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Report: Chicago must overhaul homicide investigations

Researchers said inadequate training and a failure to help witnesses contribute to the department’s low clearance rate

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In this Aug. 20, 2017, file photo, a police detective walks past the body of a man fatally shot in the parking lot of an event center in Chicago.

Photo/AP

Don Babwin
Associated Press

CHICAGO — The Chicago Police Department must make significant changes in the way it investigates homicides in a city where more than half of killings go unsolved, a police research group said in a report released Wednesday.

The Police Executive Research Forum found problems in the department that included inadequate training; a lack of a detective unit devoted solely to homicide investigations; and a failure to adequately help witnesses or even have a witness protection unit that is critical in persuading people to come forward to help solve crimes.

The report shows the clearance rate for homicides in 2017, the most recent year listed, was at 36% for the nation’s third-largest city, compared with 84% for New York and 73% for Los Angeles. Chicago has a higher homicide rate than both of those cities.

Chicago police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said the clearance rate in homicide investigations has climbed from about 30% in 2016 to more than 46% so far this year. He credited changes the department has already undertaken, including the hiring of 300 detectives.

Other problems listed in the report include too few detectives assigned to stations in areas where slayings are committed and no “tracking mechanism to determine the exact number of homicide cases assigned to each detective.” It noted that detectives and their supervisors were confused about just how many homicide cases each detective had been assigned in the past year.

In a news release, Police Superintendent Eddie Johnson and Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the department is setting up a new team to help manage and implement the changes recommended by the research group.

“With these findings in hand, the City of Chicago is acting today to ensure that police officers and detectives have the systems of support that are required not only for solving crimes — but for preventing them from occurring in the first place,” said Lightfoot.

In recent years, as homicides and violent crime in Chicago received national attention and the city came under withering criticism from President Donald Trump, a companion story has been detectives’ inability to arrest suspects for both homicides and non-fatal shootings. However, homicide numbers in Chicago have been trending downward over the last couple of years, after hitting a 19-year high of 770 in 2016. Police say 660 homicides were committed in 2017 and 561 were committed in 2018.

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