Archive for the ‘Violence’ Category

Crime Drops Despite Record Gun Purchases

By jefflouis in Attorney Services, Chicago, Crime, Illinois, MSI Detective Services, Terrorism, Violence, murder at January 24th, 2010 | No comments


The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) reported that the number of firearms purchased in the first half of 2009 was “going through the roof;” in direct comparison, the homicide rate in the United States dropped 10% nationally. The increase in legal gun sales jumped by 30% when compared to legal gun sales for the same time period one year prior.

Gun advocates state that this proves that more weapons among the populace does not increase crime, and in fact, may deter crime.  A survey conducted by the National Association of Chiefs of Police among the nation’s police executives found that nearly94% of those queried were for civilian gun ownership. Ninety-six percent of the police chiefs and sheriffs believe that the criminals who commit gun crimes obtain their weapons illegally, and that there weren’t many arrests for violations of the Federally-mandated waiting period. When the police executives were asked if concealed weapons permits would help reduce violent gun crime, 63% of the respondents answered positively.

According to Second Amendment Foundation, a civil rights group, state that this proves violent crime and gun ownership doesn’t have any correlation, and that arming citizens is a deterrent. SAF EVP Alan Gottleib stated;

“What this shows is that gun prohibitionists are all wrong when they argue that more guns result in more crime. Firearms in the hands of law-abiding citizens are no threat to anyone. Perhaps violent criminals were actually discouraged by all of those gun sales earlier this year, because the media made a point of reporting the booming gun market.”

The opposite camp, those backing gun control, state that accidental shootings or abuse of firearms rises with an armed populace. However, according to the SAF and Northwestern University School of Law, there are endless studies that there have been between 600,000 and 1 million cases where firearms have been used by citizens to protect themselves and their loved-ones.

However, looking at the data empirically, the drop in crime rate and subsequent rise in gun purchases are in no way related, and the fact that more citizens are armed could not have possibly been known by gun-toting criminals due to the simple fact that the two incidents were occurring simultaneously. Not to mention the fact that the media has access to this type of information, and there weren’t a lot of stories running the past year about victims thwarting criminals by using guns. In fact, the only one to come to light in Chicago was an intended mugging on CTA’s Orange line where the victim turned the tables on his attackers, pulling a knife and stabbing two of the five attackers. As with most criminals, once the odds evened out, and with two of their posse down, the rest of the “men” fled and were later apprehended by police.

Data is simply data. Correlations between two totally unrelated events that seem related sometimes have nothing to do with one another. In this case, it is unlikely; rather, there is a reason that crime fell that had nothing to do with policing, armed citizens, and the like. What that something is has yet to be revealed, but the last major deterrence in crime was actually a result of Roe V. Wade being overthrown, allowing unwed mothers to abort fetuses that they could not hope to raise. This led to a decrease in the number of aimless teenagers, which led to a decrease in crime. (Freakonomics, pp. 5-6, Leavitt and Dubner)

So, although it would be nice to have the answer, we don’t, and may not for a couple of years.


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Dumb Criminals

By jefflouis in Chicago, Crime, Illinois, MSI Detective Services, Mug Shots, Safety, Security, Surveillance Services, Violence, Wanted, robbery at January 18th, 2010 | No comments


Guilt was all over their faces…in the form of black magic marker.

dumbcriminalsPolice received a call Friday November 2009 that two men with hooded sweatshirts and painted faces had tried to break into a man’s home in Carroll. Responding units found the vehicle described by the caller and stopped a car matching the description. They were taken aback by the men in the vehicle. CNN reported that,

There were no ski masks or stockings pulled over their heads; instead, Matthew Allan McNelly, 23, and Joey Lee Miller, 20, streaked their faces with permanent black marker.

Carroll Police Chief Cayler told CNN the strange disguises made it easier for his officers.

“We’re very skilled investigators and the black faces gave them right away,” Cayler said jokingly. “I have to assume the officers were kind of laughing at the time. I’ve never heard of coloring your face with a permanent marker.”

Allegedly the one of the perpetrators former girlfriend was seeing a man that lived in the house.

Anything for love, including prison. Carroll’s Police Chief Cayler;

“I’ve been chief here almost 25 years, been with the department 28½ years and I’ve seen a lot of things that make me laugh and weird things but this was probably the best combination of the two — strangely weird and hilariously funny all at the same time.”
No matter the violence or mayhem indicative of criminal behavior, the easiest method to prevent becoming a victim is to out-think them.  If you need help preventing criminal activity, please contact Perry Myers at Myers Service, Inc.


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Tylenol Murder Case to Re-Open

By jefflouis in Chicago, Crime, Illinois, Violence, murder at January 8th, 2010 | No comments

lewisjamesThe single suspect in the 1982 deaths of seven people from Tylenol capsules laced with cyanide is back in the news again following a raid on his home last week. James Lewis, once a “citizen” of Chicago has been served a grand jury subpoena ordering him to submit fingerprint and DNA samples.

Lewis, some may remember, was never officially charged with the homicides; rather, he was charged with trying to extort $1 million dollars from Johnson & Johnson in order to stop the killings. He was convicted and sentenced to 20-years in prison, but got out after 13-years served in 1995.

He and his wife then moved to Boston, and in 2004, James Lewis once again ran into legal troubles, this time for the kidnapping and rape of a woman who, according to Boston authorities, was force fed a variety of chemicals. Lewis went back to prison to await trial, and spent three years locked up. When the victim was unwilling to testify, Lewis walked out of prison a free man.

Prior to the Tylenol murders, James Lewis had been charged with the murder or Raymond West, an elderly client offedsremoveevidenceLewis’s accounting business. The charges were dropped. Mr. West’s body was found chopped up, wrapped in plastic, and stored in the attic of his Kansas City residence.

Although no charges have been filed, FBI agents removed items from the Lewis’s Boston residence and it looks like the case will be re-opened. James Lewis is now 62-years old and lives with his wife in a Boston condo.

Not for much longer.




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CPD’s ClearMap Plots Crime in Your Neighborhood

By jefflouis in Chicago, Crime, Illinois, MSI Detective Services, Security, Stalking Cases, Stolen Property, Theft Investigations, Violence, murder, robbery at January 5th, 2010 | No comments
Western & Fullerton

Western & Fullerton

We hear the sirens and often see the lights of police cruisers bouncing off of buildings down the street. Most often, however, we’re (blissfully?) unaware of why the police were on-scene in our neighborhood unless it happens to make the paper. However, there is a way to determine the crime that’s taking place in and around your home.

Well, the Chicago Police Department has a service called ClearMap that will actually notate the number, and type, of crimes near your home or business using an address, street, park, beat, ward, precinct, ward, or community.

The site also allows users to choose the type of crimes that show up on the read out. For instance, if you were only interested in property crimes, you can check the boxes that cover vandalism, theft, vehicle vandalism, vehicle theft, arson, stolen property, etc. If you are looking strictly at homicides, the ClearMap system provides those crimes as well.

Thus, whether determining an area where you are looking to buy/rent, or plotting out your morning run, ClearMap can, over time, help you with your requests. Plus, it also allows users to track certain crimes in the neighborhoods in which they live so that they can petition their Alderman for more patrols.

The ClearMap system is not perfect; it’s a bit difficult to get the hang of it (you may need to change your screen resolution) and it’s also a bit “clunky” when compared to Google Maps or Google Earth. However, once you figure out how the system works, it’s relatively painless though be warned that it does “hang-up” every once in a while. Also, although the ClearMap requirements state that the best browsers to use are IE or Firefox, I had the best luck with Google Chrome with my screen set to maximum resolution. The only other “complaint” I have with this application is that it’s a week behind the current date. For instance, for the map of Milwaukee and Fullerton that I pulled up, I was able to choose from January 1, 2009 to December 26, 2009 despite the fact that today is January 6, 2010. But, nothing is perfect, and as technology improves, the update times will improve as well.

In any event, it’s another resource that may help to keep you, and your loved ones, safe.


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Man Shoots at PI; Claims He was Turkey Hunting

By jefflouis in MSI Detective Services, Safety, Security, Surveillance Services, Violence, process service, service of summons at December 22nd, 2009 | No comments

image002From the Utica-Observer Dispatch

An Annsville man accused of shooting a private investigator with a shotgun after mistaking him for a turkey earlier this year rejected a plea offer Wednesday in Oneida County Court.

The attorney for William Wehnke, 51, of Briarwood Lane, declined to disclose what kind of punishment prosecutors offered Wehnke if he pleaded guilty. Nevertheless, the attorney said his client has no plan to accept guilt at this time.

“It doesn’t matter what the offer is, because he isn’t going to plead to anything – it’s a hunting accident,” Assistant Public Defender Mark Curley said on Wehnke’s behalf. “No offer is a good offer if you’re innocent.”

Wehnke is facing charges of felony second-degree assault, misdemeanor fourth-degree criminal possession of a weapon, and unlawful manner of taking, a violation that alleges Wehnke was using the wrong type of ammunition for turkey hunting.

Wehnke was charged after he shot 26-year-old private investigator Matthew Brady from New Jersey, who was dressed in camouflage and lying on the ground. Brady had been sent to the Mohawk Valley to investigate Wehnke concerning matters of his workers’ compensation, police said at the time.

The defense says Wehnke shot Brady by accident because he didn’t see the investigator hiding on the ground as Wehnke fired at a turkey and missed. Prosecutors, however, say Wehnke recklessly failed to take the appropriate time and caution to confirm that it was safe to fire his weapon.

Wehnke’s next court appearance in front of Judge Barry M. Donalty is scheduled for Wed., Jan. 13.

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