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PROPOSED RESOLUTION
REQUESTING A PUBLIC HEARING OF THE CRIMINAL JUSTICE COMMITTEE TO DISCUSS AND RECEIVE AN UPDATE FROM THE PUBLIC SAFETY AND PUBLIC HEALTH COUNTY STAKEHOLDERS ON THE INVESTIGATIONS OF MISSING AND MURDERED BLACK WOMEN AND GIRLS IN THE CHICAGOLAND AREA
WHEREAS, Black women and girls in the U.S. are disproportionately at risk for abuse, exploitation and homicide. In the Chicago area, an alarming number of Black women have been killed and their murders remain unsolved; and
WHEREAS, in 2020, 268,884 women were reported missing in the U.S., nearly 100,000 were Black women and girls. Black women account for less than 15% of the U.S. population, but more than one-third of all missing women; and
WHEREAS, there are significant gaps in national law enforcement data about the murders of Black women; for nearly half of the killings of Black women and girls in 2020, the FBI's supplementary homicide report lists the relationship between the victim and the perpetrator as "unknown"; and
WHEREAS, Chicago based organizations and leaders have been actively seeking answers to the murders and disappearance of Black women and girls in the Chicagoland area for over two decades, marching on the streets pushing for urgency and more attention to the lives of Black women who have gone missing or been killed; and
WHEREAS, an analysis by the Invisible Institute, a nonprofit journalism organization on the South Side, found that more than 8,400 people were reported missing to the Chicago Police Department in 2021; almost 70% of those cases were of Black people and more than 3,000 of them were Black women; and
WHEREAS, on September 1, 2021, Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart announced the formation of the Missing Persons Project, an initiative that assigned a new team of detectives to work on longtime missing persons cases; and
WHEREAS, many advocates agree that violence against Black women and girls demands a broad social response, not only confined to law enforcement, w...
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