Activist Chicago priest reflects on
city's 'shameful' violent year
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[December 09, 2016]
By Timothy Mclaughlin
CHICAGO (Reuters) - A longtime activist
Chicago priest who has marched in protests, attended vigils and
delivered sermons decrying violence in the city's most deadly year in
nearly two decades, fears the surge in murders could continue into 2017.
Father Michael Pfleger, pastor of St. Sabina Catholic Church on
Chicago's predominantly black South Side where many of the more than 700
murders occurred, said in a telephone interview on Thursday that police
were struggling to rebuild trust with people as guns were also flowing
onto the streets.
"This year is through the roof," Pfleger, 67, said. "The numbers are
shameful," he added. "They should be embarrassing to us and they should
make us outraged."
There have been 711 murders in the third largest city in the United
States so far in 2016, the Chicago Police Department said, a number not
seen since 1997 when 761 were murdered, and more than Los Angeles and
New York combined reported this year. Both cities have considerably
higher populations than Chicago's 2.7 million residents.
Chicago's police department has undertaken a series of reforms following
the shooting death of a black teenager by a white officer and is under
federal investigation to determine whether the department has
systematically violated constitutional rights.
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Pfleger said the number of guns in the city had increased
dramatically over the past 20 years, contributing to the large death
toll.
"You have more guns now than we have ever had. America, whether we
want to admit it or not, has made them part of our wardrobe," the
priest said.
The number of guns recovered for the year through November was
nearly 8,000, up 20 percent from a year ago, while gun-related
arrests were up 8 percent, police said.
"The levels of violence we have seen this year in some of our
communities is absolutely unacceptable," police Superintendent Eddie
Johnson said in a statement at the beginning of December.
Much of Chicago's violence occurs on its poverty stricken west and
south sides.
(Reporting by Timothy Mclaughlin; editing by Grant McCool)
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