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ObamaNation See other ObamaNation Articles Title: Chicago Criminals Get Green Light To Rob: Odds Of Punishment Collapse To Near Zero By Ted Dabrowski and John Klingner of Wirepoints The decision to commit a crime in Chicago has never been easier. Criminals are almost guaranteed to profit because the chances of getting caught and punished have collapsed to near-zero. Its a big reason why the city is on target to hit a post-pandemic high in major crimes in 2023, currently up 32 percent vs. last year. Its also why crime is unlikely to slow down significantly any time soon. Mayor Brandon Johnson doesnt show any signs of imposing a higher cost on the citys criminals. And Cook County States Attorney Kim Foxx and Cook County Chief Judge Tim Evans havent changed their soft approach to crime either. Arrests The chance of getting arrested in Chicago for a major crime collapsed to just 5 percent in 2022. It was already a low 10 percent just four years ago. More than 68,000 major crimes were reported in Chicago last year. Only 3,228 of them resulted in arrests. Wirepoints calculations are based on the Chicago City Data Portal: Crime 2001 to Present. The arrest rate for criminal sexual assault? Just 3 percent. Ditto for Motor Vehicle Thefts. Burglaries were at only 4 percent and Robberies, 5 percent. For thefts over $500, the chance of getting busted is even lower, at just 1 percent. There were just 201 arrests out of 20,041 crimes reported last year. And youll avoid arrest 96 times out of 100 across any form of theft, which The New York Times recently reported. Unreported crimes It gets even better for Chicago criminals. The above data is just for crimes that are actually reported. The Bureau of Justice Statistics found that nationally in 2019, Only 40.9% of violent crimes and 32.5% of household property crimes were reported to authorities. So the real chance of getting caught is even lower than the 5 percent. Soft-on-crime leadership Criminals are far more likely to get verbal support for the crimes theyve committed, not condemnation, from Mayor Brandon Johnson. Kids just being silly, he said of the citys recent teen takeovers. Theyre not mob actions, he argued. We captured both those moments here and here. And theres the fact that even if criminals do get caught, the chances of being convicted and sentenced are low. States Attorney Kim Foxx and Chief Judge Tim Evans continue their light treatment of felony weapons charges and issue plea deals on the cheap. Criminals also know theyre less likely to be detained pre-trial, which Wirepoints covered in Close the revolving door for high-risk offenders in Cook County. There are about 800 more violent defendants out on electronic ankle bracelets at any one time many of them felons than there were in 2016. There are thousands more defendants out without any tracking. With the SAFE-T Act now law, the number of alleged criminals back on the streets before trial will increase further. 911 calls Yet another part of the calculus is the fact that Chicagos police arent responding to more than half of the urgent 911 calls they receive, part of what are called RAPs, or Radio Assignments Pending. Last year we reported on the 2021 data, which showed just over half of all priority 911 calls werent immediately handled. It was even worse in 2022. Of the more than 780,000 Priority 1 and 2 911 service calls, 60 percent had no Chicago police available to respond. Those delays included: Over 4,700 robbery-related calls, including 470 robberies in progress Over 19,400 calls of batteries in progress Nearly 2,000 reports of sexual assault, including 150 assaults in progress Over 18,000 reports of a person with a gun Over 1,200 reports of citizens shot Nearly 1,000 reports of citizens stabbed Making it worse The simple calculus of Chicagos criminals is clear when you look at the citys latest criminal fad: robberies. The ease of stealing cars like Kias and Hyundais, in combination with new laws prohibiting police from foot and car chases, has emboldened criminals even more. Criminals are now using those stolen cars to go on robbery sprees neighborhood to neighborhood, sometimes committing as many as 20 robberies within hours of each other, confident they wont get caught or even chased. Thats resulted in headlines like these: TV news crew robbed while reporting on Chicago robbery sprees; armed men targeted at least 30 people in about 12 hours Armed men rob victim, then carjack a nearby delivery driver in Logan Square during Thursday afternoon crime spree At Least 19 Armed Robberies Hit Logan Square Area In 2 Days, Police Say The story that perhaps best captures the restrictions placed on officers to do their jobs is in a recent article by CWB Chicago: At least 23 armed robberies reported Sunday as Chicago cops *again* see a robbery in progress, but dont chase the offenders:
CPD police officers on patrol and in a surveillance camera operations center witnessed an armed robbery in progress in the 6500 block of North Western Avenue. I can see them right now, the officer radioed. They got long guns. Theres a unit on scene. That patrol unit tried to pull the Durango over as they snaked through the North Side. Officers said four men were inside the SUV with their faces covered, bearing at least one rifle. But not long after the unit started to chase the SUV loaded with armed, masked men who had just robbed someone as Chicago police officers watched, a CPD sergeant ordered the squad car to terminate their efforts to stop the Durango. At least eleven people were robbed that night, including some after the police supervisor decided to let the group of armed robbers get away. More victims of crime Add all the above and its easy to see why criminals face a near-zero risk of punishment. That also helps explain why the citys crime numbers continue to rise. Chicagoans have been victimized more than 51,000 times during the first 8 months of 2023 already more than they were over the entirety of 2019, 2020 or 2021. Only homicides are down compared to last year, by 8 percent a small decline compared to other major cities. If the lawbreaking trend continues, 2023 major crimes will total 78,000, some 17% more than in 2022. For sure, theres a lot to be done to solve the crime crisis in Chicago. The social challenges and poor educational outcomes plaguing the city will take years, if not decades, to unwind. But to save lives in the meantime, and to make Chicago safer one of Mayor Johnsons key goals the near-zero cost of committing crimes must rise dramatically. And that means reforging the chain of criminal justice, from arresting to prosecuting to sentencing. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
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