The morning after six-year-old Brian Fernandez was shot on Chicago’s South Side earlier this month, the newspaper headlines echoed what has become the city’s bloody calling card.
‘Boy, 6, seriously wounded in South Side Shooting’
‘6-year-old boy among several hurt in Chicago shootings’
‘At least Nine People Shot, Including Three Fatally’
The following weekend was as tragic: at least 12 people were wounded by gunfire, including a tourist from Texas who was shot during an apparent drug deal gone awry.
Shooting by shooting, news cycle by news cycle, Chicago’s reputation as America’s most murderous city seems etched further into the national consciousness. But while gun violence in Chicago remains troublesome, the glare of the spotlight drawn to it may be distorting. That’s because gun violence and murders in Chicago are actually down. Way down.
As of November 25, the city had recorded 377 murders, a 20% decline from the 472 that occurred last year by this time. It’s the fewest to date of any year since 1965, according to Chicago police. The total number of shootings and shooting victims is also dramatically down. There have been 692 fewer shooting victims, 2,148 this year compared to 2,840 during the same time period in 2012. And shootings are down by 562, from 2,261 to 1,699.
By those numbers, Chicago is currently on pace to set record lows. But few seem to know it.
“There’s almost been a narrative that’s been written and it doesn’t matter what happens,” said Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy, who has been careful to call the tumbling crime numbers “progress” rather than “victory.”
McCarthy said the best year the city has had in murders since 1965 was 2011, and the city is on pace to best its 2011 tally with 17 fewer murders so far to date.
“This is my thirty-third year in policing. There’s an ebb and flow that goes with this,” McCarthy said in an interview. “I don’t want to trivialize this. We are talking about life and death scenarios. The gunshots are what we focus on. If you are going to reduce homicides in a place like Chicago, you focus on reducing the gunshots.”
“It’s a day by day, minute by minute grind,” he said, “and we just have to keep winning more than we are losing.”
The steep declines are made that much more dramatic given last year’s nation-leading murder total of 506. Chicago, the country’s third largest city, has indeed been one of the most dangerous. Last year New York City recorded a low of its own with 414 murders. Detroit counted 411 murders. And Philadelphia had 331. Still, despite having the highest number of total murders, Chicago’s 2012 homicide rate didn’t even come close to cracking the top 10 among American cities.
“There has become this echo chamber because Chicago had the largest single number of homicides last year, over 500. But there were many, many cities that had higher homicide rates,” said Roseanna Ander, executive director of the University of Chicago Crime Lab.
“If you are looking at the numbers alone and not the rate, there’s the perception that the city is the murder capital. It’s definitely a troubling problem that we have as many young people getting shot and shooting people. It’s a very significant problem, but I don’t think it’s portrayed accurately and that portrayal is being spread nationally and internationally.”
McCarthy, who joined the department in 2011, said a number of changes in the way the department polices have helped drive down the city’s stubborn crime statistics.
McCarthy spent 25 years in the NYPD and then 5 years as the chief of police in Newark, New Jersey. He came to Chicago hoping to replicate the dramatic reduction in crime he helped spur in New York.
The department has instituted hot-spot policing, in which whole cadres of additional officers are deployed to neighborhoods throughout the city where a disproportionate amount of violence occurs. Intelligence and technology are also being used to better predict where outbursts of violence might occur, particularly retaliatory and gang-involved violence.
Using an analysis of crime data from the past three years, the police department identified 20 targeted geographic areas that make up just 3% of the city but account for about 20% of violent crimes. Since Feb. 1, when McCarthy flooded those areas with additional officers, the 20 neighborhoods have seen a decrease in murders of 44% and 45% in shootings, McCarthy said.
The department has also expanded walking beats, a practice largely abandoned years ago as officers switched to patrol cars to cover more ground. The department expects to spend $93 million in overtime by year’s end.
It has also worked to better respond to gang flare-ups in real time.
“We did an audit of all the gangs in the city, all the turf that they claim, all the membership of those gangs and who they are in conflict with,” McCarthy said. “We were running into a scenario where the retaliation shootings were happening at a pace we could not keep up with. If we have the intelligence on the ground, if someone gets shot here, we can right on the ground determine who they are in conflict with and respond accordingly.”
Another strategy came from culling arrest records to determine relationships among repeat offenders to determine who might become a target. According to McCarthy, associates in circles of active gang members and criminals are “about 100 times more likely to be involved in gun violence.”
Using the people on the so-called “heat lists,” district commanders go to each individual’s home and warn them to stay out of trouble, that cops are watching.
Even with the stepped-up efforts by the police department, the fight to tamp down violent crime comes with another battle, that of public perception. In neighborhoods hardest hit by gun violence, the daily drumming of bullet-spray does little to allay the idea that things are as bad as they’ve ever been.
“If you ask me it feels worse, like it went up,” said Ellyson Carter, a community organizer with Action Now, a non-profit social and economic justice group. “We appreciate the police department for trying to make change in the community, but I just don’t trust their numbers. It almost feels like they are covering something up.”









