08/23/10
From Chicago Tribune
303 people shot in July
Not Possible. Chicago is a strict NO GUNS city.
Yeah, the people who were shot had No Guns.
| By Annie Sweeney, Jeremy Gorner and Joe Germuska The bullets flew in neighborhoods from Roseland to Rogers Park, hitting victims ranging in age from 72 to just 1. The overwhelming majority of them were young men. The bullets nicked eyebrows and ankles. They also pierced whole communities, such as historic Woodlawn. More than 300 people were shot in Chicago last month. At least 33 of them have died. Some victims made headlines, like 13-year-old Robert Freeman Jr., who was fatally shot on his block while hanging out with friends. The city paused when two Chicago police officers — Michael Bailey and Thor Soderberg — were gunned down in uniform within weeks of each other. But many more victims of shootings in July — historically among the city's most dangerous months — suffered unnoticed by the rest of the city. Crime has been holding steady in Chicago in recent years. Through July, there have been 1,089 shootings in the city, a 2.4 percent decrease over last year. This July, police counted 221 shooting incidents, compared with 229 in July 2009. A review of seven years worth of shootings showed similar numbers. In other words, this was a typical July. The Chicago Police Department declined to provide the number of shooting victims in July or comment about the month's shooting tally. But a Tribune analysis of reported shootings, based on logs kept by police and reporting by the Tribune, counted 303 people who were injured in shootings last month. The Tribune's analysis showed that shootings occurred in predictable places — the Far South Side and West Side, for instance, where violence has been a pervasive problem for decades. It also showed how a bullet — even one that doesn't kill — pierced a path of destruction in victims, families and the neighborhoods where they live. Tribune reporter Cynthia Dizikes contributed to this report. * * * * * Mayor Daley proves that Gun Control Works. I don't have the time or the motivation to do the research, but I'm sure I'd find comparable statistics from New York City and Washington D.C., two other large No Gun cities, just off the top of my mind. I'd like to compare these three with someplace like Dallas where the burglar or mugger does NOT have the Mayor's guarantee that his chosen victim is unarmed. Around Dallas, larceny can be a capital offense, so a lot of robbers choose to pursue other occupations.
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08/23/10
From Chicago Tribune of 08/21/10
Off-duty cop shoots man who broke into his home, police say
| By Becky Schlikerman An off-duty Chicago police officer
shot and killed a man who broke into his South Side home Friday
morning, police said. The intruder, who police said was armed, had
not been identified as of late Friday. * * * * * Okay, everyone agrees it was a righteous shooting for the cop, and the burglar just picked the wrong house to rob. The story would have ended completely different if the policeman had been a civilian and not allowed to own a gun for self-defense. The burglar would have killed him, taken whatever valuables he wanted and disappeared.
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