Teen who performed at inauguration shot dead in Chicago
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CHICAGO (AP) - A 15-year-old girl who had performed in President Barack Obama's inauguration festivities is the latest face on the ever-increasing homicide toll in the president's hometown, killed in a Chicago park as she talked with friends by a gunman who apparently was not even aiming at her.
Chicago police said Hadiya Pendleton was in a park about a mile from Obama's home in a South Side neighborhood Tuesday afternoon when a man opened fire on the group. Hadiya was shot in the back as she tried to escape.
The city's 42nd slaying is part of Chicago's bloodiest January in more than a decade, following on the heels of 2012, which ended with more than 500 homicides for the first time since 2008. It also comes at a time when Obama, spurred by the Connecticut elementary school massacre in December, is actively pushing for tougher gun laws.
Hadiya's father, Nathaniel Pendleton, spoke Wednesday at a Chicago police news conference, which was held in the same park where his daughter died.
"He took the light of my life," Pendleton said. He then spoke directly to the killer: "Look at yourself, just know that you took a bright person, an innocent person, a nonviolent person." Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy consoled him, the girl's mother and 10-year-old brother.
Hadiya was a bright kid who was killed just as she was "wondering about which lofty goal she wanted to achieve," her godfather, Damon Stewart, told The Associated Press. Hadiya had been a majorette with the King College Prep band.
"She was a very active kid, doing dance, cheerleading, who felt like she could accomplish just about anything, a very good student who had big dreams about what she wanted to be, a doctor, an attorney," said Stewart, a Chicago police officer and attorney. "She was constantly getting good grades."
Obama was asked about Hadiya's death in an interview with Telemundo, which led to a discussion about gun control. Also Wednesday, White House press secretary Jay Carney said Wednesday that the president and the first lady's "thoughts and prayers are with" the teen's family, adding: "And as the president has said, we will never be able to eradicate every act of evil in this country, but if we can save any one child's life, we have an obligation to try when it comes to the scourge of gun violence."
In Chicago, gangs routinely and often indiscriminately open fire. Mayor Rahm Emanuel and McCarthy are pushing for tougher local, state and national gun laws and longer prison sentences for offenders.
About three blocks from Hadiya's school, she and a group of 10-12 young people, including members of her volleyball team, had taken refuge under a canopy at a park to avoid the rain Tuesday afternoon. A man climbed a fence behind the park, ran at the group and started shooting, and then jumped back over the fence and into a white Nissan. The group scattered, but Hadiya was shot once in the back and a teenage boy was shot in the leg.
Police said Hadiya had no arrest record and there was no indication she was a member of a gang or was the gunman's target. In fact, McCarthy said there are no indications that anyone in the group was gang-affiliated. He said the police suspect that the gunman may be a member of a gang that considers the park its turf and that he mistook somebody in the group as someone from an encroaching rival gang.
McCarthy vowed to put a police officer at the park "24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year" if that is what it takes to show the gang that the park belongs to no one but the community.
Comments by both Stewart and the girl's father echo the message that city officials have long said: Gun violence is not confined to street corners in dangerous neighborhoods. Obama's neighborhood, Kenwood, is just north of the University of Chicago and the Museum of Science and Industry.
"Her parents had done everything right and she was doing everything right," he said. Stewart, who was 12 when his own brother was shot and killed, said his family and Pendleton's family were so close that his own children saw the 15-year-old as an older sister.
"The worst thing in the world was when yesterday I had to sit there and tell my children that their sister is gone," he said.
Chicago police said Hadiya Pendleton was in a park about a mile from Obama's home in a South Side neighborhood Tuesday afternoon when a man opened fire on the group. Hadiya was shot in the back as she tried to escape.
The city's 42nd slaying is part of Chicago's bloodiest January in more than a decade, following on the heels of 2012, which ended with more than 500 homicides for the first time since 2008. It also comes at a time when Obama, spurred by the Connecticut elementary school massacre in December, is actively pushing for tougher gun laws.
Hadiya's father, Nathaniel Pendleton, spoke Wednesday at a Chicago police news conference, which was held in the same park where his daughter died.
"He took the light of my life," Pendleton said. He then spoke directly to the killer: "Look at yourself, just know that you took a bright person, an innocent person, a nonviolent person." Chicago Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy consoled him, the girl's mother and 10-year-old brother.
Hadiya was a bright kid who was killed just as she was "wondering about which lofty goal she wanted to achieve," her godfather, Damon Stewart, told The Associated Press. Hadiya had been a majorette with the King College Prep band.
"She was a very active kid, doing dance, cheerleading, who felt like she could accomplish just about anything, a very good student who had big dreams about what she wanted to be, a doctor, an attorney," said Stewart, a Chicago police officer and attorney. "She was constantly getting good grades."
Obama was asked about Hadiya's death in an interview with Telemundo, which led to a discussion about gun control. Also Wednesday, White House press secretary Jay Carney said Wednesday that the president and the first lady's "thoughts and prayers are with" the teen's family, adding: "And as the president has said, we will never be able to eradicate every act of evil in this country, but if we can save any one child's life, we have an obligation to try when it comes to the scourge of gun violence."
In Chicago, gangs routinely and often indiscriminately open fire. Mayor Rahm Emanuel and McCarthy are pushing for tougher local, state and national gun laws and longer prison sentences for offenders.
About three blocks from Hadiya's school, she and a group of 10-12 young people, including members of her volleyball team, had taken refuge under a canopy at a park to avoid the rain Tuesday afternoon. A man climbed a fence behind the park, ran at the group and started shooting, and then jumped back over the fence and into a white Nissan. The group scattered, but Hadiya was shot once in the back and a teenage boy was shot in the leg.
Police said Hadiya had no arrest record and there was no indication she was a member of a gang or was the gunman's target. In fact, McCarthy said there are no indications that anyone in the group was gang-affiliated. He said the police suspect that the gunman may be a member of a gang that considers the park its turf and that he mistook somebody in the group as someone from an encroaching rival gang.
McCarthy vowed to put a police officer at the park "24 hours a day, seven days a week, 365 days a year" if that is what it takes to show the gang that the park belongs to no one but the community.
Comments by both Stewart and the girl's father echo the message that city officials have long said: Gun violence is not confined to street corners in dangerous neighborhoods. Obama's neighborhood, Kenwood, is just north of the University of Chicago and the Museum of Science and Industry.
"Her parents had done everything right and she was doing everything right," he said. Stewart, who was 12 when his own brother was shot and killed, said his family and Pendleton's family were so close that his own children saw the 15-year-old as an older sister.
"The worst thing in the world was when yesterday I had to sit there and tell my children that their sister is gone," he said.
The only way to fix this is to round up all the gang banger's be they black, Hispanic, or what ever and put them on an island in the Alaskan Aleutian chain and forget about them. That should stop most of the crime and thus the use of guns. Just a thought...
Nine times out of ten the police have a darn good idea who is behind the gang violence but they can't get enough evidence for an arrest because people are afraid of retaliation, plus there's this stupid code of silence that all the gangstas have. What they should do is roundup the entire gang and hold them all until the truth comes out and the perp is caught. Anyone that conceals facts or obstructs the investigation gets a minimum of ten years.
 @MajorSkeptic I would prefer extermination of the gangs.
I can't wait for the stricter gun laws so these punks will all lay down their guns and follow the law. Oh wait, doesn't Chicago have the 2nd strictest gun laws after NYC just passed their new laws? Oh, wait gain, haven't there been more deaths in Chicago than in the Afghanistan war, since it started? Hmmm ...
 @jellyfish Bravo, you are ready for battle on this. It looks like you have done your research and ready for the fight. I have not decided what I would want with all this, but I do admire people who are ready to take a stand for their right or passion. I respect you for pointing out the shootings in this story, instead of pointing it out on a story that has nothing to do with guns.Â
I hope you anti-gun people can view this entire video... it *MIGHT* give you pause to re-think your position.
Please keep an open mind.
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OyS3CEIbpJo
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Be careful what you ask for, you may just get it.
I love how the gun nutz blame this on "Chicago strict gun laws" when they know full well what the real problem is here.
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NYC has strict gun laws too, and that city has literally transformed itself over the last few decades.Â
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You can't have it both ways gun nutz. Remember, guns don't kill people...right?Â
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 @lakeview You need to read NY history.  Mayor Guiliani decided he was going to have the police clean up NY city and make it safe.  With his full support - politically and publicly -  he ordered that the police stop each and everyone that appeared to have or indicated they might have a weapon, etc.
The NY Mayor, like Obama's Chief of Staff Rahm could if he wanted to, supported the police and demanded they make NY safe.
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Read it.  It had more to do with enforcing existing laws by supporting the police overtly.  Rahm won't do that because he would rather spend money and holding gang-banger's hands and political grand-standing like this President.
 @lakeview  Ahhh ,,, are you saying NY has no gun violence ? I must have read the wrong statistics. And cars don't kill people either ,,,, right?
Chicago is a cesspool of gangs.
 @mstipton Just cesspool will cover it.
What the heck does Chicago have to do with it?????????
Get off your sick stinken thinken and get to the facts...This girl is 15 and she was gunned down..Could of been anywhere!! I see and hear about it all the time from all parts of the globe!
Chicago has some of the stricktest gun laws and this still happens. And Chicago does have a huge gang problem.
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"The city's 42nd slaying is part of Chicago's bloodiest January in more than a decade"
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Hows that for facts? 42 murders in one month in one city. It doesnt happen "anywhere" as you claim. Derp.
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 @reelin21 It's because of the strict gun-control laws that exist in Chicago. People are pushing for stricter gun-control laws nation-wide, and places like Chicago seem to indicate more laws and stricter laws have little, if any, effect on gun related crime.
@Datsuyama @reelin21 The fact of the matter is that Chicago is surrounded by places with very lax gun conrtol laws and that is why there is a problem. The weapons are still accessible. It does not mean that gun control policies are ineffective if they are in place across the board.
 @Citizen#3457899654 Suggest you do some research before making bogus statements.Chicago is surrounded by the State of Illinois ,, which has strict gun laws as does Michigan which is home to Detroit ,, another high crime city. Not positive about Ohio but it seems they have some restrictions also.
 @Datsuyama  @reelin21 'strict gun laws' don't reduce the number of guns available by legal means. Most if not all illegally obtained guns were initially obtained by legal means, and then sold off at gun shows, on craigslist, stolen, traded, etc. A 9mm handgun doesn't just magic it's way into a felons (or soon to be felons) hand. They get there because they exist in the market.
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No reason to argue though. Logic, common sense, and looking at every other first world country it is undeniable that we will eventually see massive gun control, a reformed penal system that actually tries to reform, and a steep decline in christian politics. Not that I'm complaining.
 @mootpoint  @reelin21 "...looking at every other first world country..."Â
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You really should practice what you preach. Look at them - guns per capita vs. murders by guns per capita. It's eye opening.Â
Guns per 100 people compared to murders by gun per 100k
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US - guns 89 per 100 people, murders 3.6 per 100k
Switzerland - 48 per 100 people, murders 0.52 per 100k
Finland - 45 guns, 0.26 murders
Sweden - 32 guns, 0.19 murders
France - 31 guns, 0.22 murders
Canada - 30 guns, 0.5 murders
just for kicks:
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Mexico (where guns are illegal) 15 guns, 10 murders
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So, I ask - is it the guns? Or, is it the culture? I can tell you this much - there is no correlation between gun ownership rate vs. murders by guns. Here are the facts, interpret them as you will.Â
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 @K. Coleman Thanks ,,,
 @Snoop That my friend is putting it into perspective!
 @mootpoint Christian politics ,,, really, are you serious. LMAO !
 @mootpoint Since when has "stolen" been a legal means ? So what are you advocating ,,, confiscation ? Get it thru your head my friend ,, there is an estimated 300 million guns in this country in private hands. The government cant deport 12 million illegal aliens much less go out and find 300 million guns.
Are you fricken kidding me??
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Chicago has the most restrictive gun control laws in the nation. Chicago also has the highest gun crime rate in the nation. There is a direct correlation. For many years now the governing bodies and law makers in Chicago have been placing more and more restrictions on gun owners, only to find the violence persists and even increases. It has been those governing bodies who have allowed the victimization of the populace. And you now have many of the same individuals in the federal government, trying to do the same to our nation. This is reaching insanity.
Very sorry for this family and the families of the other 41 other victims of this month.
Chicago needs to clean house in their government.
 @SargeMcC Chicago gun deaths are mostly gang related....They don't have school and mall shootings there...go ahead and ignore that little nugget.
 @cyclops   At the risk of being labeled a "racist" ,, my view is that this is more black violence in a predominately black neighborhood in a predominately black city and more than likely was at the hands of a black shooter who is affiliated with a black gang. Go ahead and keep ignoring the facts for the sake of political correctness ,, but doing so may get you innocently killed someday.
 @SargeMcC So the gun crimes started after the gun control? Or are you just playing with words :)
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It is true that placing restrictions on gun owners which generally have more of an effect on legal owners doesn't stop criminals from obtaining them elsewhere. It also doesn't mean that the lack of cowboys caused an increase in an already preexisting cesspool of gun crimes. Last I heard, allowing criminals to be shot on site even outside ones home down in Florida (and Texas?) hasn't caused an immediate cessation of felonious gun crimes.
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But hey, 12,000 people a year getting gunned down is a small price to pay to protect a right that was initiated in days when your musket took half a minute to reload and the government was a couple decades old.
criminals manage to get guns WHILE IN PRISON.Â
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more laws certainly aren't going to keep them from getting them while free.Â
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Fix the social issues that cause gang violence, and the gang violence will go down.Â
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Fix the social issues that make people think they have nothing to lose, or that prevent them from getting the mental health assistance they need, and the shootings will go down.Â
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the only gun crimes that cannot be solved strictly through fixing social issues are premeditated murders, and gods know there's few enough of them nowadays.Â
"as the president has said...we will never be able to eradicate every act of evil in this country, but if we can save any one child's life, we have an obligation to try when it comes to the scourge of gun violence."
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Two things we haven't "tried".
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1. The total erradication of guns from the face of the earth.  Not likely to happen, not within our power.
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2. The total erracication of laws that serve only to disarm the law-abiding citizen; "more guns/less crime".Â
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We HAVE tried, and tried, and tried, the 50 Shades of Public Disarmament, with the same, sad, pathetic outcome every time. Gun control is an emotional response, not a rational one.  Blaming the gun, and gun owners everywhere.  It's akin to demonizing and punishing law abiding car owners as a response to car crashes or drunk driving.Â
"I heard on another media outlet that the group she was hanging with were known gang members...not that it excuses her murder, but is it not a matter of hangin' with the wrong crowd?"
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Yes, and no.... in a lot of inner-city situations, a perfectly upright citizen may have friends and family that are gang members, felons, etc.  It's not always a simple thing to disassociate from them.Â
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That said, this IS just another sad demonstration of the folly, and fraud, of gun "control".   Einstein's definition of insanity comes into play.
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Gee that is not happen Chicago has the strictest gun laws in the nation! Proof gun control does not work. The cities and states that have the lowest gun violence have the least amount of gun laws.
 @Exiled_Patriot It proves nothing.  To kill mosquitos you need to drain the swamp.
How can this be? Chicago has the strictest gun laws in the nation. Is it possible that criminals dont care what laws that they break and additional laws only affect law abiding citizens?
I heard on another media outlet that the group she was hanging with were known gang members...not that it excuses her murder, but is it not a matter of hangin' with the wrong crowd?
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Strange how a city with about the most restrictive gun laws in the nation has such a high gun problem...and now, with all the feel good political grandstanding, Obama wants to turn the rest of the Country into Chicago.
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.....can't wait.
 @Controlled-Insanity This article clearly says: " In fact, McCarthy said there are no indications that anyone in the group was gang-affiliated". Not that this story is more correct than the other but from the description of the young lady, it doesn't sound likely to me that she was "hangin' with the wrong crowd." Though gang-bangers don't seem to care too much about whose crowd it is - if it's not their homies, it's the "wrong crowd".
So sad for her family & friends.
 @katiemcc If the sky is obscured by clouds, there is no indication that the sky is blue.
"No indication" is not a concrete term.....it leaves shades of gray that should be at least looked at.
The current political climate surrounding this issue, and the paranoia it has created, coinciding with a lock-stock & barrel left leaning media who will push whatever agenda suits them for the time period, will not bring a well informed & balanced, and fair look at what ever story they report on and how it is conveyed to the public, and how it is the consumed & digested in ones mind.
Sad that someone so young had to die because the gangs run Chicago. Innocent people like her are defenseless against their violence because of gun control. This is the kind of environment that will be replicated throughout America, the criminal element running the city, if certain people in our government get their way. Luckily, it looks like some sanity remains in certain elected officials.
 @dg54321 Wake up.  She was shot in the back.  What do you think this is, the OK Corral?
 @cyclops  @dg54321 step back, take a deep breath.......try to make sense.