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A city in crisis seeks answers

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(MCT) — A decade and some 4,500 Chicago homicides separate the shooting deaths of 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton and 12-year-old Rene Guillen, two tragedies that in many ways bookend the city's up-and-down struggle to contain gun violence.

President Barack Obama returns to his hometown Friday to put Hadiya's slaying center stage in a growing national debate over firearms and senseless bloodshed, a connection he also stressed earlier this week in his annual State of the Union address.

But the brutal killing of Rene back in April 2003 also helped galvanize public outrage, providing a significant catalyst for a city crackdown on violent crime that — while no panacea — still helped for years to tamp down the level of mayhem.

For more than a year now, however, the body count on Chicago's streets has climbed, even as it has dropped in other large cities like New York and Los Angeles. It is a sorrowful and politically charged development that led Hadiya to her grave and the president to publicly mourn her and demand action.

The spike in violence may have something to do with the easy availability of lethal firepower in Chicago despite strict gun laws. But that's only part of a very complicated problem, one with no simple solution that's arousing both soul-searching and blame-shifting.

Under pressure to do something about the violence in 2003, city leaders, as well as federal authorities, put new strategies in place to reduce the number of shootings in Chicago. To a degree, it worked. But in subsequent years, the pressure to address entrenched violence eased, a series of police scandals weakened support for aggressive street tactics and the city's budget woes ate away at resources.

With at least 1,000 fewer police officers in the department than just a few years ago, Mayor Rahm Emanuel sought innovations that relied on doing more with less. Over the past year, the results have put pressure on the mayor and his police superintendent. Homicides and shootings both registered double-digit percentage increases in 2012.

At a recent news conference, Emanuel seemingly called out federal prosecutors for not doing enough to fight crime in Chicago. Meanwhile, critics of the mayor argue that the surge in violence tracks closely with his decision to do away with some aggressive but controversial policing strategies implemented in the wake of Rene's death years ago.

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