Chicago Sees Dramatic Spike In Homicides In January

Hundreds of people gather to march down Michigan Avenue's "Magnificent Mile" shopping district on Christmas Eve to protest against the alleged police cover up related to the fatal shooting of Laquand McDonald by a Ch... Hundreds of people gather to march down Michigan Avenue's "Magnificent Mile" shopping district on Christmas Eve to protest against the alleged police cover up related to the fatal shooting of Laquand McDonald by a Chicago policeman Black Christmas protest, Chicago, America - 24 Dec 2015 Flanked by members of the Chicago police force, protestors were chanting "16 shots and a cover up," and calling for Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel to resign, on what was described as "Black Christmas" (Rex Features via AP Images) MORE LESS

CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago police are reporting a dramatic spike in the number of homicides and shootings in the city’s bloodiest January for at least 16 years. It’s another blow to a department that has struggled to regain public trust following the damning release of a video showing a white officer fatally shooting a black teenager.

In statistics released Monday, the Chicago Police Department reported there were 51 homicides last month compared to 29 in January of last year. Also, the number of shooting incidents and total shooting victims more than doubled; there 242 shooting incidents compared to 119 such incidents recorded in January 2015, and 292 shooting victims including the 51 who died, compared to 136 in the same month last year.

Chicago has been a national symbol of gun violence since at least 2012, when the number of homicides climbed past the 500 mark, far higher than any other U.S. city. With the department initiating a number of crime-fighting measures and spending millions of dollars on police overtime, the city saw the total fall closer to 400 than 500 in each of the next two years, and 2014 ended with the fewest homicides in decades. But last year the number of homicides and shooting incidents rose yet again, and the bloodshed has continued this year.

There has also been growing concern that the rising crime rate in Chicago, and around the country, can be linked to less aggressive policing in the wake of high-profile officer shootings, some of which were caught on camera and inflamed public outrage.

Last fall, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel said he believed that some officers had gone “fetal” out of fear that scrutiny of their actions would land them in serious trouble, pointing out that that highly charged incidents such as the death of Freddie Gray while in police custody in Baltimore had made officers more tentative.

In November, Chicago was forced to deal with one of the biggest crises in the police department’s history — and of Emanuel’s political career— sparked by the release of a video showing a white officer shooting black teenager Laquan McDonald 16 times. Officer Jason Van Dyke has since been charged with murder in the incident, Superintendent Garry McCarthy has been fired and the U.S. Department of Justice has launched a civil rights investigation into the department.

But whether the release of the video has contributed to the dramatic increase in homicides and shooting incidents in January remains unclear.

Copyright 2016 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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  1. Going fetal, or standing down and letting gun violence soar unabated? I wonder. There was a similar spike in gun deaths in Baltimore after the murder of Freddie Gray blew up. Sadly not hard for me to imagine, say, some police union proxies quietly putting into motion a slowdown to punish the public for asking questions, or to demonstrate that the public needs the police more than the police need the public.

  2. Avatar for pshah pshah says:

    Reckless speculation on the part of Rahm that fits his agenda. No one conclusively knows why crime rates went down during the nineties and no one truly knows why they may be going up…and even that’s not known for sure nationwide.

    Rahm would love to blame the victim rather than take responsibility for what’s happening on his watch.

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