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Trump Takes Control of D.C. Police, Citing ‘Bloodthirsty Criminals.’ But Crime Is Down.

August 11, 2025
in News
Trump Takes Control of D.C. Police, Citing ‘Bloodthirsty Criminals.’ But Crime Is Down.
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President Trump on Monday took federal control of the police force in the nation’s capital for 30 days and mobilized 800 National Guard troops to fight crime in a city that he claimed was overrun with “bloodthirsty criminals,” even though crime numbers in Washington are falling.

During a 78-minute news conference, during which he was flanked by several members of his cabinet, Mr. Trump took the lectern in the White House briefing room and said he also intended to clear out the capital’s homeless population, without saying how officials would do it, or detailing where those people would go.

Armed with papers that showed crime statistics, Mr. Trump decried murders in Washington compared with other global cities but ignored the fact that violent crime has fallen recently in the nation’s capital. While the violent crime rate surged in 2023, it fell 35 percent from that year to 2024, according to the city’s Metropolitan Police Department.

Instead, Mr. Trump painted Washington as an urban hellscape, repurposing some of the incendiary language he has used to describe conditions at the southern border. Mr. Trump has railed against crime in urban, largely liberal cities for decades, but his announcement on Monday was an extraordinary exertion of federal power over an American city. Warning of “caravans of mass youth” rampaging the city streets and relaying stories of children caught in shootings, Mr. Trump blamed Democrats for allowing the crime.

“Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people,” Mr. Trump said. “And we’re not going to let it happen anymore.”

Local officials immediately criticized the president’s actions, and pockets of protesters sprang up around the city shortly after Mr. Trump declared a public safety emergency in Washington. Muriel Bowser, the mayor of Washington, said in a news conference on Monday afternoon that Mr. Trump’s actions were “unsettling and unprecedented,” but not surprising.

“I can’t say that given some of the rhetoric of the past that we are totally surprised,” Ms. Bowser said, before adding that the police chief, Pamela A. Smith, would remain in her position. Ms. Bowser acknowledged that the law gave Mr. Trump the authority to take over the department temporarily. But she disputed the idea that her administration had done little to curb violent crime in Washington.

“There’s nobody here and certainly nobody who works for me who wants to tolerate any level of crime,” said Ms. Bowser, a Democrat. “We work every day to stop crime.”

There are practical questions about how Mr. Trump’s plans would be implemented. The Trump administration is relying on a provision of the D.C. Home Rule Act, a law passed by Congress in 1973 establishing local control of Washington. The law gives the president the power to temporarily take over the Metropolitan Police Department. A White House official said the takeover would last 30 days, a time limit outlined in the law.

In Mr. Trump’s briefing room appearance, during which he waxed on about his real estate experience and repeatedly detailed his coming trip to “Russia” — he is actually going to Alaska to meet with Vladimir V. Putin, Russia’s president — the president ignored follow-up questions about logistics. He did not say where city police officers, U.S. Park Police officers and National Guard members would be stationed throughout the city.

Mr. Trump said Attorney General Pam Bondi would oversee the broad effort. He said that Gadyaces S. Serralta, who was sworn in as the director of the U.S. Marshals Service this month, would oversee the police department alongside Terry Cole, who was sworn in as the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration less than a month ago.

“I hope I don’t have to fire him in two weeks because he’s too soft,” Mr. Trump said after calling Mr. Serralta up to the briefing room lectern to shake his hand. “If you’re soft, weak and pathetic, like so many people, I will fire you so fast.”

Mr. Trump’s remarks seemed largely aimed at rewriting history and the reality of crime in Washington. Soon after he took office, Mr. Trump pardoned hundreds of rioters, some of them violent, who ransacked the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Many had already been convicted of their crimes and were serving their sentences before being immediately released in January.

And in the summer of 2020, Mr. Trump deployed more than 5,000 National Guard troops to Washington to crack down on mostly peaceful demonstrators advocating for racial justice. That deployment was widely seen as a debacle.

Ankit Jain, a shadow senator for the District of Columbia who is the capital’s advocate in Congress in lieu of official senators, said the vacancy crisis in the U.S. attorney’s office, which prosecutes all adult crimes, had contributed to crime in the city. He also said the city is down two judges out of nine on its highest court, the D.C. Court of Appeals.

“What happens when you don’t have enough judges? Trials get delayed, crime goes up,” he said. “Why has the president not made this a priority of nominating judges?”

Several Washington residents said on Monday that the crime statistics relayed by the president had unnerved them, though they did not see the kind of violence he described. Others questioned whether calling the National Guard to Washington was necessary.

“I’m not a particularly pro-police, pro-law enforcement kind of person,” said Sarah Struble, 37, who lives in the Capitol Hill neighborhood. “I would much rather resources go towards, you know, community support and services and things like that, things that our taxes support and things run by the community rather than bringing in the National Guard.”

Reporting was contributed by Darren Sands, Sonia A. Rao, Campbell Robertson, Chris Cameron and Annie Karni.

Katie Rogers is a White House correspondent for The Times, reporting on President Trump.

The post Trump Takes Control of D.C. Police, Citing ‘Bloodthirsty Criminals.’ But Crime Is Down. appeared first on New York Times.

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