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Chicago hit by most violent January in decade

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With two days still left in the month, this marked the second consecutive January in which Chicago has hit at least 40 homicides. The 40 homicides last January represented a jump of more than 50 percent from 28 in January 2011. While Chicago never quite recovered the rest of the year from an even sharper jump in violence over the first quarter of 2012, homicides fell or were flat in the last four months of 2012.

Crime experts caution it’s way too early to suggest the disappointing January numbers mean violence in Chicago will continue at a similar pace throughout this year.

But Arthur Lurigio, a criminlogist, said the January numbers sure aren’t encouraging.

“It certainly bodes ill for this year’s projected homicide figures because it appears to be a continuation of the violent trends observed through many months of 2012,” says Lurigio, a professor at Loyola University Chicago.

The city’s homicide woes continue to draw unwanted attention for McCarthy and Mayor Rahm Emanuel, including a parody article Tuesday in the Onion, a satirical national publication, that was headlined: “Chicago’s Annual Homicide Drive Off To Most Promising Start In Decades.”

But there was no humor to be found in violence-plagued spots principally on the city’s South and West Sides.

Through Monday, the West Side’s Harrison District leads the city in homicides with seven, three on Saturday alone, followed by the South Side’s Englewood District with five. While it is clearly too early to draw conclusions, those numbers have to be worrisome for police officials because throughout 2012, Emanuel and McCarthy had touted those two districts as successes after they flooded “conflict zones” in both with additional officers a year ago.

University of Chicago criminologist Jens Ludwig said a plausible explanation for the woeful January homicide numbers could be the budget problems confronting cities throughout the country. Emanuel’s budget for 2013 calls for the hiring of an additional 500 police officers, but the police union has contended that number falls far short of the void created by cops retiring.

Ludwig said big cities such as Chicago could use help from the federal government.

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