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2 Chicago neighborhoods exemplify fluid nature of violence

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(MCT) — CHICAGO — Whenever a young parishioner asks for a ride home from his Back of the Yards church or evening basketball practice, the Rev. David Kelly obliges without question. He knows the youth is just looking for safe passage from one gang territory to another in what has become an increasingly violent neighborhood this year.

But just 10 miles south in Englewood, a neighborhood notorious for violence, resident and community activist Cynthia Lomax has noticed quieter weekends and fewer sidewalk memorials to murder victims. She’s spotted more uniformed and plainclothes police officers patrolling the streets, their large, boxy vehicles an easy tell.

As a particularly bloody year for Chicago draws to a close, an added police presence in Englewood has contributed to a 16 percent reduction in homicides. But next door in Back of the Yards, gang conflicts and shootings are on the rise.

The two neighborhoods are examples of the perplexing and fluid nature of violence in Chicago and how successes in one neighborhood can still leave police and residents scrambling to tamp down rising violence in another.

With 12 days left in the year, 490 homicides have been recorded across Chicago as of Wednesday, the most since 513 homicides in 2008. The city also has had just over 2,400 reported shootings, 11 percent more than by this time in 2011, police statistics show.

Chicago’s mounting homicide toll has plagued the department all year, since a particularly violent winter drew negative attention to a city already under a national spotlight for the NATO summit. While the force was praised for how it handled the summit-related protests, it faced criticism for the rising violence as well as how it deployed resources, particularly its use of police during a series of assaults in the city’s Gold Coast.

Despite the spike in homicides, police and city officials emphasize that overall crime is down across the city. They have touted successes in neighborhoods such as Englewood and West Garfield Park and celebrated a reported 8.5 percent drop throughout the city in robberies, assaults, batteries, thefts and other crimes.

And while homicides soared in the first quarter of this year, police say efforts they’ve made slowed increases since.

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