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CHICAGO (AP) — There have been about twice as many homicides and shootings so far this year in Chicago as compared to the same period in 2015, but the number of illegal guns seized has dropped, police said Tuesday.
There were 95 homicides and more than 400 shooting incidents as of the end of February, the Chicago Police Department reported in a release. But the department has seized at least 110 fewer illegal guns than in the same period last year, Chicago police spokesman Anthony Guglielmi said. The month of February saw 43 homicides, 165 shootings and 187 shooting victims.
"The level of violence is unacceptable," the police release said.
Along with a dramatic drop in the number of street stops made by officers, that total adds to evidence that the release of a video showing the fatal police shooting of Laquan McDonald — and subsequent scrutiny of the department — has led to officers being less aggressive in efforts to combat crime.
McDonald was a black Chicago teenager who was shot 16 times by a white police officer in 2014. Officer Jason Van Dyke has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder charges in McDonald's death.
Chicago police cited several efforts to reduce gang activity and cited the city's historic challenge with guns.
"We will continue to work tirelessly on ways to stop violence, and restore accountability and trust in communities throughout the city," Interim Chicago Police Superintendent John Escalante said.
MONROE, Wash. (AP) — Eight years ago, when Noel Caldellis began serving time for killing a university student, his main objective was to make 20-plus years in prison pass as quickly as possible: work out, walk circles in the yard with inmates and watch TV.
A few years into his sentence at the Monroe Correctional Complex, Caldellis discovered he could spend his time developing his mind as well as his body, moving from the weight room to the classroom.
"It's helped me tremendously to grow as a person," said Caldellis, who is working on a bachelor's degree in history.
College education in American prisons is starting to grow again, more than two decades since federal government dollars were prohibited from being used for college programs behind bars.
The shift comes as everyone from President Barack Obama to state policymakers are looking for ways to get better results from the $80 billion the U.S. spends annually on incarceration.
Private money kept some prison education programs going when government dollars vanished. Several recent studies have shown those projects cut crime and prison costs by helping inmates go home and stay there instead of returning.
"Education in prison is transformative. It leads to safer communities and that's to the benefit of everyone," said Fred Patrick, director of the Center on Sentencing and Corrections at the Vera Institute of Justice, a New York nonprofit that combines research and demonstration projects associated with criminal justice.
Now more dollars are starting to follow those results, led by a recent decision by the U.S. Department of Education to experiment again with federal Pell Grants for inmate students. Forty-seven states have applied to participate in that program. States such as Washington, New York and California also are looking into spending more state dollars on these programs.
Rudy Madrigal, a student in Washington's University Beyond Bars program, said the experience transformed his life.
Madrigal, who expects to serve about 24 years for second-degree murder and assault with a deadly weapon, said he had a rough start to his sentence, getting in fights and other trouble.
He took his first class as another way to pass the time, but started getting excited about school after really connecting with a math teacher and finding out he could work toward a degree with a scholarship from a private foundation.
"Since I started school and educating myself, I've built up connections not just with people in here but with people out there," said Madrigal, who hopes after prison to get into social services to help other people.
While his path is personally enriching, state officials and prison experts say the community is the real beneficiary. A Rand Corporation study on education in prisons found inmates who participate in any kind of educational program behind bars are 43 percent less likely to reoffend.
Another study paid for by the Indiana Department of Correction found that while all kinds of inmate education has a positive influence on recidivism, inmates who take college courses have a prison return rate of less than 5 percent. That's compared to the national average of nearly 68 percent within three years of release, federal statistics show.
In Washington state, private donations have been paying for college classes at prisons across the state since 2008. The state also provides vocational education in subjects ranging from computer coding to auto mechanics.
One way Washington is unique among the states is how many inmates are participating in its education programs. It has about 16,500 inmates and 11,000 are involved in education, said Mike Paris, state administrator of offender education. In comparison, in California less than a quarter of its more than 112,000 inmates participate in educational programs.
The Vera Institute's Pathways from Prison to Post-Secondary Education Program, which is paid for with private foundation money, gives inmates a free college education, both in prison and after release, along with other supports such as mentoring and housing assistance for inmates in Michigan, New Jersey and North Carolina.
California will be starting a new pilot project this fall to pair four community colleges with state prisons to provide classes. In the past, most California inmates going to college took online classes supported by private dollars.
In 2014, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo said the state would be putting money back into inmate education programs. Lawmakers fought the plan, saying it rewarded criminal behavior, but others pointed out how much less expensive it is to educate prisoners than to incarcerate them.
Authorities estimate New York spends about $60,000 a year to incarcerate one prisoner while a year of college in prison will cost about $5,000.
Katja Schatte, a Ph.D. candidate at the University of Washington who teaches world history at the Washington state prison in Monroe, said criminal justice reform is intertwined with so many things happening in American society today — from the Black Lives Matter movement to inequity in public schools.
"People should be thinking about how do we keep people out of prisons in the first place and education is the answer," Schatte said.
WASHINGTON (AP) — Twelve states in all cast votes for presidential nominees on March 1, also known as Super Tuesday, the biggest single-day delegate haul of the nomination contests. Republicans are voting in 11 states, with 595 delegates at stake. Democrats are casting ballots in 11 states, too, plus American Samoa, with 865 delegates up for grabs.
Here's a look at what some voters had to say as they went to the polls Tuesday:
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Retired Marine Corps. Gen. Bill Weise joined about a dozen people waiting patiently in line at the Greenspring precinct in Fairfax County, which traditionally has the highest turnout in Virginia. The precinct is made up entirely of voters from the sprawling Greenspring retirement community.
The 86-year-old Weise says seven months of agonizing over who he'd vote for came down to the final 10 seconds before he filled in the bubble next to Ted Cruz's name. Ben Carson was his favorite candidate, but he concluded Carson wasn't viable. In sorting through the other GOP candidates, Weise felt Cruz would make better decisions than Trump.
"I've read Cruz's autobiography," he said. "He's not perfect. But show me somebody who is. ...The ideal candidate does not exist."
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Michael Kernyat of Chesterfield County, Virginia, voted for Ohio's Republican Gov. John Kasich even though he thinks he probably just threw his vote away.
The 60-year-old retired computer consultant said Kasich is "the most reasonable person running" but probably has no chance of beating Donald Trump.
"Nobody is going to stop that freight train," Kernyat said. "I think it's going to come down between him and Hillary."
He said people seem to be rallying behind Trump because "they're tired of politics as usual," but he prefers the moderate positions of Kasich.
"The only one who really scares me in this election is Bernie," Kernyat said.
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Nicole Freed, a disabled 32-year-old Army veteran who served in Iraq, describes herself a moderate Democrat but she voted in Virginia's GOP primary, choosing Marco Rubio, with the aim of knocking Trump off the ballot in November.
"I can't let Trump win," Freed said.
As for her November vote, she's conflicted.
"I'm probably going to end up voting for Hillary Clinton in the General Election just because — well, I don't really like her that much either but there aren't any good choices."
Freed called Bernie Sanders' tax plan "ludicrous" and said her preference for president would either be Ohio Republican John Kasich or Vice President Joe Biden, who decided against running.
Though she's against Trump, she said she's not against all of his ideas, and likes his stance on immigration.
"Some things I like about him," Freed said. "But I feel like he's going to get us into a war with somebody who's going to beat us. I don't think we can fight the entire Muslim world."
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Tyler Murphy, a 26-year-old Boston resident who works as a project manager for a construction company, voted for Trump on Tuesday even though he thinks the billionaire businessman is "undeniably wrong on a lot of things."
For better or worse, he said, the controversial candidate is the "wake-up call" the country needs.
"Ultimately, if we have to elect someone who is borderline crazy to get people to understand what's going on, then that's what we have to do," Murphy said.
An independent, he voted for Mitt Romney in 2012 and Barack Obama in 2008 and said he's donated to both parties in the past.
Murphy said that if Trump had not become such a viable candidate, he would likely have voted for Hillary Clinton.
"I just don't think she's going to be the person to shake people out of their seats," he said. "She's not what the country needs right now."
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Karen Williams, a lifelong Democrat from Duluth, Georgia, said she voted for Hillary Clinton. But the 55-year-old voter mostly has her eyes on Trump, whom she wants to stop from gaining the White House.
"I can't see him talking to dignitaries from other countries, insulting people," she said. "A lot of countries don't take kindly to insults."
Williams is so concerned about the campaign season's "childish behavior" in the face of very real challenges for the country that she said a prayer before going in to vote Tuesday.
"I prayed," she said. "I prayed for this nation. I really did. I'm really concerned."