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  • 2018-08-15 (xsd:date)
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  • Did 600 Murders Take Place in Chicago Last Weekend? (en)
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  • On 14 August 2018, Omarosa Manigault Newman, former Director of Communications for the Office of Public Liaison in the Trump administration, appeared on the Daily Show to talk about her new tell-all book, Unhinged. Although the conversation primarily focused on the former Apprentice contestant's experiences in the Trump White House, Omarosa also dropped a curious statistic about the number of murders in Chicago. While criticizing President Trump for not living up to his campaign promise to reduce violence in Chicago, Omarosa declared that the Second City had seen 600 murders over this weekend. That comment can be heard around the 6-minute mark of the following video: That claim was absurd. Omarosa appeared to be referring to the number of murders that had occurred over the previous weekend, but the number of people killed in Chicago over the second weekend in August wasn't even close to 600. According to NBC Chicago, the actual number of people murdered that weekend was one: The Chicago Tribune reported similar statistics: No Chicago weekend in 2018 was as deadly as Omarosa claimed. In fact, according to the Tribune, the city hadn't seen 600 murders throughout all of 2018 up to that point: As far as we can tell, no weekend in the recent history of Chicago has seen the amount of murders claimed by Omarosa. While the number of homicides in Chicago reached 900 during a few years in the 1970s and 1990s, the majority of years (let alone weekends) over the last several decades didn't see 600 murders: This is the second time in recent weeks that number of murders in Chicago has been grossly exaggerated by a member (or former member) of President Trump's team. The president's attorney, Rudy Giuliani, claimed in a tweet that 63 murders were recorded over the first weekend in August 2018 in Chicago: The weekend Giuliani was referring to, however, saw 63 people shot, not murdered. Only 12 people were killed during the first weekend of August. We've reached out to Omarosa to find out exactly what she was referencing in her citing of crime statistics. It's possible that she misspoke and was attempting to refer to the number of murders in Chicago the previous year, not the previous weekend. If that's the case, it is true that Chicago saw more than 600 murders in 2017. (en)
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