Those Damn Guns Again II - Chicago

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Cops: Boy, 17, brought gun to school out of fear of gangs

Cops: Boy, 17, brought gun to school out of fear of gangs
By Rosemary Regina Sobol
Tribune reporter
10:24 a.m. CDT, September 25, 2013

A 17-year-old boy is accused of bringing a loaded gun into his Near West Side school, claiming he needed it because gangs were after him and he needed it for protection, police said.

Darnell Hamilton was charged with unlawful use of a weapon and possession of a firearm in school, both felonies, police said.

Police were sent Tuesday morning to the west campus of the Urban Prep Charter Academy at 1326 W. 14th Pl., where the principal and assistant principal told officers they were approached by a witness who told them Hamilton had a weapon in his locker, according to police.

Authorities found a 9 mm handgun with a 4-inch barrel and a magazine with eight live rounds tucked in his school bag inside the locker, police said. The gun did not have a round in the chamber, police said.

Hamilton told school officials he had the weapon for protection because gangs in the area were “after him and stated they were going to kill him,’’ according to a police report. Police said Hamilton has no known gang affiliation.

Hamilton was arrested at 11:15 a.m. Tuesday and is expected to appear in bond court today.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/...r-of-gangs-20130925,0,3517012.story?track=rss
 

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Gary Slutkin: Let's treat violence like a contagious disease

Gary Slutkin: Let's treat violence like a contagious disease
Published on Oct 10, 2013

Physician Gary Slutkin spent a decade fighting tuberculosis, cholera and AIDS epidemics in Africa. When he returned to the United States, he thought he'd escape brutal epidemic deaths. But then he began to look more carefully at gun violence, noting that its spread followed the patterns of infectious diseases. A mind-flipping look at a problem that too many communities have accepted as a given. We've reversed the impact of so many diseases, says Slutkin, and we can do the same with violence. (Filmed at TEDMED.)

<iframe width="420" height="315" src="//www.youtube.com/embed/CZNrOzgNWf4" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

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Chicago under the gun

<iframe width="1000" height="1800" src="http://graphics.chicagotribune.com/under-the-gun/" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 

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Cartel Hits Midwest With Heroin Killing Chicago Youth

Driving this explosion in customers is a growing nonchalance toward a drug once considered taboo. Users today are younger, more affluent and more likely to live in suburbs or small towns, according to government officials and drug treatment experts. And they’re snorting or injecting a form of heroin more potent than during the drug’s previous heyday.

In the Midwest, heroin’s re-emergence has been abetted by the marketing ingenuity of the Sinaloa cartel, the Mexican drug organization that has grabbed control of narcotics sales in the region. The cartel, whose leader once described Chicago as his “home port,” took advantage of the power vacuum left when federal prosecutors sent many top gang leaders to prison, fomenting violence among gang members who serve as the main sales force for Sinaloa.
Cartel Hits Midwest With Heroin Killing Chicago Youth
 

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Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Mayor Rahm Emanuel has said that besides putting more officers on the street, various programs for young people have played a role in bringing the numbers of violent crime down. At a recent news conference, for example, the mayor said that a record 20,000 young people were involved in the city's summer jobs program.

"Not one of those kids was affected by gun violence this summer, and I don't believe for a minute that if they didn't have jobs they would be safe," he said.
Now if only the black community would go all-in on that idea.

Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013
By DON BABWIN | Associated Press
12 hrs ago

CHICAGO (AP) — Following a year when Chicago led the nation in homicides with more than 500, the city's Police Department said Wednesday that in 2013 the city recorded the fewest killings since 1965 and saw its overall crime rate fall to level not seen since 1972.

The city, which ended the year with a 16 percent drop in crime, saw the numbers of violent crimes, including robbery, aggravated battery and criminal sexual assault drop significantly — some by double digits— as well as drops in burglary and motor vehicle theft.

But it has been the city's homicide rate, especially the toll on young people, that has captured national attention.

The year did not start promisingly, with more than 40 homicides recorded in January, including that of 15-year-old honor student Hadiya Pendleton, who was gunned down a mile from President Barack Obama's South Side home. But the rate slowed considerably after that, and by the end of the year the city had recorded 415 homicides, 88 fewer than in 2012 and 20 fewer than in 2011.

"We are making significant progress by putting additional officers in high-crime areas, using intelligence to prevent retaliatory shootings, moving officers from administrative positions back to the streets," Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said in a statement.

One reason Chicago has been in the national spotlight is that in recent years it has recorded more homicides than larger cities like New York City and Los Angeles. That was again true in 2013, with New York recording 333 homicides, the lowest number since comparable record-keeping began in 1963. And, according to the Los Angeles Times, as of Dec. 28, there were 250 homicides in LA, compared with 298 the year before.

In Chicago, the police also said the number of shootings fell 24 percent from 2,448 to 1,864 between 2012 and 2013, and the number of shooting victims dropped from 3,066 to 2,328 for the same period. Further, the department said every police district in the city saw a reduction in crime and all but four of the city's 22 police districts saw the number of homicides either fall or remain the same as the year before.

The department and other city officials have pointed out that the drop in homicides, shootings and other violent crimes coincides with changes in police strategies, including tactics targeting violent street gangs that are responsible for the vast majority of the city's gun crimes and, significantly, about $100 million in overtime pay for hundreds of officers deployed nightly to high crime areas.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel has said that besides putting more officers on the street, various programs for young people have played a role in bringing the numbers of violent crime down. At a recent news conference, for example, the mayor said that a record 20,000 young people were involved in the city's summer jobs program.

"Not one of those kids was affected by gun violence this summer, and I don't believe for a minute that if they didn't have jobs they would be safe," he said.

http://news.yahoo.com/2013-ends-big-drop-homicides-chicago-212612071.html
 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Nevermind. It was a serious question and the answer may have been apparent, but I wanted to be certain. I do a lot of work in this area and I am always interested in municipal government solutions, including the "Public Sector" jobs program that contributed to the success in Chicago.
 

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Nevermind. It was a serious question and the answer may have been apparent, but I wanted to be certain. I do a lot of work in this area and I am always interested in municipal government solutions, including the "Public Sector" jobs program that contributed to the success in Chicago.
Like I said, you're not for it.

There is a predictability with this board. You've done the cliche thing by gravitating towards the government aspect of the quote, instead of the over-riding theme that kids were better off working.

Despite your faith, people can find jobs without the government. If you let them.
 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Hard to know who would like it if you're afraid to discuss "it" -- whatever "it" (the all-in idea) is.

I note that you didn't give the public sector jobs creation much credit. Maybe those jobs were created by the private sector ??? NOT.

Its great that something is working to give Chicago kids a chance.

Its dishonest that one Chicagoan completely overlooked the public sector job creation's role in that effort. :hmm:



"With speed camera revenue coming into the new fund, children’s programs will continue to be funded at their current levels, the mayor said, and more invests will be made in early childhood education and after school and summer job opportunities for the city's youth.

Specifically, the budget calls for $13 million in after school programs for nearly 16,000 kids, $14.5 million in summer jobs for more than 12,000 youth and $11 million in early education opportunities.

The budget also continues to improve public saftey and promote job growth, including expanding the microlending initiative in partnership with the city treasurer’s office to help support 300 businesses by 2016, the mayor said."

http://www.progressillinois.com/posts/content/2013/10/24/breaking-down-emanuels-2014-chicago-budget

 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Despite your faith, people can find jobs without the government. If you let them.

:rolleyes:

I agree, people can find whatever is available.

But, according to the article you posted, the jobs they found that apparently made a difference in the death/maiming in Chicago were found in the "public Sector."

One has to wonder, how many more jobs people might find nationwide if your buddies in Congress would stop blocking job creation efforts, in their ever-present quest to stop that black president. :hmm:
 

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Hard to know who would like it if you're afraid to discuss "it" -- whatever "it" (the all-in idea) is.
I'm going to go out on a limb and say we've talked about jobs before today, i.e. in this thread. Just a guess though.

I note that you didn't give the public sector jobs creation much credit. Maybe those jobs were created by the private sector ??? NOT.

Its great that something is working to give Chicago kids a chance.

Its dishonest that one Chicagoan completely overlooked the public sector job creation's role in that effort. :hmm:



"With speed camera revenue coming into the new fund, children’s programs will continue to be funded at their current levels, the mayor said, and more invests will be made in early childhood education and after school and summer job opportunities for the city's youth.

Specifically, the budget calls for $13 million in after school programs for nearly 16,000 kids, $14.5 million in summer jobs for more than 12,000 youth and $11 million in early education opportunities.

The budget also continues to improve public saftey and promote job growth, including expanding the microlending initiative in partnership with the city treasurer’s office to help support 300 businesses by 2016, the mayor said."

http://www.progressillinois.com/posts/content/2013/10/24/breaking-down-emanuels-2014-chicago-budget


:rolleyes:

I agree, people can find whatever is available.

But, according to the article you posted, the jobs they found that apparently made a difference in the death/maiming in Chicago were found in the "public Sector."

One has to wonder, how many more jobs people might find nationwide if your buddies in Congress would stop blocking job creation efforts, in their ever-present quest to stop that black president. :hmm:
The government has policies that makes it hard for this particular group of workers to be hired in the private sector, so it creates programs for opportunities to find jobs through government, thus proving you need government to find jobs.

Good logic. Would you also praise a doctor for setting a broken bone if he was the one that broke it in the first place?
 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

I'm going to go out on a limb and say we've talked about jobs before today, i.e. in this thread. Just a guess though.

You're out on a limb to discuss the "all-in" idea you raised :lol::lol::lol:

:smh::smh::smh:



Good logic. Would you also praise a doctor for setting a broken bone if he was the one that broke it in the first place?

:rolleyes: anything to avoid the conclusion that the government creates jobs, as well. In many of those cases, it is clear that the private sector doesn't give a shit. But, some people will say/twist anything to safeguard their economic-view of the world. You included.
 

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

You're out on a limb to discuss the "all-in" idea you raised :lol::lol::lol:

:smh::smh::smh:
Yes, the idea I raised before today. Since you're eager to get into it, just reread this thread and respond to one of my old post about it.

:rolleyes: anything to avoid the conclusion that the government creates jobs, as well. In many of those cases, it is clear that the private sector doesn't give a shit. But, some people will say/twist anything to safeguard their economic-view of the world. You included.
The government creates jobs the way it creates wealth, another thing we've been over multiple times.
 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

QUOTE=QueEx;13880987]:rolleyes: anything to avoid the conclusion that the government creates jobs, as well. In many of those cases, it is clear that the private sector doesn't give a shit. But, some people will say/twist anything to safeguard their economic-view of the world. You included.[/QUOTE]



The government creates jobs the way it creates wealth, another thing we've been over multiple times.

And if the government had not created those jobs that you can bet your ass those Chicago youth are thankful for, you wouldn't have had the opportunity to boast how they've been helped. :smh:
 

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

QUOTE=QueEx;13880987]:rolleyes: anything to avoid the conclusion that the government creates jobs, as well. In many of those cases, it is clear that the private sector doesn't give a shit. But, some people will say/twist anything to safeguard their economic-view of the world. You included.





And if the government had not created those jobs that you can bet your ass those Chicago youth are thankful for, you wouldn't have had the opportunity to boast how they've been helped. :smh:
Pretty sure you're delusional if you characterize it as me boasting how they've been helped. I maintain they don't need help, they need to stop being hindered.

I say they should be angry at your policies, and you think these programs are a national triumph..
 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Yes; and making more jobs more plentiful should be a national goal.
Instead, you and your friends have taken up blocking the black guy, as your national mantra.
 

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

Yes; and making more jobs more plentiful should be a national goal.
Instead, you and your friends have taken up blocking the black guy, as your national mantra.
You keep clinging to your faith that if someone is against bad policies then they are racist.
 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

You keep clinging to your faith that if someone is against bad policies then they are racist.

No son; you keep clinging to those whose sole focus is to block-the-damn-black-guy -- who, at the same time (not even attempting to mask their true nature), have not offered shit in the alternative.

You just keep clinging to that NO THIS/BLOCK THAT policy, under your faux ideological guise.
 

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Re: Chicago's murder rate plunged in 2013

What you're mad at has nothing to do with me.

Ok, white people are racist, now what?

Is the ACA, in logic/implementation/results, a goodness?
Is the NSA data used for "non terrorist American citizens" prosecutions a goodness?
Is killing Americans with no due process a goodness?
Is giving trillions over the course of his presidency to rich people a goodness?

Once again, white people are racist, now what?
 

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Chicago Ban on Gun Sales Within City Struck Down by Judge

Chicago Ban on Gun Sales Within City Struck Down by Judge
By Andrew Harris
Jan 6, 2014 11:01 PM CT

A Chicago law prohibiting the sale of guns within the third-most populous U.S. city was struck down as unconstitutional by a federal judge.

“Chicago’s ordinance goes too far in outright banning legal buyers and legal dealers from engaging in lawful acquisitions and lawful sales of firearms,” U.S. District Judge Edmond E. Chang wrote in a decision yesterday.

The judge said he was delaying the effect of his ruling to allow the city time to seek a stay during an appeal or, if it elects to forgo an appeal, to consider and enact sales restrictions “short of a complete ban.”

The ordinance, adopted in 2010 after the U.S. Supreme Court in a 5-4 decision invalidated a ban on gun possession within the city, allowed only the transfer of firearms through inheritance, prohibiting even gifts among family members.

There were 415 murders and 1,864 shooting incidents last year, according to Chicago police, in the city of 2.7 million where President Barack Obama’s political career began.

Second Amendment

The right to keep and bear arms for self-defense under the U.S. Constitution’s Second Amendment must also include the right to acquire a firearm, Chang said.

“The Mayor strongly disagrees with the court’s decision and has instructed the city’s Corporation Counsel to consider all options to better regulate the sale of firearms within the city’s borders,” Roderick Drew, a spokesman for the Chicago’s Department of Law, said in an e-mail. “Every year Chicago Police recover more illegal guns than officers in any city in the country, a factor of lax federal laws as well as lax laws in Illinois and surrounding states related to straw purchasing and the transfer of guns.”

Chang set a Jan. 13 deadline for the city to file papers seeking a stay and scheduled a status conference before him the following day at the federal courthouse in Chicago.

The lawsuit was filed in July 2010 by three city residents and the Illinois Association of Firearms Retailers.

The case is Benson v. City of Chicago, 10-cv-04184, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Illinois (Chicago).

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-...les-in-city-unconstitutional-judge-rules.html
 

QueEx

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Re: Chicago Ban on Gun Sales Within City Struck Down by Judge


B.A.M. – Becoming A Man


BAM-Obama-Hyde-Park-BAM-Session-1024x682.jpg

President Obama visits a B.A.M. group in Hyde Park


B.A.M. (Becoming a Man) is a dropout and violence prevention program for at-risk male students in grades 7-12. B.A.M. offers in-school programming, in some cases complemented by after-school sports, to develop social-cognitive skills strongly correlated with reductions in violent and anti-social behavior. Each session is built around a lesson designed to develop a specific skill through stories, role-playing and group exercises. Participants learn about and practice impulse control, emotional self-regulation, reading social cues and interpreting intentions of others, raising aspirations for the future and developing a sense of personal responsibility and integrity. The after-school sports component reinforces conflict resolution skills and the social and emotional learning objectives of the in-school curriculum.


Evidence

A recent randomized controlled trial conducted by the University of Chicago Crime Lab showed that B.A.M. reduces violent crime arrests, weapons crime and increases school achievement:

•Reduced violent crime arrests by 44%

•Reduced weapons crime and vandalism by 36%

•Reduced the likelihood of attending school in a juvenile justice setting by 53%

•Increased future graduation rates by 10-23%​



B.A.M. is grounded in research that shows a large share of homicides of Chicago youth stem from impulsive behavior – young people with access to guns “massively” over-reacting to some aspect of their social environment. This is consistent with a growing body of research showing that social-cognitive skills such as impulse control, future orientation, and conflict resolution are predictive of a wide range of key life outcomes such as school success and crime involvement. The $550 billion the US spends on K-12 schooling each year mostly focuses on academic skills. B.A.M. seeks to fill this need by developing key non-academic skills for at-risk male youth.


B.A.M. Youth

According to the U of C Crime Lab, 7,000 students have missed more than 40 days of school and are enrolled in schools within communities with homicide rates more than twice the national average. They are at a greatly elevated risk for violence involvement.

B.A.M. serves these very high risk males in grades 7-12 in Chicago Public Schools. On average participants have missed six-weeks of school during the pre-program year and have a mean GPA of 1.7/4 (D average). Nearly 40% have been arrested and more than half are over-age/under-credited.

B.A.M. currently serves more than 1,500 male youths in close to 40 schools in the Austin, Englewood, North Lawndale, Woodlawn and Pilsen/Little Village neighborhoods among others. These numbers triple the number of youths served in the 2012-13 school year – 492 young men in 17 schools.​


B.A.M. Curriculum Addresses Six Core Values
BAM-photo-300x225.jpg

B.A.M. group therapy session

1. INTEGRITY – is the core principle of the program. Students learn that a man is someone who is reliable, honest and in touch with his integrity or lack thereof and that he makes amends when he is out of integrity and does what he says he is going to do.

2. ACCOUNTABILITY – Students learn that they should be responsible for the choices that they make and take ownership for their feelings, thoughts and behaviors. A man can feel anger, sadness or fear, but he must own his reactions to those emotions.

3. SELF-DETERMINATION – Students learn the importance of focus and perseverance in reaching one’s goals. They learn to deal with self-defeating feelings, thoughts and behaviors that can become obstacles or barriers to achieving their goals.

4. POSITIVE ANGER EXPRESSION – is the most effective and remembered lesson taught in the program. Students learn anger management coping skills and effective techniques to express anger that avoid typical negative consequences such as suspensions, arrests, and damaged relationships.

5. VISIONARY GOAL SETTING – Students learn to envision their futures and make clear connections between their current behaviors, attitude and values and their visions. They seek to get in touch with traumas, pains and faulty thinking that cause them to act in negative and destructive ways. They learn how to heal these parts of themselves and direct that energy toward achieving their vision. This can be a very intense and yet life-altering process for those who are ready for it.

6. RESPECT FOR WOMANHOOD – Students are challenged to take a critical look at the values and actions that represent positive experiences and appreciation for women as opposed to depreciation, devaluing and oppression. They then learn appropriate and positive communication skills and begin using them in their interactions with women thereby increasing their respect for women of all ages.



SOURCE


 

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Chicago Police Supt. McCarthy Warns Of Dangers From Concealed Carry Law

McCarthy Warns Of Dangers From Concealed Carry Law
March 4, 2014 7:52 AM

CHICAGO (CBS) – As the state’s first permits to carry concealed firearms began arriving in the mail this week, Chicago Police Supt. Garry McCarthy was warning of potentially deadly consequences from having more guns on the streets.
Illinois State Police began sending out the first 5,000 concealed carry permits last week, and those permits began arriving in the mail this week.

McCarthy, who has been one of the most vocal critics of the law allowing Illinois residents to carry concealed firearms in public, warned there will be confrontations that could escalate into a deadly shooting – similar to January, when a retired police officer shot and killed a man who had been using his cell phones during the previews at a movie theater; or when a Florida man shot four teens – killing one – during an argument over loud rap music in 2012.

“There are going to be confrontation situations. We’re hearing stories across the country about people getting shot over ‘thug music,’ right? Or somebody throwing popcorn in a movie theater,” he said. “These things are going to come, as sure as we’re standing here.”

He said deadly shootings involving people supposedly acting in self-defense will be seen in Illinois now that residents can carry guns in public.

“Stand by and watch what happens. The answer to gun violence is not more guns,” McCarthy said.

But an Orland Park husband and wife who are among the first people to get concealed carry permits said they feel the law is too restrictive for gun owners. Steven and Leslie Potete applied for licenses years after they were robbed at knifepoint, and said they believe locations where concealed firearms are banned will become targets for armed criminals.

“Some of these restricted places are almost like beacons to people who want to do harm,” Leslie Potete said. “It’s like saying put the sticker on ‘no guns here,’ those are the places that people who are going to do bad things are going to want to go.”

As for people with concealed carry permits being allowed to lock their guns in their car when they go somewhere guns are not allowed, McCarthy said “that is not a safeguarded firearm.”

“What’s going to happen is, that’s putting illegal guns on the street, because people steal cars, and now they’re not just going to get the car, they’re going to get a bonus. They’re going to open the glove compartment, and find a firearm,” McCarthy said. “It’s outrageous. It’s not well thought-out. And 16 hours of training is not even near to being adequate to learning how to use a firearm, let alone become proficient with it, nor learn when you can use it.”

The superintendent also expressed concern for officers who now will be conducting traffic stops without knowing whether the driver is packing heat – legally or illegally. McCarthy said it’s the responsibility of concealed carry license holders to immediately inform police officers if they’re armed when they’re pulled over for a traffic violation.

“When these men and women pull over a car, think about how dangerous it is for them to be in a split-second moment to figure out if it’s a legal or illegal firearm. Either way, it puts them in danger,” he said.

State police and local law enforcement officials can object to giving someone a permit based on the criminal history of the applicant. Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart has filed hundreds of objections, citing arrests for domestic violence, burglary, theft, gang activity and crimes involving drugs and guns.

The seven-member Concealed Carry Licensing Board has 30 days from the date an objection is raised to review an application and make a decision.

So far, the board has sustained about 100 objections, and overruled about 100 others.

http://chicago.cbslocal.com/2014/03/04/mccarthy-warns-of-dangers-from-concealed-carry-law/
 

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Chicago’s Gun-Toting Gang Girl: ‘Lil Snoop’

Chicago’s Gun-Toting Gang Girl: ‘Lil Snoop’
Michael Daly
U.S. NEWS 04.29.14

She was just 17, a charter school graduate. But little Gakirah Barnes was also purported to have killed two in tit-for-tat gang violence now being celebrated by the recording industry.

She was called “Lil Snoop” by one friend, after the fictional female assassin in the TV show The Wire.

Mostly, 17-year-old Gakirah Barnes was known as “K.I.” in the real life and death world of Chicago gangs.

And as K.I., she became a kind of mythic figure in social media, a diminutive gap-toothed girl gunsel who was nobody’s bitch. She was purported to have killed at least twice avenging murdered friends, the first time when she was just 14.

After she herself was killed on April 11, an array of disturbing photos appeared on Instagram of her brandishing a variety of firearms, looking at once like a young girl and exactly like the “shootah” she was said to be.

“I only fw k.i. Cuz she do wat Yu bitch ni**as scared too do !” a senior member of her Fly Boy Gang tweeted before her death.

Yet Barnes does not seem to have ever been convicted of a serious crime, although she was arrested several times. She was never even named a suspect in a shooting.

Her mother, Shontell Brown, allows that Barnes was “not an angel” but describes her as a beautiful and “very loved girl” who would sit with her mom as they played music on their iPhones and joked and laughed.

The photo the mother wishes the world to see is of her daughter in a cap and gown, taken when she graduated from the Charter Perspective/IT Math & Science Academy.

“I just want everyone to know she’s just not what they’ve seen on social media,” Brown says. “She was a young girl that had dreams of being something and getting herself and family away from this life.”

The mother adds, “She didn’t bother anyone…Unless they bothered her. She always was respectable and mannerable.”

Barnes’s father was shot to death on Easter Sunday in 1997, when she was not yet 1. And to have had him taken from her before she even knew him may have helped make her at once self-reliant and hungry to bond with others. This early loss also may have contributed to her strong impulse to keep those dear to her safe from harm.

“She just wanted to protect everybody,” her mother says.

The mother pauses, then adds, “With her lil’ self.”

As Barnes entered her teens, she fell in with a group of young men from her immediate area in Woodlawn on the South Side who called themselves variously the St. Lawrence Boys and the Fly Boy Gang. They included 15-year-old Shondale “Tooka” Gregory, who was shot to death as he waited for a bus in January 2011.

The group memorialized him by dubbing itself the Tooka gang and the surrounding neighborhood “Tookaville.” Barnes took the Facebook name “Tookaville’kirah.”

Eight months later, a 20-year-old opposing gang member named Odee Perry was shot to death. Online postings would later report that Barnes had been the “hitta,” though the police would never name her a suspect.

“lol so odee was killed by a girl smh [shaking my head],” one street guy later tweeted.

The opposing gang memorialized the fallen Odee by christening its home turf “O’Block.” The residents included the rapper and Black Disciple gang member Keith “Chief Keef” Cozart, who had included Odee in one of his music videos. Keef recorded two songs that derided Tooka.

“Fuck a Tooka gang, I let this Ruger bang,” said one.

In November 2011, Carlton “Tutu” Archer of the Tooka gang was shot to death. Barnes posted a photo inscribed “RIP Carlton” that showed her with her hands pressed together in prayer.

The killing that had seemed to have the most profound effect on Barnes was apparently unrelated to the ongoing rivalry between Tookaville and O’Block. The victim was 13-year-old Tyquan Tyler, whose mother had moved him from Chicago to western Illinois to get him away from the city’s violence. He returned for a visit in June 2012 and was killed by a stray bullet when two grown gang members fired into a crowd of youngsters who were leaving a party. Tyler’s mother had just been coming to pick him up.

“I held him in my arms on the sidewalk and talked to him while he was fighting for his life,” she told the Chicago Tribune. “He was my baby—so loving and respectful.”

Barnes grieved as if Tyquan had been her little brother. She adopted the Twitter handle “Tyquanassassin” in his honor.

In the meantime, the rap rivalry escalated. A Tooka associate named Joseph “Lil JoJo” Coleman recorded a song and video dissing Keef and his fellow Black Disciples.

“We BDK!” JoJo announced, with the K standing for killers.

In September 2012, Lil JoJo was shot to death as he rode on the back of a friend’s bicycle shortly after tweeting his location.

On Christmas Day 2012, 18-year-old Joshua “Jay Loud” Davis was gunned down, apparently because he was wearing a Lil JoJo hooded sweatshirt. His brother, Ricky Davis, told reporters that the murdered teen’s hope had been to make it as a rapper and give his mother an easier life than raising five kids on her own.

“He simply wanted to get rich for his momma,” the brother reported.

The brother also said: “It’s all about the Chicago music. If people weren’t making that music, none of this would be happening.”

In July 2013, the Fly Boy Gang posted a music video called simply “Murda.” Young X Dutchie led the rapping.

“My young ni**as they’re gonna murder...” he rapped.

Then came this line:

“K.I. my young killa.”

Barnes appears in much of the video, looking small and impossibly young but absolutely sure of herself among the others, who are all male and bigger. She at one point appears holding an automatic pistol, a black bandanna covering the lower half of her face.

In one bit of video playacting, some supposed interlopers attempt to rob the gang, only to discover that they are dealing with more than they can handle. The overall message is not a threat but a warning: If you mess with the Fly Boy Gang, you do so at your own peril.

Were it not for all the real-life murdas, the whole video could have been just theatrics, fantasy stuff like those made by a host of poseur rappers from New York and Los Angeles and elsewhere who sought stardom by pretending to be from the street. That bogus stuff had begun to seem tired. And in seeking something fresh, the recording industry had discovered Chicago “drill music”; to drill in that city’s parlance meaning to shoot.

“A lot of ni**as be rappin’, but we the ones tote guns,” the Fly Boy Gang video says immediately after the reference to K.I. the young killa.

The commercial interest in real street stuff encouraged all the talk of murda and the gun waving, fostering an illusion that the bloodshed was more than senseless, the stuff of stardom. The video thus had another message: Give us a recording contract like you gave Chief Keef.

Thanks to his contract with Interscope, Chief Keef had moved to the safety of a suburban McMansion, posting Instagrams of himself posing with guns in a marble bathroom. His debut album, Finally Rich, included the song with the lyrics dissing the murdered Tooka.

In September 2013, a Chief Keef associate named Leonard “L’A Capone” Anderson was shot after emerging from a recording studio. He had survived a shooting a year before, but this time his luck ran out. He had just turned 17, and a chocolate birthday cake his mother had baked sat in the family kitchen.

“I don’t know what to do without my son,” his mother was quoted as saying.

Keef stirred further trouble in November 2013 by tweeting what was apparently a future album lyric containing a reference to the murder of Barnes’s pal Tutu.

“Bitch I’m coolin wit my Youngins. Smokin Tutu wit my Youngins.”

On April 9, Keef’s 30-year-old cousin and sometime music collaborator, Mario “Blood Money” Hess, was shot and killed. Online postings would later name Barnes as the “hitta.” The police did not name her as a suspect in the killing of this father of five. And she herself made no direct online reference to the shooting. She did cite a line from a Biggie Smalls song in a tweet the next day:

“u Nobody until Somebody kill u dats jst real Shyt.”

But that could have been a reference her own losses, the most recent of which had come 12 days before, when police shot and killed 19-year-old Raason “Lil B” Shaw after he allegedly pointed a pistol at them during a foot chase right where the “Murda” video was made. Barnes named her Twitter page “NO SURRENDER LIL B.”

“I Dne seen 2 many of my ni**az n a casket…In da end we DIE,” she tweeted on April 10.

That same day, a rapper named Lil Jay with the Fly Boy Gang taunted Blood Money’s friends by posting a video of himself drinking a red-hued beverage from a Styrofoam cup. Jay had survived being shot 10 times back in June.

“Sippin’ on Blood Money,” he now sang.

The following afternoon, April 11, a hooded gunman approached Barnes on Eberhart Street, just two and a half blocks from where Odee Perry was killed in 2011. She collapsed with multiple bullet wounds at the base of some wooden steps. A neighbor tried in vain to stanch the bleeding with a towel. A ambulance responded, but she was beyond saving when she reached the hospital.

“They killed my little ni**a snoop #restuptyqanaassassin,” a Fly Boy Gang associate tweeted.

In the aftermath, friends posted photos of Barnes brandishing guns. And, as if social media were an alternate reality where she still lived, somebody began tweeting in her name:

“YOUNG NI**AS THEY GONE MURDA... TAUGHT A COUPLE YOUNG NI**AS HOW TO SHOOT SOME OLD GUNS B4 MY TIME WAS UP

“BITCH IMMA STILL TURN UP… IMMA HAVE U NI**AS WIT NIGHTMARES…BOSS KIRAH LIVES TOOKAVILLE.”

Her mother stood before a TV news camera with the graduation photo that to her was the real Gakirah Barnes. The mother told people not to believe what was posted on social media.

“I wanted everyone to know my 17-year-old daughter first off before they start judging,” she later said.

She noted that much of the blustering on Twitter and Instagram and Facebook was just kids trying to impress each other and themselves, making myth out of madness.

“All those kids and rappers talk like Jesse James. Everyone wants to be the biggest and the baddest,” she said. “This is life in Chicago.”

She knows full well that some rappers sit in relative safety while stoking the violence.

“They stir up,” she noted. “But they don’t walk these streets and have to go back and forth to school like these kids.”

The mother said she would be adding Barnes’s obituary to a stack of them her daughter had collected of her friends during her too brief life not two dozen blocks from President Obama’s home in the city some now call Chiraq.

“She seen quite a few friends buried, last few years,” the mother said. “It’s like a war zone.”

The mother insisted that at her core Barnes was a protector. And that made the loss all the more wrenching.

“Because I couldn’t protect her,” the mother said.

She spoke of organizing a Million Mom march for all mothers who have lost a child.

“No matter how they were lost,” she said.

Barnes is buried near her father, who was taken from her on her very first Easter. The two of them now join together to ask if it is ever going to end.

http://www.thedailybeast.com/articl...s-teen-girl-ganglord-real-life-lil-snoop.html
 

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More Than 60 Shot, 9 Dead in Chicago's Bloody Holiday Weekend

More Than 60 Shot, 9 Dead in Chicago's Bloody Holiday Weekend
Jul 7, 2014, 12:45 AM ET
By GILLIAN MOHNEY

Independence Day celebrations were marred by multiple shootings in Chicago that reportedly left at least nine dead and 60 injured.

The first fatal shooting occurred around 2:30 a.m. Friday, kicking off a violent weekend for the city.

Corey Hudson, 34, was killed after a car pulled up and someone inside shot him and a friend on the street. According to ABC News station WLS-TV in Chicago there were also three police-involved shootings on July 4th alone. At least one suspect involved in one of those shootings was killed.

The most recent shootings occurred Sunday night, according to WLS-TV.

They city has been actively combating gang and shooting violence in recent years after a bloody year in 2012, when it was the only city in the nation to record more than 500 homicides.

To bring down the high murder rate, police have been dispatched by the hundreds in dangerous neighborhoods and government officials have worked with community leaders to try to combat violence.

"We will keep building on our strategy, putting more officers on the street in summer months, proactively intervening in gang conflicts, partnering with community leaders," Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said in a statement.

The strategy appeared to be working, with the number of homicides falling to 415 in 2013 from more than 500 the year before. However the murder rate was still higher than many other U.S. cities. By comparison New York City, which is more than triple the size in population recorded less than 350 murders in 2013.

As of June 30, there were nine fewer homicides in Chicago than during the same period as last year, according to The Associated Press.

The Chicago Tribune updated its tally of Chicago shooting victims today, bringing up the total of those shot to 1,129 so far this year. According to the Tribune, there were 2,185 shooting victims in Chicago last year.

http://abcnews.go.com/US/violence-m...ekend-50-reportedly-injured/story?id=24446308
 

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In violent weekend, at least 40 people shot in Chicago

In violent weekend, at least 40 people shot in Chicago
1 hour ago


(Reuters) - An 11-year-girl was shot and killed during a slumber party as violence struck Chicago over the weekend, local media outlets reported on Sunday.

At least 40 people were shot, and four killed, in weekend violence in the third-largest U.S. city, the NBC affiliate in Chicago reported.

The deaths included an 11-year-old girl, shot in the head inside a first-floor bedroom on Friday night after someone fired a gun from outside the house, said Chicago Police Officer Jose Estrada.

Shamiya Adams, who died the next day, had been sitting on the floor during a sleep-over at her best friend's home, the Chicago Tribune reported.

The Chicago Police Department on Sunday had not released an official tally of the weekend violence. But reports of another outbreak of gunfire came as the city has been grappling with a wave of summer violence.

City officials condemned as unacceptable a spree of gunfire over the Fourth of July holiday weekend that left 17 dead, with 53 people shot, including five by police. Authorities said at the time that shooting deaths in Chicago were down for the year.

http://news.yahoo.com/violent-weekend-least-40-people-shot-chicago-182226067.html
 

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4 charged in shooting death of Chicago 9-year-old

4 charged in shooting death of Chicago 9-year-old
September 19, 2014 9:23 PM

CHICAGO (AP) — Four men have been charged in the death of a 9-year-old boy who was gunned down in a backyard after becoming upset with his mother and running from his Chicago home, Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy said Friday.

Derrick Allmon, 19, Jabari Williams, 22, and Michael D. Baker, 19, all face first-degree murder charges in the death of Antonio Smith, McCarthy said. Police didn't immediately release the name of the fourth suspect.

Allmon, Williams and Baker were allegedly driving around looking for rival gang members on Aug. 20. Allmon was handed a gun by Williams and ordered to shoot two men they came across, McCarthy said.

"As Allmon approached his intended targets on foot, he came across Antonio Smith in a rear yard of a residence,'" McCarthy said. "Believing that Antonio Smith was yelling a warning to his intended victims, Allmon shot Antonio Smith multiple times, wounding him fatally."

The boy was shot at least four times — killed not far from where he lived in the Grand Crossing neighborhood on Chicago's South Side.

Shortly after the shooting, the boy's mother, Brandi Murry, said her son left home after she answered "no" when he asked for a cupcake. About an hour later, he was being taken to a hospital with gunshots to the chest.

Allmon allegedly dropped the .380-caliber handgun in a nearby sewer as he fled the shooting scene, authorities said. It was recovered by investigators Thursday.

The same handgun has been traced to two other shootings this year, including another fatal one, McCarthy said.

"Unfortunately this tragic murder is yet one more example of the strife being caused by gangs and guns in our community," McCarthy said.

McCarthy emphasized the boy and members of his family have no street gang affiliation.

It wasn't immediately known if the suspects have attorneys.

McCarthy said Allmon had been arrested in 2012 on a gun charge, convicted in 2013 and sentenced to 3½ years in prison the following year. Allmon was released just weeks before the boy's death.

http://news.yahoo.com/4-charged-shooting-death-chicago-9-old-012347052.html
 

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Jimmy Fallon's Coming, But Where Are The Activists?

Jimmy Fallon's Coming, But Where Are The Activists?
John Kass |
Sep 24, 2014

If Jimmy Fallon really wants to grab Mayor Rahm Emanuel's attention when he brings "The Tonight Show" to Chicago for another mutual ear-licking session, Jimmy might ask this:

When will Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson Sr. show up in Chicago to show Ferguson-style outrage over the assassination of 9-year-old Antonio Smith?

I don't think Rahm will like that too much. And neither will Sharpton or Jackson.

But a little boy has been gunned down by Chicago street gangs -- the shooter allegedly said, "I just hit a shorty, I just hit a shorty" -- and there has been precious little national outrage over it.

There was plenty of televised outrage over the Ferguson, Missouri, death of unarmed black teenager Michael Brown, who was shot by a white cop.

But practically none over Antonio Smith, who just before he was killed argued with his mom because she wouldn't give him a cupcake.

So maybe Fallon should have Anita Alvarez as his guest. She's not a character on "The Good Wife" on CBS.

She's the Cook County state's attorney, handling all the murder and mayhem America hears about happening in President Barack Obama's political hometown.

Alvarez picked up the phone Tuesday and we talked about Chicago, about Ferguson and about the lack of outrage here.

"I don't understand why people aren't as outraged when a young child like this is executed on a street," Alvarez said.

I asked: I didn't see Al or Jesse on the South Side, did you?

"I agree with you," she said. "I think that's wrong because it's young children being killed in minority communities and these activists need to be just as vocal and just as outraged ... as they are when there's a police shooting.

"You and I don't know exactly what happened down there in Ferguson. I know what's been reported. But I don't know the exact facts. None of us do. It's sad -- it's a sad statement."

Alvarez wasn't pushing for a spot on "The Tonight Show." She's spent 28 years as a prosecutor in Chicago. It is a job that brings politics with it.

But Tuesday on the phone with me, she was angry. And she was pushing for stronger truth-in-sentencing laws applied to gangbangers convicted of gun crimes. An honest sentence would have kept Derrick Allmon, the alleged shooter in Antonio's murder, in prison.

Instead he served only 20 months of a three-year sentence for aggravated unlawful use of a weapon by a gang member -- meaning a gun was in his hand or on his body. He was on home electronic monitoring courtesy of the Illinois Department of Corrections, and he dutifully checked in after he allegedly shot the child.

Alvarez wants new laws toughening gun sentences for habitual criminals -- not law-abiding gun owners -- and wants gangbangers convicted of weapons violations to serve at least 85 percent of their sentences.

"How many more children are going to be slaughtered on our streets by these gang members who are out running around -- they're carrying guns like they're carrying cellphones?" Alvarez asked.

There was plenty of TV outrage over Michael Brown's shooting. Sharpton and Jackson reveled in it. Activists even took to raising their hands as they say Brown did before he was shot.

Alvarez said Antonio was shot at least six times, in the chest, back, arm and hand.

But no crowds of protesters took to the streets in his memory.

There was a peace vigil on the South Side, and there was anger from the community. And the Rev. Michael Pfleger, pastor of St. Sabina Roman Catholic Church, offered a $13,500 reward for the arrest. The priest called the offer a "bounty."

But there was little if any national political outrage, or national coverage. And without daily protests, looting or Sharpton's showmanship, without those white college kids in their Guy Fawkes masks, Antonio Smith's story died, too, for a time.

He was a black child allegedly killed by black gangsters, so the politics apparently weren't right for outrage. And the loudest sound after Antonio died was of his mother, sobbing.

Four men with gang ties have been charged with murder. Allmon, the alleged triggerman, has a tattoo that says "Blessed" inked into his chest.

After their arrests, prosecutors said they made statements admitting their involvement. Video surveillance reportedly spotted their cars as they snaked down 71st Street, crossing from their turf on the east of the railroad viaduct just east of Kimbark Avenue.

To the east lives the Sircon City faction of the Gangster Disciples. To the west is the Pocket Town faction of the GDs. That's where Antonio was killed.

Police said they were led to the alleged murder weapon by Allmon. They said he dropped it into a sewer.

Sources familiar with the investigation said Tuesday that the weapon found by police is a Russian-made Baikal .380-caliber semi-automatic handgun.

"We've seen those shootings when one gangbanger is shooting at another and the poor 2-year-old girl down the block gets killed," Alvarez said, her voice rising in anger.

"This child was executed," she said. "When you talk about the amount of bullets that went into him, I mean, he's got six gunshot wounds of entrance. That's not some stray bullet."

Jimmy's coming to Chicago for Rahm, and that's national news. But the activists who flooded Ferguson and got their TV face time, where are they?

http://townhall.com/columnists/john...s-coming-but-where-are-the-activists-n1896140
 

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1 charged in killing of Demario Bailey, 15, who tried to save twin brother from robbe

1 charged in killing of Demario Bailey, 15, who tried to save twin brother from robbers

Stephanie K. Baer, Kim Geiger
8:59 pm, December 14, 2014
Demario and Demacio Bailey, close-knit identical twins known within their South Side charter school community as the “Bailey boys,” were raised in a home that prioritized schooling and safety.

A member of the school PTA and always on top of their grades, the boys’ mother insisted on escorting them to and from Johnson College Prep in Englewood, one of the city’s toughest neighborhoods. But like most 15-year-olds, Demario and Demacio were eager for more freedom. So their mother recently began allowing them to get around more on their own, the boys’ grandmother, Bernice Fitzpatrick, told the Tribune.

Tragedy struck the family Saturday afternoon, when Demario was shot and killed as he tried to defend his brother during an armed robbery while the boys were walking just a few blocks from their school.

“They were raised to stick together,” Fitzpatrick, 62, said Sunday. “We always said, ‘Take after your brother, look after your brother.’”

Carlos Johnson, 17, has been charged with first-degree murder in Demario's slaying and with another robbery that took place nearby not long before Demario's slaying, said Cook County state's attorney's spokeswoman Sally Daly. Johnson was expected to appear for a bond hearing Monday.

The shooting rocked the charter school community, where parents, teachers and classmates gathered Sunday to remember Demario, an honor roll student who was described as a kindhearted kid who stayed out of trouble.

“You hear all the time (after shootings) about, ‘This was a good kid,’” said Jack Greenfield, a math teacher and football coach at Johnson who was Demario’s algebra teacher. “This was actually a legit good kid.”

Demario and Demacio had taken the No. 29 State Street bus Saturday afternoon to 63rd Street, where they got off and started walking west through a long, dark viaduct toward the school where Demacio had basketball practice, according to a police report. Four robbers confronted them under the viaduct, the report said.

Ordering the brothers to “give it up,” the robbers started going through their pockets, the police report said. A struggle and fight ensued, and Demario, the older of the twins by five minutes, saw that one of the robbers was on top of his brother. He went to Demacio’s aid, telling the assailant to “Get off my brother,” and was able to push the robber off, according to the report.

At that point, Demacio saw a weapon appear from one of the assailants and heard a shot go off, the report said. He thought Demario was right behind him as he ran away.

“But when he turned around, he didn’t see him,” Fitzpatrick said.

Demacio found his brother on the ground with a gunshot wound to his chest, the police report said. Demario was pronounced dead at the scene minutes later.

The robbers were last seen running toward Wabash Avenue, police said. They said they took several people in for questioning soon after the shooting, and investigators think the attackers were responsible for two other armed robberies in the area earlier the same day.

Fitzpatrick called her grandson "honorable."

“Demario was an excellent child, all my grandchildren are … just honorable children," she said. "That’s how they were raised. They were raised to be good children.”

Saturday was one of the few times the boys had been allowed to walk out on the South Side streets alone, Fitzpatrick said.

“Our children have always been dropped up and picked up and escorted,” Fitzpatrick said.

“They were starting to say, ‘Ma, we can do things on our own,’” she said. “We promised them we would give them a little more freedom. We let them go for one month. I don’t know what we’re supposed to do now.”

Demario and Demacio, both sophomores at Johnson, were inseparable.

Classmates and teachers described the elder twin as a supportive peer both inside and outside of the classroom during a memorial service in the school gymnasium, where Demario spent many afternoons cheering for his brother on the basketball court.

They took turns sharing their memories of Demario with the crowd, eliciting laughter and tears.

“He truly embodied the motto, ‘I am my brother’s keeper,' ” said Ketica Guter, a history teacher who works with the sophomore class.

“That goes beyond Demacio,” Guter added, saying that Demario was that way with his friends and the whole Johnson community.

One classmate said that Demario was the only person who could make her smile at school and that his death was “eye-opening.”

“That was my favorite boy,” she said.

The twins also had a 3-year-old brother and a 19-year-old brother who studies at Northeastern Illinois University, Fitzpatrick said. Their mother could not be reached Sunday.

At school, Demario participated in many extracurricular activities, including the Marine Corps Junior ROTC program and choir, family and staff said. Demacio played on the football and basketball teams, and Demario was his biggest supporter.

“He was like a shadow to (Demacio),” Greenfield said. “He would sit and watch all the practices, he’d come to every game and he’d wait for his brother.”

Demario was “funny, smiling all the time,” said his adviser, Rachel Terry. He came from a home with a “very involved mother.”

Garland Thomas-McDavid, founding principal at the charter school, said gun violence is something her students have had to deal with since the school opened in 2010.

“It sounds crazy saying it, but kids get shot around here all the time,” she said. “But we were always lucky that no one ever died.”

That changed over the summer, when Marcel Pearson, a 17-year-old Johnson graduate, was gunned down two days before he was supposed to begin orientation at Western Illinois University.

The school has 10 officials, including some off-duty police officers, who monitor the streets nearby to make sure students can come and go safely, Thomas-McDavid said.

“Sometimes when you listen to the walkies, it sounds like you’re in a war zone,” she said.

Demario and Demacio were in the area over the weekend, when school officials aren’t around to police the streets.

Frustrated by what she views as a lack of attention to the dangers her students face, Thomas-McDavid issued a statement late Saturday saying that she wouldn’t mind “if it takes (martial) law to get this in order.”

“I know I speak for every educator who continuously deals with this type of tragedy in saying we are sick and tired of being sick and tired,” she wrote. “The apologies are not enough, and after all the fanfare is over, someone still has to put their baby in the ground.”

Thomas-McDavid opened the school Sunday in order to allow students and staff to grieve together. Asked if she would allow news cameras to film the gathering, the teary-eyed principal welcomed the cameras in.

“They need to see what the kids are going through,” she said. “We just can’t keep covering it up.”

Dozens of students gathered in the school gym where they cried and consoled one another and wrote notes of encouragement for Demario’s family.

Keontay Thompson, 19, a senior who plays on the football and basketball teams with Demacio, said he usually walks through the viaduct with the twins on the way to practice but wasn’t with them Saturday when the shooting happened.

He said Johnson students know the area around the viaduct is dangerous because it’s so poorly lit and not well-monitored.

“We always have to stick together,” he said while standing Sunday at the site of the shooting as activists walked in the street waving signs that said, “Stop gun violence NOW.”

“It’s really hurtful knowing I wasn’t there to help him,” Thompson said.

http://my.chicagotribune.com/#section/-1/article/p2p-82284269/
 

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Deadly weekend in Chicago highlights city's gang warfare

Deadly weekend in Chicago highlights city's gang warfare
By DON BABWIN
2 hours ago

CHICAGO (AP) — A 7-year-old boy who was one of seven people shot to death in Chicago over the holiday weekend was the son of a gang leader with a lengthy arrest record, and police say the man's refusal to cooperate with detectives highlights the city's ongoing challenge to curb gang-related violence.

During the Fourth of July weekend, 48 people were wounded by gunfire in 34 separate incidents in Chicago. Seven homicides also were reported during the same three-day period last year, and this year's total in the nation's third-largest city nearly matched the combined numbers for New York (one), Los Angeles (three) and Houston (five) — the other cities that rank in the top four in population.

Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy has repeatedly lamented that the lack of tough gun laws in Illinois has made the streets that much more dangerous because of the quickness with which people arrested on gun charges are back on the street.

Among them, he said, is the father of the young shooting victim. McCarthy said that the bullet that struck Amari Brown in the chest "was meant for his father," whom he described as a "ranking gang member" who had been arrested 45 times.

Antonio Brown's refusal to cooperate with the investigation is a familiar hurdle for Chicago police that as of Monday had yet to capture a suspect in Amari's death.

After Brown was arrested for gun possession last April, he was released on bail the next day, McCarthy said.

"If Mr. Brown is in custody, his son is alive," McCarthy told reporters Sunday.

Brown's family bristled at the suggestion that Brown bore any responsibility for his son's death as well as the contention that he was the intended victim.

"He was in the house using the washroom," his uncle, Carl O'Neal, told The Associated Press on Monday. "Yes, he's a former gang member. Yes, he's been arrested, but what does that have to do with a man shooting at a group of kids?"

The Rev. Ira Acree, who appeared with Brown and other family members at a news conference Sunday, also questioned McCarthy's assertion that the boy would be alive if his father was in custody.

"I can understand his anger and his frustration ... but the fact is 50 people were shot over the weekend," said Acree. "Are you going to tell me that all 50 people had a relative that caused them to be shot?"

Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel visited with the Brown family on Monday and expressed concern about Antonio Brown's actions.

"The idea that you're taking a 7-year old out at midnight, you have a responsibility to that child, and then to cooperate with the police department on a crime committed to that 7-year old," Emanuel said.

Three years after capturing the attention of the country when the total of homicides topped the 500 mark, the number of slayings is once again climbing after dropping each of the last two years. As of June 28, there were 203 homicides compared to 171 for the same period last year. And there were 1,045 shooting incidents compared to 866 for the same period last year.

That total does not include the slaying of 17-year-old Vonzell Banks, who was shot to death Friday afternoon at a playground named after Hadiya Pendleton. It was Pendleton, an honor student, who in 2013 became a national symbol of gun violence in Chicago when she was gunned down as she talked with friends just a mile from President Barack Obama's South Side home just days after returning from the president's inauguration.

http://news.yahoo.com/deadly-weekend-chicago-highlights-citys-gang-warfare-203911817.html
 
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