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Homicides, shootings, doubled in Chicago so far this year

CHICAGO -- Homicides and shootings have doubled in Chicago so far this year compared with the same period in 2015, and police have seized fewer illegal guns -- more possible signals that officers have become less aggressive in the aftermath of a shooting video released last fall.

Interim Police Superintendent John Escalante said Tuesday that he was so concerned about officers possibly holding back that he filmed a video for the entire department in which he encouraged them to do their jobs and assured them that a federal probe of the force was not aimed at individuals.

A safe space in one of Chicago's violent neighborhoods 03:06

"We are aware that there is a concern among the rank and file about not wanting to be the next YouTube video that goes viral," Escalante said in the video before introducing a segment of his own to remind viewers "why we took this job and swore this oath of office."

The statistics come almost exactly three months after the city on the orders of a judge released the video of officer Jason Van Dyke firing 16 shots at Laquan McDonald, a black teen killed in 2014. Since that day, Van Dyke has been charged with murder, and Superintendent Garry McCarthy has been fired. The Department of Justice launched a civil rights probe of the police force, and Mayor Rahm Emanuel has sought to regain public trust in the department and his own leadership.

The crime figures offer a stark reminder that the nation's third-largest city is nowhere near shedding its reputation for frequent street violence. The vast majority of the bloodshed is happening in neighborhoods on the south and west sides, away from the Loop business district.

Just two hours into the New Year, 24-year-old Deandre Holiday was gunned down after a fight at a New Year's Eve party spilled into the street. He was Chicago's first homicide of what's so far been a bloody 2016, CBS News' Adriana Diaz reported.

In the first two months of the year, authorities recorded 95 homicides, compared with 48 for the same period last year. Thus far, there have been 406 shootings, or more than twice as many as the 180 reported in the same two-month period in 2015.

Raydell Lacey's 19-year-old grandson Eric was one of those killed by guns this year.

"He was headed on the right path. You know? To his full potential," said Lacey to CBS News' Adriana Diaz.

Eric had just started a job, and hoped to join the Navy. But in January he was shot in the head in an apparent ambush. Lacey says he wasn't in a gang.

"Before he passed, they said he said 'We good? We good y'all?' Then they didn't hear him any more, and he just slumped over," said Lacey, weeping.

The McDonald case raised concerns that officers, fearful of attracting negative attention, may be pulling back and becoming more passive. Quietly, officers say they are not going to take chances that might land them in legal trouble or threaten their jobs and pensions.

"I'm hearing that police are standing down because they're afraid what might happen to them, that when they get a call, they wait to see if someone answers it first," said the Rev. Michael Pfleger, a prominent Roman Catholic priest and activist on the South Side. "I get really angry about that. If they are not going to do police work, they need to get out."

Evidence of a pullback starts with an 80 percent decrease in the number of street stops that the officers have made since the first of the year. Escalante said he believes that decrease is largely tied to the fact that since the first of the year, officers have been required to fill out far lengthier forms than the brief "contact cards" they used to use.

The new forms were the result of changes in state law and an agreement between the department and the American Civil Liberties Union of Illinois that required Chicago police to more thoroughly document and monitor street stops.

Escalante said he hopes the newer and simpler forms the officers started filling out on Tuesday will help bring those numbers back up.

Officers' unwillingness to make as many stops as they once did might also explain the steep decline in gun seizures. Normally, the number of illegal guns recovered by police would climb with the number of homicides and shooting incidents, but the opposite has happened. So far this year, the total number of illegal guns seized by the department has fallen from 955 in the first two months of last year to 829 so far this year.

Chicago gun violence soars 02:21

The decrease is particularly striking after the way McCarthy used to put seized weapons on display at news conferences. The displays were meant to show that his department was taking more guns off the streets than any other police force in the nation and to urge lawmakers to enact tougher gun laws.

The president of the union representing Chicago police officers did not respond Tuesday to messages from The Associated Press seeking comment.

Escalante, who has not put guns on display as often, said he has not deemphasized gun seizures. He pointed to encouraging recent signs that include a 33 percent increase in gun arrests in the last four weeks and a 20 percent increase in the number of street stops officers have made in the last two weeks.

He said he is optimistic that the street-stop numbers will continue to climb with the new shorter form that replaces the two-page investigatory stop form officers have been filling out since Jan. 1. And he said he is hopeful that certain changes, including the deployment of 100 newly trained sergeants to increase supervision, will ease the crime numbers.

"I believe they (officers) are starting to make the effort again," he said, "to try to do what they can to bring this violence down."

Here's what we know about the crime figures:

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MORE VIOLENCE: At the end of February, the city had recorded 95 homicides and more than 400 shootings for 2016. Those are double the numbers from last January and February. February alone saw 165 shootings and 43 homicides.

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FEWER GUN SEIZURES: Police seized at least 110 fewer illegal guns than in the same period last year, a sharp contrast from the administration of former Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy, who often displayed seized weapons at news conferences. Officers made many fewer street stops, too.

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THE IMPLICATIONS: The statistics could be another sign that officers have become less aggressive since the release of a video showing the fatal police shooting of Laquan McDonald. The death of the black teenager led to weeks of protests and murder charges against one officer. Interim Police Superintendent John Escalante said he was so concerned about officers possibly holding back that he filmed a video for the entire department in which he encouraged them to do their jobs.

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