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2 charged in slaying of Chicago honor student

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Just as the December killing of 20 children and six adults at an elementary school in Newtown, Conn., brought renewed scrutiny of the nation’s gun laws, the death of the popular Chicago teen has cast Chicago’s gun violence problem in a new light.

Earlier Monday, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel seemed to make just that point.

“The only time when the gun issue ever gets affected is when Newtown happens,” he said. “What happens in urban areas around the country too often ... gets put to the side.”

He said that while it’s not wrong that massacres stir such debate, what happens on the streets of Chicago and in other urban areas “gets put in a different value system.”

“These are our kids,” he said, his voice rising. “These are our children.”

Emanuel joined Police Superintendent Garry McCarthy and Cook County State’s Attorney Anita Alvarez at an afternoon news conference to announce they would push for tougher gun laws that would increase the minimum sentences and require offenders to serve at least 85 percent of their sentences.

They say the law now allows offenders to be released after serving no more than half their sentences and sometimes obtain their release after a matter of weeks. Emanuel said he has been busy talking to state lawmakers about sponsoring the legislation.

To underscore the dangers that releasing such offenders so quickly, McCarthy brought photographs of men who were either arrested on murder charges or who were homicide victims themselves while they were on parole, often just months after they were convicted of gun charges.

“The gun laws are not working,” said Alvarez. “They’re not deterring gangbangers. We’re not seeing gang member going to prison for long enough sentences.”

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