Crime & Safety
12-Year Homicide Study Ranks BWP, Humboldt Park, Austin
A recent report ranks the Bucktown and Wicker Park neighborhoods on the low end, compared to nearby Chicago communities. Austin was among the deadliest parts of the city. Learn what other details the study uncovered.

A recent study places the Bucktown and Wicker Park areas among those with the lower murder rates during the past decade.
The New York Times analyzed more than 6,100 homicides within Chicago city limits from Jan. 1, 2001 through Dec. 24, 2012, according to its "A Chicago Divided by Killings" report.
Areas were determined to be near a homicide if two or more occurred within a census block group at any time in the 12-year time frame.
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Bucktown and Wicker Park were among those plotted on the map. The communities have seen a total of 73 homicides since 2001, the most recent of which was reported in April 2012, according to City of Chicago data.
The Times reports:
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"Residents living near homicides in the last 12 years were much more likely to be black, earn less money and lack a college degree."
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Among the city's deadliest places was Austin, where 450 homicides are listed, according to the map. Nearby Lincoln Park joined neighborhoods like Hyde Park, home to the University of Chicago, which the report indicates had less than one homicide per year.
A recent Chicago Police news release indicates that the city finished 2012 with 506 homicides, which is 16 percent more than the previous year.
"The total, 71 more than the 435 committed in 2011, was the highest for the city since 2008, when 512 homicides were recorded," reports CBS news. "At the same time, the rate of killings has slowed significantly since the first quarter of 2012 when the city’s homicide rate—more than 60 percent higher compared to the same period in 2011 ... —made national headlines."
The report states that the city will be focusing on both "intelligence gathering" and placing more officers on patrol. Doing so may allow authorities to track rival gangs, the story says.
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However, according to a recent analysis of beat officers throughout the city, there are fewer patrolling the streets in Bucktown and Wicker Park than before Rahm Emanuel took office.
While the local 14th Chicago Police Department District shows a loss of nine officers, the adjacent 18th and 19th districts decreased their forces by 30 and 34 beat officers, respectively, the report says.
The most significant losses were found in those latter two districts, which were joined by the 12th, 13th, 24th and with the largest decline of 79 officers, the 2nd districts.
The total number in Chicago has fallen by 108—a direct contradiction to Emanuel's inauguration promise to increase the beat officer ranks.
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