Chicago cops making record-low numbers of arrests as violent crime soars

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Chicago cops making record-low numbers of arrests as violent crime soars​

By
Lee Brown
July 19, 2022 3:11pm
Updated

Embattled Chicago cops are making a record-low number of arrests — even as violent crimes soar to record highs, according to alarming data.

Arrests were made in just 12% of crimes reported last year, the lowest since 2001 when the data was first made public, according to an analysis by the Chicago Sun-Times.

It marks a dramatic drop-off from previous years, with the arrest rate almost 20 percentage points higher in 2005 at 31%, the paper noted.

The pullback is even more concerning because it came as the Windy City was rocked by one of its most violent years in decades — with the 797 homicides last year setting a 25-year record.

The murder rate was up 3% in 2021 compared with 2020 and criminal sexual assault was up a disturbing 27%, according to crime statistics.

Compared to pre-pandemic and pre-Black Lives Matter 2019, murder skyrocketed 60% in 2021.

Homicides are tracking down again in Chicago, dropping 14% so far this year, compared to this time last year — but crime overall in the Democrat-run city is up 34%, according to the latest figures.

The decline in arrests last year wasn’t just related to violent crime. The drop was seen across the board with fewer tickets and stops too — 69,000 “investigative stops” were made where people were searched on the streets, representing less than half the 155,000 recorded in 2019, the paper noted.

Police insiders blamed woke reforms implemented haphazardly in response to cops taking heat for shooting armed suspects in chases — even when they face imminent danger.

One beat cop told the Sun-Times that the deadly shooting of officer Ella French last year “make us take a step back and think: Who really cares about us at that point?”

“We can only support each other at the lowest ranks,” the officer says. “And if that means going out there and not doing anything, then that means going out there and not doing anything,” he said.
The same beat cop also complained that prosecutors now have such high thresholds to approve felony charges that officers second-guess when to engage “criminals with guns.”

That sentiment was shared by veteran cops who also said that previously routine actions now carry the risk of disciplinary action, including termination and even arrest.

“In the past, I might see a guy with a gun in his waistband, and I’d jump out and chase him … No way I’d do that now,” one decorated officer told the paper.

One academic blamed “The Ferguson Effect,” named for the rise in violent crime in the St. Louis suburb where police pulled back amid protests over the fatal police shooting of black teen Michael Brown in August 2014.

That then escalated with the swell of anti-police sentiment in 2020.

“It’s entirely possible that the murder of George Floyd, the highest-profile [police killing] in US history, played a role in increases in crime,” crime statistics researcher Deepak Premkumar told the paper.

Chicago Alderman Ray Lopez, however, blamed the startlingly low numbers of arrests on police Superintendent David Brown as well as progressive Mayor Lori Lightfoot, who has had cops turn their backs on her.

The record-low numbers of arrests come as violent crime soars.Getty Images
Together, they have “driven away officers” and caused “a personnel crisis within the department,” Lopez told the Sun-Times.

It is a self-perpetuating problem, he said, noting that “as fewer arrests are made, the legitimacy of law enforcement gets questioned” — and people “see that you can get away with almost anything in this city right now and not get caught.”

“Refusal to recognize that fact only makes Chicago all the more dangerous,” he warned.

Lightfoot admitted many of the issues cops complain about.

“Is this a difficult time to be the police? No question,” the divisive mayor told the Sun-Times.

“Are there officers that are concerned about being that next viral video? No question,” she said.

However, she downplayed the suggestion of a work stoppage, insisting that officers are “still running towards danger.”

Meanwhile, top cop Brown also dismissed the arrest data, saying higher rates from earlier years merely reflected a troubled era typified by “stopping and frisking” and mass incarcerating people of color.

“I’ve been doing this 40 years, and the highest arrest rates in the ‘80s and ‘90s did not make us safer,” the superintendent insisted.

“It was a flawed policing model,” he said.

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White or Black, this is one of the most retarded articles I have ever read.
 
Can confirm, at the risk of PLing, I live in the suburbs of Chicago and the shit seeping out here to surrounding burbs, as well as my medium sized village. Some of the mayors from surrounding towns are actually suing Shitcago and Beetlegeuse/Nig Fox/Prickster for allowing the rats to infest our neighborhoods.

I was a victim of a crime last year, not even sure if the cop was a Chicago PD investigator or an Illinois police one, he didn't give me a card and he was very disinterested from the get go. I was in shock so I don't remember much, but he did accuse me multiple times of flashing a piece at the nigger who attacked us, so that was cool. :\
 
This is just sad. There is such an easy solution. Just get Jussie Smollett to buy a few MAGA ats and hire some Nigerians. Wakanda in maybe two days, max. Chicagotopia, he shall name it, and the whole world will clap.
 
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Every time someone suggested the opposite, that Chicago be a nice non violent place to live they bitched and moaned to no end. I guess living in a nice place is colonialism or something.
 
And it did, on paper...... the BEST kind of reduction!
It's not even a theory that when a city wants to improve their numbers, they just stop arresting criminals. It is objectively a thing that they do. I've heard it from multiple cops in multiple blue cities. No arrests, no convictions, no crime stats. You can legally write down that crime in your city is plummeting even though the exact opposite is happening, because there is no system for counting all crime, just arrests and/or convictions.

The best thing you can find, if they bother to keep track of it, is victim statistics. They can refuse to prosecute a criminal, but the victim of his crime still exists and still gets put in a database somewhere. Those books can be cooked too, but it's much more difficult than simply pretending the problem doesn't exist.
 
It's time to wall off Chicago completely and let the scum fight among themselves. Chicago is a class example of how to not run a city and reduce crime.
 
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