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Chicago takes a leading role in national gun debate

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Gingrich “has been in Chicago, and he can see we don’t have a Berlin-type wall with checkpoints around it,” said Rep. Mike Quigley, a Chicago Democrat. “You can go to any gun show in Indiana ... and get a gun without a background check.”

Statistics show that more than half of the guns seized by Chicago police in the last 12 years came from other states.

And a University of Chicago study found that more than 1,300 guns confiscated by police since 2008 were purchased at a single store just outside city limits. More than 270 were used in crimes.

Chicago leaders have embraced the city’s role in the debate.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel is proposing a law to increase jail time for anyone who fails to report guns that have been lost, stolen or sold. At the U.S. Conference of Mayors, he urged fellow leaders to follow his example and sever financial ties with gun manufacturers that oppose gun-reform legislation.

His police superintendent, Garry McCarthy, has repeatedly compared the laws in Chicago and New York, where he spent the bulk of his career on the city’s police force.

“When people get caught with guns in New York, they go to jail,” McCarthy said, pointing to the case of Plaxico Burress, the NFL football player who only had to shoot himself accidentally in the leg to land in prison for 20 months.

Although Chicago has many gun laws on the books, the maximum penalties are typically no more than six months in jail, “which is something that a criminal laughs at,” McCarthy said.

In 2012, Chicago police seized more than 7,400 guns – about three times more than officers in New York. In the first three-plus weeks of this year, police seized 450 guns, compared with 99 in New York. McCarthy says that disparity helps explain why Chicago’s homicide rate rose last year while New York’s fell to a historic low.

For residents of some troubled neighborhoods, the abundance of weapons helps explain why they hear so many gunshots so often.

“People are afraid to go out, sit on their porches,” said Nathaniel Pendleton, the grand uncle of Hadiya Pendleton. “It’s horrific. Every family is suffering.”

Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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