Chicago reaches 40 homicides in January

CHICAGO (AP) — A bloody weekend in which seven people were killed and six wounded has put an abrupt end — at least for now — to hopes that Chicago was at least putting a lid on its frightening homicide rate.
With a few days left in the month, the nation's third-largest city now finds itself on the cusp of its deadliest January in more than a decade. The news comes just after Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy had announced that after several violent months, Chicago had seen a drop in homicides at the end of 2012 and for the first few weeks of 2013.
Police say the homicide rate is a reflection of the city's gang problem and a proliferation of guns. Chicago has for years tried to cut off the flow of guns. It has what city officials have called the strictest handgun ordinance in the U.S. But police officials say more needs to be done and that penalties for violating gun laws should be stiffer.
Among those killed over the weekend was 34-year-old Ronnie Chambers, who was shot in the head with what police believe was an assault weapon. Such guns are banned in Chicago but can be purchased legally in the suburbs or nearby states. Chambers is the fourth child of Shirley Chambers to fall victim to gun violence.
"I'd pray for God to protect Ronnie and keep him safe day and night," Shirley Chambers told the Chicago Sun-Times.
With the weekend shootings, Chicago now has 40 homicides — the exact same number as last January. With a few days left in the year, the city could reach its deadliest January since 2002, when it had 45 homicides in the first month.
Chicago's homicide count eclipsed 500 last year for the first time since 2008, but last week, McCarthy announced recent figures showing homicides had dropped. The city saw a 16 percent decline in the fourth quarter of 2012 and a 22 percent drop in the first weeks of January.
McCarthy wants lawmakers to increase jail time for those who are caught with illegal weapons, including for felons who aren't allowed to have them and for so-called straw purchases, in which people buy guns for others who aren't supposed to have them.
Chicago's handgun ordinance bans gun shops in the city and prohibits gun owners from stepping outside their homes with a handgun. The city passed the restrictions in July 2010 after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down an outright ban that Chicago had for 28 years.
Chicago leads the nation in guns seized by police, and recently police have started displaying the guns each week to offer a visual reminder of the awesome firepower that is on the city's streets as they push for tougher gun laws. First Deputy Superintendent Al Wysinger said Monday that last year's total of 7,400 is nine times as high as the number seized in the nation's largest city, New York, and three times as high as in its second-largest, Los Angeles.
So far this year, Chicago officers have taken 574 firearms, Wysinger said Monday.
Wysinger called the spate of shootings "frustrating" for the department. But he said the number does not mean there are problems with changes the department has made to combat crime, particularly a strategy to focus on gang members and gang activity.
"Without this gang violence reduction strategy this weekend could have been a lot worse than it was," he told reporters.
McCarthy last week noted that New York finished 2012 with 418 homicides, a record low. He said New York's stiffer penalties for gun violations help. McCarthy has repeatedly mentioned Plaxico Burress, the NFL football player who spent 20 months in prison on a gun charge after accidentally shot himself, as an example of New York's tough gun laws.
"We are doing the same exact things New York is doing," said McCarthy, a former high ranking member of that city's police department. "What is different is the reasonability of the New York gun laws."
With a few days left in the month, the nation's third-largest city now finds itself on the cusp of its deadliest January in more than a decade. The news comes just after Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy had announced that after several violent months, Chicago had seen a drop in homicides at the end of 2012 and for the first few weeks of 2013.
Police say the homicide rate is a reflection of the city's gang problem and a proliferation of guns. Chicago has for years tried to cut off the flow of guns. It has what city officials have called the strictest handgun ordinance in the U.S. But police officials say more needs to be done and that penalties for violating gun laws should be stiffer.
Among those killed over the weekend was 34-year-old Ronnie Chambers, who was shot in the head with what police believe was an assault weapon. Such guns are banned in Chicago but can be purchased legally in the suburbs or nearby states. Chambers is the fourth child of Shirley Chambers to fall victim to gun violence.
"I'd pray for God to protect Ronnie and keep him safe day and night," Shirley Chambers told the Chicago Sun-Times.
With the weekend shootings, Chicago now has 40 homicides — the exact same number as last January. With a few days left in the year, the city could reach its deadliest January since 2002, when it had 45 homicides in the first month.
Chicago's homicide count eclipsed 500 last year for the first time since 2008, but last week, McCarthy announced recent figures showing homicides had dropped. The city saw a 16 percent decline in the fourth quarter of 2012 and a 22 percent drop in the first weeks of January.
McCarthy wants lawmakers to increase jail time for those who are caught with illegal weapons, including for felons who aren't allowed to have them and for so-called straw purchases, in which people buy guns for others who aren't supposed to have them.
Chicago's handgun ordinance bans gun shops in the city and prohibits gun owners from stepping outside their homes with a handgun. The city passed the restrictions in July 2010 after the U.S. Supreme Court struck down an outright ban that Chicago had for 28 years.
Chicago leads the nation in guns seized by police, and recently police have started displaying the guns each week to offer a visual reminder of the awesome firepower that is on the city's streets as they push for tougher gun laws. First Deputy Superintendent Al Wysinger said Monday that last year's total of 7,400 is nine times as high as the number seized in the nation's largest city, New York, and three times as high as in its second-largest, Los Angeles.
So far this year, Chicago officers have taken 574 firearms, Wysinger said Monday.
Wysinger called the spate of shootings "frustrating" for the department. But he said the number does not mean there are problems with changes the department has made to combat crime, particularly a strategy to focus on gang members and gang activity.
"Without this gang violence reduction strategy this weekend could have been a lot worse than it was," he told reporters.
McCarthy last week noted that New York finished 2012 with 418 homicides, a record low. He said New York's stiffer penalties for gun violations help. McCarthy has repeatedly mentioned Plaxico Burress, the NFL football player who spent 20 months in prison on a gun charge after accidentally shot himself, as an example of New York's tough gun laws.
"We are doing the same exact things New York is doing," said McCarthy, a former high ranking member of that city's police department. "What is different is the reasonability of the New York gun laws."
How's all those gun control measures in Chicago really working?! ......
Soooooo, the regular pro gun control crowd seems to have convienently missed this story........
Hmmmm, maybe gun control isn't the answer.......
 @kramr It isn't because criminals don't give a care about what's legal or illegal anyways so they are still going to have the guns.. while the law abiding folk won't so much.
Now we just need to get the POSÂ Piers Morgan off the air.Â
 @TreeWizard AMEN!!
@TreeWizard Better yet can't we just shut down the communist news network altogether? between them and Faux news i can't decide who is more biased. Of course they are 2 sides of the same coin there to keep the sheeple divided and distracted.
 @Jeremy  @TreeWizard damn straight Amen.
So glad those gun control laws work so well. You have a better chance surviving a year in an active war zone than you do in Chicago. 5 out of 5 criminals agree gun control works.
I lived in Chicago in 1993 when 855 people were murdered. The handgun ban wasn't working then, either. The suburbs will supply all the weapons that the gangs want through straw purchases. Largely, guns and gun control are beside the point. What's at work here is poverty - I've never seen worse poverty in my life. Life becomes cheap because essentially it is.
 @Max Quinn That's what you get when you let Democrats run inner cities. They go to crap.
 @Max Quinn Have you ever been to Detroit? Chicago is like paradise compared.
Those extra tuff gun laws in Chicago are sure reducing the crime! NOT!!! SEE PEOPLE??? GUN LAWS DON'T STOP THE CRIMINALS FROM KILLING, IT JUST HURTS LAW ABIDING CITIZENS.
Wondering when the "enlightened" ones are going to show up and tell us that we're all a bunch of ignorant, racist, haters, clinging to God and guns? That we're uneducated, naive, and incompetent and that gun control REALLY, REALLY works!!
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Those guys are hilarious!
Gang members killing gang members. Who really cares.
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Notice some statistics.
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Murders are dropping almost everywhere in the US even in areas that have lots of guns. In Chicago specifically and to some extent in the state of Illinois where guns have been severely restricted murder rates are going up (per this article).
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crime_in_the_United_States
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If one takes notice where most of the gang murders are happening the black population is significantly higher and in most cases are over 75%. The area where there is a high incidence of welfare is also included in the same link.
http://www.city-data.com/poverty/poverty-Chicago-Illinois.html
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"Chambers is the fourth child of Shirley Chambers to fall victim to gun violence."
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Shirley is on welfare, lives in Section 8 housing and her son Ronnie has been arrested 29 times and is a known gang member. Are we supposed to feel sorry for her? I have to wonder how many baby daddies she had?
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Chicago is becoming as violent and many parts of Africa.
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It is not about guns. It is about enabling the entitlement society, the codependent relationship government has with the poor and the really bad teachers in the Chicago school system that test lower than the students in national tests.
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Yet because of the failed socialist experiment in Chicago run but the Democrats that somehow makes them want to restrict guns I can buy here in Oregon as if it's somehow my fault.
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I am tired of the liberal crap and their welfare system that breeds the low lifes in our society.
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@RalphCramden   Very Well Said RC !
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reminds me of the govt. definition of irony.....
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The  food stamp program is administered by the US department of Agriculture. They proudly report that they distribute free meals and food stamps to many many millions of people on an annual basis.
Meanwhile the national park service, run by the US department of the interior asks us, "please do not feed the animals"..... their stated reason for this policy being that....
"the animals will grow dependent on the handouts and then they will never learn to take care of themselves"
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THIS CONCLUDES TODAYS LESSON...... ANY QUESTIONS??
 @kramrÂ
That is one of my favorite comparisons and haven't heard it for a while. Thanks for the reminder.
I wonder how many were done with Assault looking rifles and high capacity magazines?!?
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I also wonder how many were committed with small caliber hand guns like .22?
So, 40+ gun  deaths a  month in a city with some of the strictest gun laws in the nationÂ
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sounds like a resounding failure to restrict the rights of law abiding citizens in the effort to reduce gun voilence.
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When are the loons on the left going to learn criminal thugs don't give a rats ass about the laws.
One Word.......GANGS!
 @goldie Better word..... Politicians.
Another success for gun control.
Don't you love it when a plan comes together? For everyone of those guns pictured, there are many times more in the hands of the bad guys. How many innocent people will die as more laws to disarm honest citizens give the criminals an overwhelming advantage?
lol at Shitcago.
Chicago has some strictest anti gun laws along with New York. They also have some of the highest gun violence. It is just one more piece of evidence to support the fact that anti gun laws don't slow down the criminals.
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Only idiots and imbeciles believe that more gun restrictions will slow or stop crime!
The only thing that stops a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun!
 @Freedom1267 Check out billionaire 1%er mayor Bloomberg's private NYPD security goons harassing a reporter... ...in Washington DC. The cop's intellectual crayon is so sharp he actually asked the guy "Do you have a birth date?" "No, Officer Barbrady. The President miracled my ass into existence."http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Journalism/2013/01/28/EXCLUSIVE-Journalist-Accosted-By-Security-Over-Mayor-Bloomberg-Gun-Control-Question
Couldn't pay me enough to live in Chicago. Or New York. Or Texas. Or Florida. :-P
 @Mikey Or California....
Strange that the photo of guns seized by the polize doesn't include one so-called "assualt" weapon!
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Just further proof that more gun-control laws don't solve the problem - they need to start enforcing the laws that are already on the books! Start really punishing the criminals and leave the law-abiding citizens alone.
The gun control model Obama wants us all to follow is clearly working wonders.
 @HuskyKMA That's his proud hometown!
How's that gun ban working, Rahm? Worst mayor since the last Chicago mayor but that one is less of a menace to society because we've taken away his right to carry a gun.Where's a cop when your people need one, Mayor?
40 so far in January. That puts them right on track for another 500+ for 2013. Homicides tend to go up in warmer weather and it has been anything, but warm in Chicago lately.
 @WebFootSTi "First Deputy Superintendent Al Wysinger said Monday that last year's total of 7,400 is nine times as high as the number seized in the nation's largest city, New York, and three times as high as in its second-largest, Los Angeles."
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Clearly it's working.