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Chicago mayor inches closer to police redeployment plan in wake of violent January

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The neighborhood lost dedicated tactical teams, as well as a commander and beat cops who knew the area well, according to a homicide detective with several years of experience on the South Side. The district was absorbed into the Wentworth District, headquartered at 51st Street and Wentworth Avenue, an area farther south that historically has had a higher violent crime rate than the Kenwood-Oakland community.

Emanuel insisted his new revisions to policing strategy were not a reversal of course but rather a fine-tuning aimed at saturating areas where trouble is brewing—“before a flame becomes a fire, to put it out.”

While McCarthy kept a smaller force of “area teams” in place after the 2011 change, law enforcement sources critical of the broader disbandment said that the remaining teams were too small to be effective. When implemented, Thursday’s announced changes would return the saturation team force to 400 officers, nearly as many as were dedicated to such patrols at the height of their use in the last decade.

A police supervisor familiar with Emanuel’s latest plan said the returning officers would even be picked from the rolls of the old saturation teams.

The distinction between the saturation strategies Emanuel and McCarthy say they want to engage in now and what they did away with in 2011 is lost on some longtime investigators who had worked with similar teams created in 2003. Those efforts were modeled after a technology based system called Compstat that McCarthy built his career running years ago in the New York City Police Department.

In the Chicago version, which was called the Deployment Operations Center, police added large units to tamp down violence after crime analysts pinpointed likely violence hot spots.

Last decade, those saturation teams were used in violence hot spot areas that were pinpointed by crime analysts in the Deployment Operations Center, and homicides dropped by 25 percent the first full year the system was in place in 2004. And the murder numbers stayed roughly flat for several years until McCarthy and Emanuel did away with the large teams.

The new vision of saturation policing that McCarthy is now describing appears to differ little from the old one he criticized. “Don’t burn down the city to save it,” he said last summer, describing the approach under former Chicago Mayor Richard Daley and a succession of police superintendents.

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