Posted on 06/30/2014 9:38:53 AM PDT by Responsibility2nd
CHICAGO (STMW) One person was killed and at least 35 others were wounded in weekend shootings across the city.
The fatal shooting happened Saturday morning in the Humboldt Park neighborhood on the West Side.
Here is how to keep up with the score.
http://voices.suntimes.com/news/breaking-news/chicago-weekend-shootings-tracker-for-june-20-22-2014/
Or Baghdad.
“I also cannot figure out if they go back to see if people shot later died.
. . .
Secondly, there appears to be little reporting on the apprehension of the criminals.”
I sent the reporting team a note asking these two questions and got very quick response back.
One, they do review morgue reports to see if wounded victims died and add them to the count sometimes months later.
Two, they agree tracking apprehension and adjudication is very difficult. Here is their response on that.
Just a quick follow up on the subject of apprehension and adjudication.
The “clearance rate” in Chicago in 2013 was approximately 30%. There are good details in this article by Mark Konkol (http://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20140124/chicago/chicago-detectives-solved-higher-percentage-of-murders-2013). Unforuntately, Mr. Konkol does not seem to understand what homicide clearance means, so you should disregard any talk in that piece of “solved” cases and the like. Clearance means police were able to arrest and charge a suspect on suspicion of murder. A cleared homicide is not “solved” unless you believe that arrested suspects are inherently and automatically guilty.
Data on convictions may be requested via Freedom of Information Act requests to the Cook County Clerk who maintain court records. However, the court’s data is exempt from FOIA requests. Therefore, responding to the requests is at the discretion of the Chief Judge of the Cook County Court. See http://crime-punishment.smartchicagoapps.org/court.html for details.
To my knowledge, the only successful request for such data in bulk was made by the Chicago Justice Project and covers convictions (not all cases) from 2005-2009. This data will be released to the public in July or August of this year. This data could provide a possible measure of the percentage of all homicides that resulted in a conviction from that time period by comparing against police records from the time, but there are serious methodological questions that would haunt such an analysis without more robust data.
In short, journalists and citizens in Cook County do not have reliable, consistent data about the process and end results of homicide investigations.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.