• Mayor Muriel Bowser says Trump's surge of federal law enforcement has lowered crime in D.C.

    From a425couple@a425couple@hotmail.com to or.politics,alt.law-enforcement,seattle.politics,ca.politics,fl.politics on Wed Aug 27 20:16:32 2025
    From Newsgroup: alt.law-enforcement

    from https://www.nbcnews.com/politics/politics-news/bowser-trump-police-takeover-lower-dc-crime-national-guard-ice-rcna227582

    Mayor Muriel Bowser says Trump's surge of federal law enforcement has
    lowered crime in D.C.
    The Democratic mayor also said the presence of masked ICE agents and
    National Guard members rCLis not working.rCY
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    Aug. 27, 2025, 12:57 PM PDT / Updated Aug. 27, 2025, 2:43 PM PDT
    By Rebecca Shabad
    WASHINGTON rCo D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser on Wednesday credited President
    Donald Trump's directed surge of federal law enforcement with lowering
    crime in the nation's capital but made it clear that the presence of immigration agents and National Guard troops is "not working."

    Bowser conveyed her ambivalent view of the Trump administration's federalization of D.C. in a situational update since Trump announced
    efforts to combat crime in the city on Aug. 7. On one hand, she said the changes have resulted in less crime, but on the other she also expressed
    deep concern about residents' "living in fear."

    (Sheesh, ditzy Democratic talking points - crime has been reduced,
    I assure all, when a person is a vitim of crime - then they really
    "live in fear")

    "We greatly appreciate the surge of officers that enhance what MPD has
    been able to do in this city," Bowser, a Democrat, told reporters about
    the expansion of federal law enforcement and its partnership with the Metropolitan Police Department.

    Carjackings, she said, were the "most troubling" crime that plagued D.C.
    in 2023, and they have decreased in recent years. Bowser said that in
    the 20 days since the federal takeover, there has been an 87% drop in carjackings compared with the same period last year. The data cited also showed a 15% fall in crime overall in the district during the same
    period last year.

    "We know that when carjackings go down, when use of guns goes down, when homicide or robbery go down, neighborhoods feel safer and are safer, so
    this surge has been important to us," said Bowser, who added that she
    has been personally engaged with Attorney General Pam Bondi and White
    House chief of staff Susie Wiles.

    Several members of the City Council rebuked Bowser's conciliatory
    remarks, chiding her for characterizing the surge of federal law
    enforcement as helpful despite many DemocratsrCO warnings that Trump is
    using scare tactics to exert his presidential authority over the city.

    "We should not, as the District of Columbia, be giving people the
    impression that this is a good thing, that we are OK with it, that it is helping the city. It is not doing any of those things," at-large Council member Robert White Jr., a Democrat, said in a video on X. "I am not OK
    with this. The average resident is not OK with this. D.C. residents,
    D.C. voters, are not OK with this."

    Ward 1 Council member Brianne Nadeau, also a Democrat, echoed White's sentiment, writing on X after Bowser's remarks that D.C. is "under siege."

    "Our residents are afraid, hesitant to go out & to work, angry that our limited autonomy is being eroded. There is nothing welcome about this,"
    Nadeau said.

    Bowser said she spoke to Trump on Wednesday afternoon, though she
    declined to provide details of their discussion and said the meeting was
    a "courtesy."

    "I was reminded of our first meeting after his re-election, where we
    discussed shared priorities for the district," she said. "There, I was reminded that the president's interest in cities predates his time in
    office, and his knowledge of D.C. had significantly increased from the
    first time he was in the White House."

    Asked what assurance she received that Trump won't try to go beyond the surge's 30-day period, Bowser said, "That was not something that I
    discussed with the president."

    Bowser signaled that the surge may not be needed after the set period.
    "What we want is local control of our public safety ecosystem," she said
    when she was asked what she wanted after the month is up. "That includes deployment of officers, and we want federal officers that work in
    coordination with us rCo DEA, ATF, FBI rCo who, as the chief just mentioned, work with us on major crime issues all the time."

    She added, "After 30 days, I think we're going to have officers, and we
    want officers. We want to enhance our officer presence."

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    Bowser said the police department's ability to address crime in D.C.
    would be greatly enhanced if the department were able to hire at least
    500 police over the next several years. Police Chief Pamela Smith also suggested at the news conference that the city has benefited from the
    federal task force formed to bring down crime and indicated it could be
    a solution in the long term rCLwhen we do see surges and spikes in crime.rCY

    Bowser said that since the increase in federal law enforcement officers,
    there have been more stops that have resulted in the seizure of illegal
    guns and there has been more "accountability in the system" that "is
    driving down illegal behavior."

    "We know that we have had fewer gun crimes, fewer homicides, and we have experienced an extreme reduction in carjackings," she said.

    Bowser, however, strongly rebuked the Trump administration's deployment
    of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents and National Guard troops
    in the city. "What we know is not working is a break in trust between
    police and community, especially with new federal partners in our
    community. We know having masked ICE agents in the community has not
    worked, and national guards from other states has not been an efficient
    use of those resources," she said.

    While she refused to say whether she brought up her concerns about ICE
    arrests to Trump or Bondi, Bowser said people should be "assured that
    the things that we are very concerned about, we are working on a
    resolution."

    Many immigrants in D.C. have felt afraid since the federal law
    enforcement buildup began, especially as masked agents in unmarked cars
    have been seen arresting alleged undocumented immigrants.

    Bowser said that the local government doesn't have any information about anyone ICE has detained in D.C. recently. "I am concerned, for sure,
    because we think anything that we do and anything that we're going to
    ask the federal partners to do is focused on violent crime."

    "I am devastated by people living in fear," she said. "I think you know
    very clearly how I feel about our nation needing comprehensive
    immigration reform, about the Congress establishing a pathway to
    citizenship for hard-working people who came to this country for a
    better life and who are not criminals, who are law-abiding."

    Reached for comment about Bowser's remarks, White House spokeswoman
    Taylor Rogers said that "crime is not a partisan issue."

    "Americans expect elected officials to prioritize their safety over
    politics. President TrumprCOs bold action and partnership with local law enforcement has quickly minimized violent crime and removed over a
    thousand criminals from the streets of our nationrCOs capital," she said. "This includes illegal aliens who have prior arrests for heinous crimes
    like assault or rape and are members of dangerous gangs like MS-13 and
    Tren de Aragua. Other Democrat leaders who are criticizing President
    Trump for cleaning up D.C. should take notes on the tremendous success
    that Washington, D.C., has already experienced under President TrumprCOs leadership.rCY

    A White House official said Wednesday that on Tuesday night, 40
    undocumented immigrants were arrested who had "multiple convictions for assault, prior criminal arrest for DUI, assaulting a law enforcement
    officer, prior criminal arrests for controlled dangerous substances with intent to distribute, prior immigration encounters, and one has been
    deemed special interest alien."

    Since the federal surge began, the official said, 1,170 people have been arrested.


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