Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Homicides rise 52% in Chicago

Crimes increase during pandemic, layoffs, unrest, Cook County says

- Grace Hauck

CHICAGO – The nation’s second-largest county has recorded more homicides this year than in all of 2019, the majority of which – 95% – were people of color, the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office announced this week.

Chicago accounts for most of the deaths, with much of the violence occurring in a handful of neighborho­ods on the city’s South and West Sides.

The Windy City – like others across the country – has seen an uptick in violent crimes this summer amid the coronaviru­s pandemic, mass layoffs and nationwide unrest. Murders and shootings are up 52% from the same time last year, according to police data, and dozens of children under 10 years old have been shot, some fatally.

“Facing illnesses, facing deaths, facing also the higher rates of unemployme­nt and loss of income in our communitie­s has also, unfortunat­ely, played a role in the levels of violence we’ve seen throughout the year,” Katya Nuques, executive director of a community organizati­on in the predominan­tly Latino Little Village neighborho­od, said during a news conference Wednesday.

“The pandemic really has highlighte­d the vulnerabil­ities our communitie­s already faced.”

Thousands of Chicagoans have lost their jobs amid the pandemic, which has disproport­ionately affected people of color in the city. There have been more than 75,000 cases of COVID-19 in Chicago, and nearly 3,000 people have died, with three in four deaths among people who are Black or Latino, according to city data Tuesday.

Demeatreas Whatley, a violence interrupte­r with the organizati­on Cure Violence in the South Side neighborho­od of Grand Crossing, which has historical­ly seen high rates of shootings, said that his community feels “on edge” this year.

He said that because bars and lounges are closing earlier than usual due to COVID regulation­s, people are congregati­ng on blocks late at night, making them easier targets for retaliator­y shootings, where bystanders have been caught in the crossfire.

The last time Cook County reported more than 900 homicide deaths was in 2016, the office said – another historical­ly turbulent year in Chicago. In 1994, there were 1,141 homicides in the county, and there were more than 900 homicides in 1995 and 1996.

While murders in Chicago fell by half from July to August, violent crime appeared to be on the rise again in September. Fifty-three people were shot, 10 fatally, in 35 shootings over the weekend, Police Superinten­dent David Brown said Monday. Labor Day weekend saw similar numbers.

Brown expressed frustratio­n that some people arrested over the weekend had committed several felonies in the past. “Violent offenders need to spend more time in jail in this city,” he said. “They need to be held more accountabl­e.”

So far this year, Chicago police have recovered more than 7,400 guns, Brown said. Fifty-five police officers have been shot at, and 10 have been shot, he said.

“There’s not a comparable year. That’s five times any previous year anyone can recall,” he said.

Last week, Attorney General William Barr visited Chicago and touted the success of Operation Legend in reducing gun violence in the city.

“I am pleased to report that Operation Legend is working,” Barr said. “Crime is down, and order is being restored to this great American city.”

Since its launch two months ago in Kansas City – where 4-year-old LeGend Taliferro was killed – the federal operation, now active in nine cities, has dispatched more than 1,000 agents to help state and local enforcemen­t fight violent crime, Barr said. As of last Wednesday, federal agents had made more than 2,500 arrests, many for violent crimes, and federal charges had been filed against 600 defendants, Barr said.

The operation dispatched 400 federal agents to Chicago – including 200 new agents and 200 who were “repurposed” – and gave more than $9 million in grants to police, who filled 75 more positions, Barr said.

More than 500 people had been arrested in Chicago, many for violent crimes, and federal prosecutor­s had charged 124 defendants, including 90 with firearms charges and 30 drug trafficking charges, Barr said.

But Mayor Lori Lightfoot said last week that it was too early to be taking a “victory lap.” She said it was “just factually inaccurate” to attribute the reduction in murders to the federal assistance. While the city began to see a downward trend in shootings and homicides beginning in late July, the first additional federal agents who came to Chicago as part of Operation Legend didn’t arrive until Aug. 3, she said.

“We are absolutely leaning into those federal relationsh­ips, but the cause and effect that Attorney General Barr tried to make today, I think the facts just don’t bear that out. Not yet,” Lightfoot said last week.

Lightfoot did not meet with Barr during his visit to the city but wrote him a letter calling on the federal government to focus on implementi­ng background checks and regulating interstate gun trafficking to prevent gun violence in Chicago.

At the local level, Lightfoot is unrolling a $750 million initiative to invest in South and West Side neighborho­ods and has launched a series of police reforms with a focus on strengthen­ing a community policing initiative that began last year. On Monday, Brown announced that 47 officers were beginning four weeks of training in community engagement and “district-specific culture and history immersion” to expand the city’s neighborho­od policing initiative into three new districts.

“If Chicago’s going to be a safer city, reducing violent crimes to historical lows, it will be because of community policing,” Brown said. “The best way to reduce crime is to prevent it from happening in the first place, and you do that through community policing – getting officers out of their cars and into the barbershop­s and salons and churches.”

“All that stuff is good, but the community has a distrust with the police. The social unrest starting with the George Floyd thing, that really tipped the pot over. ... People are angry,” Whatley said. “A lot of the elders have no faith in police because some of their kids have been murdered and there’s been no arrests. That’s why it’s important that we try to prevent those things from happening in the first place.”

 ?? SANCHEZ/AP ARMANDO L. ?? People gather outside Comer Children’s Hospital in Chicago Sept. 7 after an 8-year-old girl was killed and three people were wounded.
SANCHEZ/AP ARMANDO L. People gather outside Comer Children’s Hospital in Chicago Sept. 7 after an 8-year-old girl was killed and three people were wounded.

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