six new murder cases a year.

“Most of what we are doing is a result of that PERF report,” Deenihan said.

He said the installati­on of “Area Technology Centers” in the five detective headquarte­rs has boosted the department’s ability to use social media, video surveillan­ce and cellphone data to solve killings. He said the centers rely on open- source social media unless a detective obtains a search warrant to get into a protected account.

Deenihan said it’s gotten “harder and more complicate­d” to be a homicide detective than when he joined the department 24 years ago.

“I like to call them informatio­n managers now,” he said of detectives, “because they have to manage so much informatio­n coming at them on so many different levels in order

to solve a case.”

Deenihan blames the steep rise in killings in Chicago and other cities mainly on the coronaviru­s pandemic. The civil unrest following George Floyd’s death after a Minneapoli­s police officer held him down by kneeling on his neck for nearly nine minutes in late May “emboldened criminal acts that have led to these remarkable spikes in homicides,” Deenihan said.

David Olson, a criminolog­ist at Loyola University Chicago, said the pandemic changed the mix of murder cases detectives have to investigat­e. He said the domestic violence killings, which have risen this year, are easier to solve because the suspect is usually known. There were more than 50 domestic killings this year through Dec. 7 — up 60% over last year — and police made arrests in 34 of those, or 68%.

But most of the hundreds of other killings in Chicago this year were on the streets, sparked by gang rivalries, protection of drug markets and personal conflicts. Those have been even more difficult to solve during the pandemic, Olson said, with suspects concealing their identities with masks and fewer people outdoors as possible witnesses.

Witnesses to those crimes typically are members of the victim’s own gang and typically don’t cooperate with investigat­ors, Deenihan said.

In a video the police department released this past week, Supt. David Brown said he wants homicide detectives to meet with people at sporting events and other community activities, which he said might help them build trust and ultimately solve more murders.

Detectives also need to demonstrat­e to prosecutor­s that they have a solid case. In the four years Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx has been in office, prosecutor­s have rejected murder charges that the Chicago Police Department was seeking in, on average, nearly a quarter of the cases the police presented to them.

By comparison, during the last four years of Foxx’s predecesso­r Anita Alvarez’s tenure as state’s attorney, an average of 17% of Chicago murder cases were rejected for prosecutio­n.

“State’s Attorney Foxx’s approach to justice within the nation’s second- largest prosecutor’s office is a contrast to how previous administra­tions operated,” Foxx spokeswoma­n Sarah Sinovic said in a written statement.

Sinovic pointed to Cook County’s history of wrongful conviction­s.

“Unlike her predecesso­rs, State’s Attorney Foxx does not believe in kicking the can of responsibi­lity to judges and juries to decide someone’s fate when the evidence is just not there — because this is not fair to those whose futures are on the line,” she said.

After a murder case is rejected, the police can present new evidence, and that sometimes can lead to prosecutor­s reversing themselves and approving charges, Sinovic said.

 ?? PAT NABONG/ SUN- TIMES ?? Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan at a news conference in August.
PAT NABONG/ SUN- TIMES Chief of Detectives Brendan Deenihan at a news conference in August.
 ?? CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT ( ABOVE); FACEBOOK ( RIGHT) ?? Police say surveillan­ce cameras captured images of Orlando Perez walking on the block of Selena Reyes- Hernandez ( inset, right) the day of her killing.
CHICAGO POLICE DEPARTMENT ( ABOVE); FACEBOOK ( RIGHT) Police say surveillan­ce cameras captured images of Orlando Perez walking on the block of Selena Reyes- Hernandez ( inset, right) the day of her killing.
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 ??  ?? David Olson
David Olson

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