A bloody Easter weekend in Chicago has shaken up what had been months of steady declines in gun violence, ushering in the city’s warm season with a bang.
Weekend violence left nine dead and at least 35 wounded, including six children, an escalation that caused federal authorities to intervene Monday. The youngest of the children injured by gunfire included an 11-year-old girl who was shot while leaving a park with a group of friends on Sunday evening.
The girl, a fifth grader identified by local newspapers as Tymisha Washington, was struck by two bullets just hours after attending church services and eating Easter dinner with her family.
A day after the shootings, Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy offered the obligatory, if not wearied, response:
“We’re all tired of it,” McCarthy told NBC Chicago on Monday afternoon, lamenting the lack of teeth behind the state’s gun laws, which have allowed an untold number of illegal weapons to flow into Chicago from around less restrictive cities across the state. “Unfortunately, we’re going to have the same conversation that we always have.”
Late last year, McCarthy was hopeful that steep drops in gun violence and murders could be sustained with new police tactics and bolstered communication with stakeholders in the communities most affected by shootings. He assigned whole cadres of officers to walking beats, effectively removing the buffer of police cruisers from between the police and the people they are sworn to serve.
But if this most recent spate of violence is any indication, the city will likely redouble its efforts to maintain the steep declines the city had seen following a nation-leading murder tally in 2012.
“This doesn’t wipe out the progress that we’ve made, but it certainly doesn’t do us any good,” McCarthy said Monday. “I can’t sit here and tell you that we are doing that much better when we have a weekend like we just had. It’s just the facts. So we’re going to keep doing what we are doing, which is having an impact on what’s happening.”
The U.S. Attorney’s Office announced Monday that it will step up its efforts to diminish violent crime in the city, in the form of a specialized new unit staffed by more than a dozen prosecutors tasked with using federal law as a crime-fighting weapon.
“This is putting a group of talented attorneys together and telling them that their mission is to help the city and the district tamp down violent crime … and to use all the tools and strategies at their disposal that are going accomplish that mission,” Randall Samborn, spokesman for U.S. Attorney Zachary Fardon, told The Chicago Tribune.
The new unit, The Violent Crimes section, launched earlier this month and boasts 16 prosecutors on staff. The unit was formed as part of a restructuring of the U.S. Attorney’s Chicago office, which consists of 160 prosecutors and enjoys a budget of nearly $35 million. Members of the unit were pulled from the larger narcotics and gang unit.









