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."
What is really enlightening is if u look at most of the weapons they proudly display none are of that evil "assult rifle" type, I see a few shotguns, one of which appears to be a 1100 remington "evil semi auto" and a 9mm or so pistol. Do u really thing that the gang bangers are using these weapons.. I really doubt it.  is this just "chicago style show & tell"?
Guns + poverty = bad news.
"Chambers is the fourth child of Shirley Chambers to fall victim to gun violence."Sounds like she's raising a bunch of winners. Bet all her kids are gang banger losers.
I'd like to think that Army and Marine recruiters could offer a special incentive for all the gangbangers to join the military enmass, and send them to the sandbox. "Hey, all you tough guys, we'll pay you a monthly wage and send you around the world, where you can kill anyone who points a gun at you. Get all your homies together and we'll make it a group package." I know, I'm just dreaming. The pukes would join the Taliban as soon as their feet hit the ground.
Chicago has 114 different gangs with a membership of over 110,000 and growing, what do they expect. They have a "Gang" problem. There are none so blind as those that will not see.
Where are all the local antis' comments on THIS article??? Apparently the tards won't argue with facts like these. But the story about the local bar shooting of a 'grower's' Ex has them postulating & spewing comments that are so absurd. I'm fedup with their ineptitude at grasping reality...Â
When you try to take guns away from the good guys it just leaves all the bad guys with the guns. Logic!
 Chicago murder rate is alarming and the entire US will look like this if we start getting crazy with gun control laws.
It has what city officials have called the strictest handgun ordinance in the U.S.
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Yeah, We see that thats working well for you. Disarm the law abiding and you just create easy targets.
Wait a minute...I thought guns were illegal in Chicago? You mean that gun control laws don't work? Let's see, strict gun laws equal 40 deaths in a month...loose gun laws (where you can buy a bazooka under a freeway during a police buyback program) equal one death in a month? Wonder which one is working better? 1000s of guns were freely displayed and traded openly under a freeway underpass this weekend in Seattle...guess how many people were shot? NONE!Â
 @sometimesright I think the difference is Chicago believes in population control and Seattle doesn't yet.
Does anyone wish to conjecture on the rise (cough, cough) of the Great Society and a correlation with urban violence?
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Nah, probably nothing there.
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The Gun Control Hardliners in office have assuredly ordered any personal security to disarm themselves in the name of the greater good.Â
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You first, Bloomie...
They should go talk to Aurora just down the road from Chicago.  Zero homicides last year.  The focus wasn't on guns and gun control, it focused on the criminals and keeping them locked up for as long as possible.  Notice no mention of gun bans or gun control or blaming guns at all.  http://www.suntimes.com/17317331-761/for-the-first-time-in-six-decades-aurora-ends-year-with-no-murders.html
Washington D.C. and Chicago have or had the strictest gun control laws in the nation and the highest per capital firearms murder rate. Â How downright stupid would politicians have to be to imagine that stricter gun laws only give criminals an added advantage over law-abiding citizens. Â I suppose we all know the answer to that question. Â
So much for gun control, eh city leaders? Take the guns away from the criminals and you'll have what you want. But good luck with that. It's not the law abiding gun owners you need to worry about. (or is it?)
Is it just me or is there no scary assault weapons on the table in the picture, mostly hunting weapons.
I don't know, that handgun is black and silver, pretty scary, Ooooooh,
But the rifle above it looks truely scary. Is that packing tape holding it together? WTF?
Look at what political party that has had control of Chicago for ever that should tell you something
Increase jail time for those caught with illegal guns these little punks in Chicago do not care about jail time. You and I do they don't. There tough guys. Chicago has had a problem sense the 20's. If you don't like move the hell out. the guy in the white house did.You can't nit pick the bad guy's with little BS laws they don't care about. Put about 10 a week in the morgue for a couple week, I don't think they really care about what real life is all about. And that is a dam shame it really is.
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 @Mike Jail is mandatory for their resume even. What a laughing stock, these Chicago politicians. Lets see, you're not allowed outside your home with a handgun. So just walking a block, you can get gunned down by a gang banger that doesn't give a rats azz about that law.Â
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All this beating around the bush. If someone walked up to you and said, i don't want you to die, i care about you, then stepped aside for a criminal to shoot you with a shotgun, anyone in their right mind would go, that man is a LIAR. He doesn't care about me. But for some reason these politicians keep getting elected, even after showing they don't care about anyone in that city.Â
I have an app on my phone that allows me to listen to the emergency scanner. There is a button on hit that says 'TOP 50' and Chicago is always number one on the list with the most listeners. The dispatchers and police speak with, dare I say, ebonics and sound like the criminals themselves.
See, this is how "gun control" works. LMFAO, stupid progressive socialists.Â
 @oldster70 Exactly. Only the criminals have guns in Chicago.
I'll be darned........you mean the criminals dont follow the gun laws? Who'd of thought that? These people do know the definition of insanity right?
Gun control in Chicago exists just so they can say they're doing something. It's obviously an out of control gang problem that they either can't control or are too afraid to control.
 @jowsuf Chicago is like Gotham before Batman. All the cops are on the take. They just look the other way.
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.
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a guy in New York "ACCIDENTALLY" shoots himself and gets 20 months in prison for it? what the hell?
 @Rick4001CS He is a non violent (yet stupid) man. It's easy for the lawmakers to "make an example" out of someone that won't hunt down their families after their released from prison, and seeing as how Plaxico is a celebrity, he was probably spoiled rotten in "Club Fed" anyhow, with all of the weight training he could possibly ever need to prepare him to return from his "martyrdom"
@Rick4001CS Public figure, and with the biggest audience in the country (NYC)Â -Â public example.
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 @the unvarnished truth True, you would think so. But in that case, there must be a lot of "mentally challenged" people in Seattle because they are all bleeting and mewing about people having guns. Yes, if Seattlites had their way, no one would be able to own a gun. F'n sheeple.
@the unvarnished truth More obviously, their (everybody's) GANG CONTROL is a failure. Too PC it makes me puke.
I think they are going about this the wrong way. They should let all of the people take up arms, give them hunting and tactical training, and open a season on gang bangers.
 @SgtPepperSpray Amen. Bangers are cowards that thrive on fear and numbers. Start decreasing their numbers, and THEY will be the ones in fear.
DANG! Â There are still 3 days in January, holy moley.
"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."
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Wonder what made them come to that conclusion...without recovering a round or weapon, and judging by damage alone, I don't think I would know the difference between let's say a .308 or 7.62x39...they'd both be rather messy.
 @o0Infidel0o Maybe the hole in his head LOOKED scarier than a normal bullet wound. Therefore it was an "Assault Weapon!"
 @Harley-H.S.C.  @o0Infidel0o Bigger scarier hole is made by a .44 mag JHP though.
Great example of gun control. You are controlling everyone's guns except the outlaws. So where does that leave the law-abiding citizen for self-defense?
You have no self-defense ability. You're doomed. Throw in the towel already.
exterminate the gangs with guns, quit being so PCÂ we won't care, promise
Outlaw the gangs, not the guns. Same should be the letter of the law everywhere, then we wouldn't be inundated by such discussions.
Getting awfully tiresome...