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Billionaire Ken Griffin takes on Chicago crime with $10 million donation - Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago’s five major sports teams pledged a total of $1 million late last year to bankroll violence prevention programs in the city.

Now Chicago billionaire Ken Griffin — listed as Illinois’ richest man — is raising the ante.

Griffin is donating $10 million toward the city’s efforts to reduce gun violence, the mayor’s office announced Tuesday.

Mayor Rahm Emanuel acknowledged he and Griffin are on opposite ends of the political spectrum. Griffin is Gov. Bruce Rauner’s biggest contributor and on Monday, Emanuel blasted the Republican governor for vetoing a gun store licensing bill that was pushed by the mayor.

But Emanuel said he and Griffin see eye-to-eye on the need to improve Chicago. The mayor said the conservative Griffin even supported him in his first successful bid for Congress back in 2002.

“We don’t have the same party affiliation,” Emanuel said in an interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, “but we have the same goals of public service.”

Griffin said he hopes his donation will inspire other civic leaders to join the efforts “to make our city safer.”

“As a community, we are unified in our desire for Chicago to be a safer place to live and work. No child, anywhere, should be afraid to walk to school or play outside,” Griffin said in a statement. “A safer Chicago attracts more families and better jobs, and provides a better quality of life for all.”

Griffin, founder and CEO of the Chicago-based hedge fund Citadel, is already known as a major Chicago benefactor.

Last year, he donated $125 million for scholarships and research in the University of Chicago’s economics department. In 2016, he gave the city $12 million to complete two bike and pedestrian paths on the 18-mile lakefront trail and another $3 million to build soccer fields across Chicago.

The Englewood District’s strategic decision support center. | File photo

Griffin’s latest donation will largely support a partnership of the Chicago Police Department and University of Chicago Crime Lab. In early 2017, they opened Strategic Decision Support Centers in high-crime police districts.

The support centers, which cost about $1.5 million each, are rooms inside police stations. Officers and U. of C. analysts crunch gunshot data to determine where to best deploy cops. Information from gunshot detectors and surveillance cameras is displayed on large monitors. Officers have real-time access to the information via cellphone and in-car computers, alerting them to the spot where a shooting occurred.

The police department partly credits a recent decline in gun violence across the city to the support centers. Through March, homicides were down 17 percent and the number of shooting victims decreased 30 percent compared with the same period of 2017.

The support centers were piloted in the Englewood and Harrison districts in February 2017. Thirteen of the city’s 22 police districts will have them by the end of the year, officials say.

Police Supt. Eddie Johnson. | File photo

Police Supt. Eddie Johnson says the centers have reduced officers’ response times to shootings by more than five minutes.

In the late 1980s, when he was a patrol officer, Johnson says he would get a call about shots being fired, but tracking down the shooter was very difficult. Yet in the first half-hour of the Englewood support center opening in 2017, analysts pinpointed where shots were fired and officers were able to arrest a shooter, he said.

“We have been living hand-to-mouth to keep this going,” said Roseanna Ander, executive director of the 10-year-old U. of C. crime lab, which has been involved in everything from helping police launch a West Side drug-diversion program to supporting a nationally recognized mentoring program called Becoming a Man. “I’m very excited about this.”

She said the support centers have already been expanding their footprints in some districts by exploring new responses to domestic violence and working on ways for officers to engage positively with residents.

The $10 million grant will underwrite the collaboration of the police department and the U. of C. Crime Lab through 2019. Some of the money will go into an “innovation fund.”

The money also will help improve services for officers, including training, stress management and mental health treatment, the mayor said.

“I am excited about the early intervention technology to identify trends with officers and get them the help they need,” Emanuel said.

He said that will go toward satisfying recommendations from the U.S. Justice Department after a report last year found Chicago Police officers were engaging in a pattern of civil-rights violations.

When Chicago’s homicides spiked in 2016, private donations streamed into social service agencies with anti-crime programs, but direct philanthropic support of the police department is unusual.

“The extraordinary new investment by Ken Griffin helps fill in an important piece of the overall strategy,” Ander said.

Griffin, a Republican, gave more than $33.6 million to Illinois campaigns in the last two years, with roughly two-thirds of it going to Rauner, according to a Sun-Times analysis.

“This isn’t about politics, it’s about public safety,” Johnson said. “All of us recognize that at the end of the day we have a vested interest in making the city and state safer. “[Griffin] has done his research to see what was working and what was integral in reducing gun violence in the city of Chicago.”

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