National reporter Trymaine Lee answered your questions today about his coverage of gun violence and policing in Chicago. Take a look to see the conversation.
Jason Smikle: A TED Talk recently by Gary Slutkin suggested that the world should “treat violence like a contagious disease”. What are your thoughts on this approach?
Trymaine Lee: Hey Jason! This is a really interesting approach and I’ve had the pleasure of speaking with Gary Slutkin about this very topic.
The idea, as you mentioned, is to treat violence as a contagious disease and a step further, treat those infected with it or those most likely to become infected by it, aggressively, locally.
The model has really shown promise in particular neighborhoods in Chicago. Slutkin’s approach has also, as he tells it, spread internationally.
Here’s what Slukin told me earlier this year:
“This is a scientific approach that takes a look at violence as an epidemic process and epidemic behaviors. We use a scientific method more than a moralist method. It uses violence interruption and other work to change norms,” said Slutkin, an epidemiologist and physician who founded CeaseFire, now called CureViolence. “Just like when you do TB control or AIDS control. It’s the same system.”
It’s called the CureViolence model and Slutkin developed the approach in the mid-90s. By treating high risk individuals—a neighborhood’s shooters or prospective shooters—and de-escalating conflicts in real time, “violence interrupters” aim to break the links that often lead to shootings and retaliatory violence.
The interrupters are so-called “credible messengers,” mostly folks from the communities being treated and many of them have had some involvement in gun violence or the criminal justice system. Anyway, in many cities, an overwhelming number of the shootings are retaliatory shootings, revenge violence for a preceding event.
So the idea is that “credible messengers” who have their ears to the street and have the confidence of the community, will be able to catch wind about a brewing beef between people or groups and intervene.
The problem is that the model hasn’t been replicated successfully on a large enough scale. But, again, the results have shown promise in particular neighborhoods. But according to groups that have adopted the model in particular catchment areas (neighborhoods), the numbers show it’s working to a degree.
I like the idea, because it’s the community getting involved. And one life saved is a victory in itself. But to address the kind of urban gun violence we suffer in our cities using this model, we’d need an unrealistically deep bench of “credible messengers” and “violence interrupters.” And frankly, I haven’t seen that kind of unified, collective groundswell in addressing young minorities dying in our streets.
PaolaPT: Does Chicago have a higher percentage of gun ownership than other cities?
Trymaine Lee: The City of Chicago has basically had an moratorium on gun ownership. There aren’t any gun dealers within the city limits and those who wanted a gun had to apply for a city permit and register their weapon with the police. It was a complicated, difficult process.
That is just context.
The police most recently have said that its gun registry currently contains about 8,000 gun owners and 22,000 guns.
But Chicago police recover as many as 10,000 illegal guns from the streets each year. So far this year, more than 5,500 guns have been recovered.
So, the number of legal gun owners on the books is relatively low. And by the number of guns pulled from the streets each year by police, it’s clear that illegal gun ownership is relatively high.
Now, apples to apples comparisons can be difficult as you’d have to rely on the reporting practices of local law enforcement. It’s also difficult to get a really firm number because of a federal law (vigorously supported by the NRA and other gun groups) that prohibits the creation of a national gun registry.
The actual law prohibits the use of the National Instant Criminal Background Check System from being used to create any system of registration of firearms or firearm owners.
Here’s a good breakdown by the folks over at Smartgunlaws.org: http://smartgunlaws.org/federal-law-on-registration-of-firearms/#footnote_0_6109.
Back to your question, depending on the region and the local gun laws, ownership rates across the country vary widely.
According to a recent study on gun ownership and gun violence published in the American Journal of Public Health, gun ownership in 2010 among the states hovered around 51.7%.
Between 1981 and 2010 the average rate of gun ownership ranged from a low of 25.8% in Hawaii to a high of 76.8% in Mississippi.
Not exactly an answer, but I think it puts the idea in solid context.
Erica Pepitone: The police force seems to be making great strides with increasing its community presence, but as mentioned in the article, “there simply aren’t enough officers to cover the entire city.” What efforts do you think Chicago lawmakers and community members can make to help curtail gun violence?
Trymaine Lee: Hey Erica! There are countless community folks and organizations on the front lines trying to curb gun violence. Talking with a number of them and there’s a common theme: Complete devotion to trying to save lives. And serious battle fatigue. These folks are driving kids to school, feeding hungry families, persuading petty drug dealers to take job placement programs and finish getting their GED’s.
But they are not on the city’s payroll, have families of their own and bare the emotional brunt of seemingly endless bloodshed day in and day out.









