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A city in crisis seeks answers

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Even in what is considered a "good" year, Chicago is a city awash in homicide: 435 in 2011 and 506 in 2012. This January alone saw 42 deaths, the most recorded for that month since 2002. Occasionally, however, some attacks are so brazen that they sear the public consciousness.

Such was the case with Hadiya, a drum majorette gunned down in a North Kenwood neighborhood park last month, days after returning from Washington, where she took part in Obama's inauguration festivities.

And such was also the case with Rene, a happy-go-lucky kid struck as he left a city-sponsored school cleanup. Gang members wrongly thought the friends he was walking with were members of a rival gang they blamed for stealing a bicycle from them.

For Herlinda Guillen, Rene's mother, what happened to Hadiya is an all-too-chilling reminder of the past.

"I feel bad about it," Guillen said in Spanish, tears welling in her eyes as she stood in the kitchen of her family's apartment in the Back of the Yards neighborhood. "Seeing it on the news, it hurts."

Gang graffiti litters her block, the same one her family lived on when Rene died. It is two blocks from the spot where he was killed, a painful daily reminder.

Guillen said she hopes the reaction to Hadiya's murder, including Obama's visit, will help prevent future killings, especially of children. But she is not optimistic.

"Hopefully there will be a change," she said, "but I don't know how."

Her son's death appeared to accomplish just that, at least for a time. "Enough is enough," declared then-Mayor Richard Daley just days after Rene was shot. Not long after, the Police Department began sending large units of uniformed officers to swarm neighborhoods when violence erupted.

The presence and visibility of so many cops, night after night, was credited with quelling the mayhem. In 2004, the first full year of implementation of the units and Chicago's adaptation of a computerized crime analysis system borrowed from New York, the homicide rate in the city dropped nearly 25 percent.

Police argued that criminals were more wary of being stopped and caught carrying a firearm. But the creation of the so-called Targeted Response Unit was accomplished by borrowing officers from districts across the city and detailing them to the new saturation patrols — an approach that Emanuel and his police superintendent, Garry McCarthy, did not think was the most effective way to patrol the city.

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