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Home » Videos » Chicago Mid-Year Crime Data from the Chicago Police Dept.

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Chicago Mid-Year Crime Data from the Chicago Police Dept.

Chicago Mid-Year Data from the Chicago Police Dept.

Smith
Last updated: July 3, 2026 7:21 am
Smith - Editor in Chief
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Chicago Mid-Year Crime Data from the Chicago Police Dept.
Chicago Mid-Year Crime Data from the Chicago Police Dept.
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Newly released mid-year data from the Chicago Police Department reveals a 5.6% increase in homicides and a 4% rise in shooting incidents through the first six months of 2026. However, these figures represent the second-fewest first-half homicides in the city since 2015, maintaining most of the monumental 29% reduction in violent crime achieved during a record-setting 2025. Conversely, major property crimes and street robberies saw sharp double-digit drops across the city and the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) system. Criminologists caution that while high-profile violent crime data remains structurally accurate, steep drops in property crime statistics require careful analytical scrutiny due to potential reporting discrepancies and historical classification challenges.

Chicago Mid-Year Crime Data Reveals Slight Uptick in Homicides Against Multi-Year Reductions

CHICAGO, IL – July 3, 2026 (STL.News) The Chicago Police Department (CPD) has finalized its official public safety data for the first half of 2026. The mid-year snapshot presents a nuanced narrative for the nation’s third-largest municipal area. While lethal gun violence has experienced a single-digit percentage increase compared to the same period last year, the city has successfully preserved the vast majority of its recent historic safety gains. Concurrently, broader categories of property crime, carjackings, and public transit offenses have plummeted across nearly every major police district.

The marginal increases in gun violence must be interpreted against a highly unusual, historic baseline. In 2025, Chicago achieved a stunning 29% year-over-year collapse in total homicides, closing out that year with 416 murders—the lowest annual volume documented by the city since 1965. Criminologists from the University of Chicago Crime Lab indicate that while the rapid downward momentum of the past four years has flattened into a slight plateau in early 2026, the absolute volume of severe violence remains far below the severe pandemic-era spikes observed between 2020 and 2022.

The 2026 Mid-Year Statistical Breakdown

Data compiled from January 1 through June 30, 2026, illustrates a distinct structural divergence between lethal gun violence and opportunistic property or street-level crime throughout Chicago.

Lethal and Non-Lethal Gun Violence

  • Homicides: Chicago recorded 210 homicides during the first six months of the year, up from the corresponding period in 2025. This represents a year-over-year increase of nearly 6% (approximately 5.6%). Despite the rise, the 210 figure stands firmly as the second-lowest first-half murder total recorded citywide since 2015.

  • Shootings: The city logged 686 distinct shooting incidents through June, a 4% increase year-over-year. These incidents resulted in a total of 858 shooting victims. That is more than 4 per day!

  • Monthly Intensity: The month of June alone accounted for a significant portion of the early summer surge, yielding 139 shooting incidents and 43 homicides.

Drastic Reductions in Robberies and Property Offenses

In contrast to the slight escalation in firearm violence, other severe crime classifications dropped by double digits:

  • Armed Robberies: Decreased by 32% citywide.

  • Overall Robberies: Dropped by 27%.

  • Carjackings: Fell by 25%, extending a multi-year cooling trend in vehicle thefts.

  • Burglaries: Declined by 12% compared to the first six months of 2025.

Public Transit Safety Improvements

Public safety metrics across the extensive Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) bus and rail networks showed significant improvement. Violent crime on CTA lines dropped by 28% through the first half of the year, while property crime across the transit system fell by 32%.

Data Veracity: Which Statistics Hold Up to Scrutiny?

For digital publishers, regional news organizations, and public policy analysts, evaluating municipal crime statistics requires a critical framework. Criminologists divide police data into two operational categories: High-Trust Metrics that are structurally resilient against manipulation, and Vulnerable Metrics that are heavily influenced by human reporting patterns, policy initiatives, and political pressures.

The High-Trust Metrics: Homicides and Shootings

The single-digit increases reported in Chicago’s homicides (210) and shooting incidents (686) are considered highly accurate and verifiable by independent bodies.

  1. External Corroboration: Homicides and shootings generate an extensive, indelible paper trail that exists completely outside of local police reporting channels. Every firearm fatality or injury involves the Cook County Medical Examiner’s Office, emergency medical services, and mandatory hospital trauma admissions.

  2. Technical Redundancies: Acoustic gunshot detection platforms and independent aggregators, such as the Gun Violence Archive, track firearm discharges in real time, matching them to police dispatches.

Because a municipal police agency cannot easily downgrade a homicide or conceal a hospitalized shooting victim to alter its statistical output, these numbers provide an authentic reflection of the city’s violent crime trajectory.

The Vulnerable Metrics: Robberies, Burglaries, and Property Crimes

Conversely, investigative journalists and policy experts approach the steep double-digit declines in armed robberies (-32%), general robberies (-27%), and burglaries (-12%) with a degree of healthy analytical skepticism. While a true downward trajectory is likely occurring, the precise percentages are frequently subject to external factors:

  • The Citizen Reporting Gap: Property crime and street robbery statistics rely heavily on victims proactively filing formal police reports. If residents in specific high-crime police districts lose faith in response times or believe a detective is unlikely to clear a property case, they often stop reporting offenses altogether. In statistical tracking, an unreported crime does not exist.

  • Institutional Downgrading Incentives: Local police leadership operates under immense political pressure to demonstrate the efficacy of deployment strategies. Historically, investigative deep dives into major metropolitan police departments have revealed systemic “under-classifying” of offenses. An armed robbery can be subtly downgraded to simple theft, or a residential burglary can be recorded as trespassing or property damage. This clerical adjustment keeps the offense out of the “Part I” violent crime metrics reported to the federal government’s Uniform Crime Reporting (UCR) system.

  • Multi-Victim Compounding Rules: The methodology for logging crimes involving multiple victims can alter the final statistical narrative. If a single offender robs three individuals simultaneously on a public sidewalk, the event may be classified under certain reporting criteria as a single incident rather than three distinct victim counts, effectively flattening the visible volume of crime data.

The Broader Institutional Landscape

The publication of this mid-year data coincides with a period of leadership transition and evolving resource allocation within Chicago’s public safety infrastructure. CPD officers have intensified proactive enforcement, recovering 5,149 illegal firearms since the start of the year, with 857 of those weapons seized during June alone.

Furthermore, the stabilization of violent crime rates occurs at a moment of significant fiscal and structural transformation for the city’s taxpayers and law enforcement apparatus. Chicago has spent a staggering $225 million within the first six months of the year alone to resolve police misconduct lawsuits. This ongoing fiscal pressure comes as the department prepares for an impending leadership change following CPD Superintendent Larry Snelling’s retirement announcement, highlighting the ongoing operational challenges facing the city as it attempts to sustain its hard-won post-pandemic safety margins.

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By Smith Editor in Chief
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Martin Smith is the founder and Editor in Chief of STL.News, STL.Directory, St. Louis Restaurant Review, STLPress.News, and USPress.News.  Smith is responsible for selecting content to be published with the help of a publishing team located around the globe.  The publishing is made possible because Smith built a proprietary network of aggregated websites to import and manage thousands of press releases via RSS feeds to create the content library used to filter and publish news articles on STL.News.  Since its beginning in February 2016, STL.News has published more than 250,000 news articles.  He is a member of the United States Press Agency (Reg. # 31659) and a Certified member of the US Press Association (Reg. # 802085479).
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