logo
Trump Administration Live Updates: National Guard Begins Arriving on D.C. Streets

Trump Administration Live Updates: National Guard Begins Arriving on D.C. Streets

New York Times2 days ago
President Trump cast the nation's capital as overwhelmed by record-breaking levels of violent crime as he announced a federal takeover of the city.
On Monday, Mr. Trump and his newly confirmed federal prosecutor for Washington cited an array of inaccurate statistics about murders in the city and crimes committed by children. It was part of a broader bid by his administration to rail against crime in urban, largely liberal cities, often turning to exaggerated and inaccurate figures to portray soaring violence and lawlessness.
Here's an assessment of some of their claims.
What Was Said
'Murders in 2023 reached the highest rate probably ever. They say 25 years, but they don't know what that means because it just goes back 25 years.'
— Mr. Trump in the news conference on Monday
False. There were 274 homicides in Washington in 2023 among a population of about 679,000 people, a rate of about 40.4 per 100,000 people. That was the highest rate in over 20 years, but not 'ever.' Moreover, the homicide rate has since declined.
The number of homicides declined by about a third in 2024 to 187 while the population grew to over 702,000 people, for a rate of 26.6 per 100,000. The recent trend of declining homicides appears to be holding, with 100 homicides as of Aug. 12, compared with 112 at the same point last year.
The 274 homicides in 2023 was the highest number since 1997, when the city reported 301 homicides, according to police data compiled by the F.B.I. And the rate was the highest since 2003, which had a rate of 44 per 100,000, according to an analysis by Jeff Asher, a crime analyst based in New Orleans.
But Mr. Trump is wrong that it was the highest rate 'ever' or that the data only extends to the early 2000s. Records dating back to the 1960s show that Washington's homicide rate peaked in the 1990s at more than 80 per 100,000 people in 1991, or about double the rate in 2023.
What Was Said
'Look at the kind of numbers we have: D.C., 41 per 100,000, No. 1 that we can find anywhere in the world. Other cities are pretty bad, but they're not as bad as that.'
— Mr. Trump in the news conference
False. Mr. Trump held up a chart that first appeared on Fox News and was shared by Vice President JD Vance last week purportedly comparing Washington's homicide rate to that of eight other 'capitals.' (One, Lagos, Nigeria, is not a capital.) But the chart cites outdated data and omits several capitals and many other cities with much higher rates.
The chart cited a homicide rate of 41 per 100,000 people for Washington, close to the city's rate for 2023. But again, the rate declined to 26.6 per 100,000 in 2024.
Mr. Trump has a point that Washington's homicide rate is much higher than many capitals, but its rate is nowhere near the highest 'anywhere in the world.'
In 2023, according to data compiled by the Igarapé Institute, a Brazilian think tank, capitals with higher homicide rates included Port-au-Prince, Haiti, with a rate of 67.2 per 100,000 people; Cape Town, South Africa, with 66.8; Kingston, Jamaica, with 64.2; Caracas, Venezuela, with 47.9; and Guatemala City at 47.8.
The think tank reported a slightly lower homicide rate for Washington at 39.1, based on data from the Council on Criminal Justice and its higher population estimate. Overall, the think tank reported, 47 cities with more than 250,000 people had higher homicide rates than 40.4 and 49 cities had rates higher than 39.1, including six in the United States: Memphis, New Orleans, St. Louis, Baltimore, Cleveland and Detroit.
Image
President Trump cited an array of inaccurate statistics about murders in the city and crimes committed by children during a news conference on Monday.
Credit...
Doug Mills/The New York Times
What Was Said
'Juvenile offenders in crimes against persons, as they say, it's getting worse.'
— Mr. Trump in the news conference
This is exaggerated. Total arrests of youths under 18 did increase from 2021 to 2023, but declined in 2024. Juvenile arrests through the first six months of 2025 are slightly higher compared with the same time period last year. But arrests of youths still remained below prepandemic levels and have significantly declined over the past 20 years.
According to data compiled by the city's Criminal Justice Coordinating Council, the police made about 1,500 arrests of children in 2020; 1,400 in 2021; 1,700 in 2022; 2,200 in 2023; and 2,000 in 2024. Juvenile arrests totaled 1,128 through the first half of 2025, compared with 1,114 in the first half of 2024.
In comparison, the police arrested 2,300 to 2,900 youths annually from 2016 to 2019 and 3,400 to 4,000 annually from 2006 to 2010.
What Was Said
'They know, these young gangs — or as they're called here, crews — they know that if they're 14, 15, 16, or 17, they're below the age of criminal responsibility unless they commit the crime of murder, rape, armed robbery or burglary in the first degree.
And that means if you shoot someone and they don't die, I don't even get the case as a prosecutor. And understand I'm not just a federal prosecutor, I'm the local D.A., so to speak here for D.C.: All of the cases go to family court and the goal of family court — the 14- through 17-year-olds — and those cases go to family court where the focus is rehabilitation and they talk about ice cream socials and yoga.'
— Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, in an interview with Fox News on Monday night
This is misleading. It is true that Ms. Pirro, who was nominated by Mr. Trump to her role and confirmed by the Senate this month, does not have jurisdiction over most crimes committed by children 17 years and under. But that does not mean arrested youth are not prosecuted at all; rather, a local prosecutor handles those cases. Similarly, many youth are detained at a center criticized for violence and overcrowding, not simply engaged in 'ice cream socials and yoga.'
By 'family court,' Ms. Pirro is most likely referring to the role of the D.C. Superior Court's family court social services division as the city's probation agency for children. The agency decides whether arrested youth are released to parents or a guardian, placed in a shelter or confined to a juvenile detention center as they await trial or sentencing.
Nearly half of youth arrests in Washington result in detention before an initial hearing, which is higher than the national average of about a quarter.
Ms. Pirro is correct that she can directly charge a child as an adult if the child commits one of four serious crimes: murder, rape, armed robbery or burglary. But youths arrested on other offenses can be prosecuted by the city's elected attorney general, who prosecuted 84 percent of violent crimes committed by children in 2024, and about 73 percent of all crimes.
If the children are judged to have been 'involved in a delinquent act' — which would be a crime if committed by an adult — the family court then decides again if the children should be released on probation or detained. If sentenced to a juvenile detention center, the children receive services like counseling and education and vocational training with the goal of rehabilitation and eventual re-entry into society, as Ms. Pirro correctly noted.
Ms. Pirro's portrayal of the criminal justice system as indulgent is a matter of opinion.
Eduardo R. Ferrer, a professor at Georgetown University who supervises its Juvenile Justice Clinic, described her portrayal of the juvenile criminal justice system as inaccurate.
He pointed to a number of local news reports about understaffing, confinement, sexual abuse and physical abuse at the juvenile detention facility in Washington. A recent investigation by The Washington Post also found that the number of dangerous incidents at the center nearly quadrupled in recent years, and that many children are held longer than the stated goal of 30 days.
'Young people are not coddled in D.C.,' he said. 'To the contrary, generally, system-involved youth are not currently receiving the services and supports necessary for them to succeed.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Melania Trump threatens to sue Hunter Biden over ‘salacious' Epstein comments
Melania Trump threatens to sue Hunter Biden over ‘salacious' Epstein comments

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Melania Trump threatens to sue Hunter Biden over ‘salacious' Epstein comments

US first lady Melania Trump has demanded that Hunter Biden retract comments linking her to sex trafficker Jeffrey Epstein and threatened to sue if he does not. Ms Trump takes issue with two comments Mr Biden, son of former president Joe Biden, made in an interview this month with American journalist Andrew Callaghan. He alleged that Epstein introduced the first lady to now-President Donald Trump. The statements are false, defamatory and 'extremely salacious' Melania Trump's lawyer, Alejandro Brito, wrote in a letter to Mr Biden. Mr Biden's remarks were widely disseminated on social media and reported by media outlets around the world, causing the first lady 'to suffer overwhelming financial and reputational harm', he wrote. Mr Biden made the Epstein comments during a sprawling interview in which he lashed out at 'elites' and others in the Democratic Party he says undermined his father before he dropped out of last year's presidential campaign. 'Epstein introduced Melania to Trump. The connections are, like, so wide and deep,' Mr Biden said in one of the comments Ms Trump disputes. Mr Biden attributed the claim to author Michael Wolff, whom Mr Trump disparaged in June as a 'Third Rate Reporter'. He has accused Mr Wolff of making up stories to sell books. The first lady's threats echo a favoured strategy of her husband, who has aggressively used litigation to go after critics. Public figures like the Trumps face a high bar to succeed in a defamation case. The president and first lady have long said they were introduced by Paolo Zampolli, a modelling agent, at a New York Fashion Week party in 1998. The letter is dated August 6 and was first reported on Wednesday by Fox News Digital. Abbe Lowell, a lawyer who has represented Mr Biden in his criminal cases and to whom Brito's letter is addressed, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Ken Calvert has served California for decades. Newsom's plan could end his dominance
Ken Calvert has served California for decades. Newsom's plan could end his dominance

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Ken Calvert has served California for decades. Newsom's plan could end his dominance

Last year Republican Rep. Ken Calvert, the longest-serving Republican of California's delegation, narrowly held his seat against a former federal prosecutor, Democrat Will Rollins. This year he faces eight challengers, and the possibility that his area, California District 41, could be redrawn to give Democratic candidates the advantage. Gov. Gavin Newsom is proposing what lawmakers are calling an emergency redistricting plan for California, aimed at turning at least five red congressional seats blue. Calvert's Inland Empire district is one of those targets. Newsom floated his plan after Texas began redrawing its political lines to eliminate five Democratic seats. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott is pushing the proposal with the backing of President Donald Trump, who wants to bolster the GOP's House majority in next year's midterm election by skewing voting districts in Republicans' favor. 'Donald Trump called up Governor Abbott for one simple reason: to rig the 2026 elections,' Newsom said in a statement, vowing to 'fight fire with fire.' But he faces some hurdles. Unlike Texas, where the legislature sets political boundaries, California relies on an independent citizens' commission to draw voting lines. California voters approved the redistricting commission for state offices in 2008, empowering the bipartisan body to set boundaries based on geographic areas and 'communities of interest,' which can include cultural and economic characteristics. In 2010, voters added congressional districts to the process. To circumvent that, Newsom would ask California voters to approve new boundaries that would remain in place through 2030. He plans to release proposed voting maps next week. Then the state legislature has to authorize a ballot measure by Aug. 22 to place the redistricting plan on the November ballot. Newsom wants to redraw California map: Here's an overview of where we stand Last week Newsom hosted Texas lawmakers who fled the state to delay a vote on its redistricting effort. And on Monday he sent Trump a letter outlining California's counteroffensive. 'You are playing with fire, threatening to destabilize democracy, while knowing that California can neutralize any gains you hope to make,' Newsom wrote. Although the governor has been leading the charge for redistricting, his office said the legislature is handling the maps. 'That is not something our office is actively involved in,' Brandon Richards, a spokesperson for the governor's office, told CalMatters in an email. Calvert didn't comment on how the redistricting proposal would affect his district, but said the plan undermines California's citizen-led redistricting process. 'I strongly oppose the scheme being orchestrated behind closed doors by Sacramento politicians to take constitutionally afforded power away from the Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission and replace it with a process that would allow legislators to draw district maps that are gerrymandered to benefit themselves and their political allies,' Calvert said in a statement to CalMatters. 'A partisan political gerrymander is not what the voters of California want as they clearly stated when they passed the VOTERS FIRST Act and participated in the Independent Citizens Redistricting Commission process.' If voters approve the new maps it could put Calvert's seat at risk. Previous redistricting in 2021 added the liberal Coachella Valley to conservative parts of western Riverside County, making it a more competitive race. Rollins brought a tightly run campaign and $8 million war chest to the fight and lost by just 3% in November. With even more Democrat-friendly boundaries and a wide field of candidates that include business executives, an educator and a pop star, the swing race would likely attract renewed national attention and campaign donations. This article originally appeared on Palm Springs Desert Sun: California redistricting Ken Calvert seat

Democrats in Bryan County hope to sway residents to vote blue as election cycle ramps up
Democrats in Bryan County hope to sway residents to vote blue as election cycle ramps up

Yahoo

time27 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Democrats in Bryan County hope to sway residents to vote blue as election cycle ramps up

Democrats in Bryan County are looking to garner support and bolster nominees that can spearhead more blue votes at the local level and beyond. In Richmond Hill, qualifying for mayor begins Aug. 18. The governor's race is heating up too as there are candidates who have announced their bid and have kicked off their respective campaign for the general election in May 2026. According to a voting map on Bryan County is predominantly red. Despite an area that has strong Republican backing, residents like Corey Foreman, president of the Bryan County Democratic Committee, want to change that. 'There is more hope in Bryan County than most people realize — and when we come together with purpose, things can change faster than anyone expects,' said Foreman. 'The numbers don't lie. Even if you think this is a county that cannot be flipped, I promise you, it's not. The potential here is real — and growing.' At the heart of the matter is concern regarding the Republican stronghold not only in the county but in the state. Foreman said affordable healthcare and the cost of living are top of mind. Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp, Attorney General Chris Carr, Lt. Governor Burt Jones are also Republicans. According to Ballotpedia, Republicans make up 55% of Georgia lawmakers, including Ron Stephens, Jesse Petrea and Lehman Franklin, who all serve portions of Bryan County. Foreman said there is a place in the Democratic Party for those who may not see eye-to-eye on every topic. However, he feels strongly that issues such as reproductive rights and access to affordable health care are at the forefront of the party's concerns and issues Foreman says are controlled by the GOP. 'The Democratic Party needs action and to show the commitment of the true policy that we want to change for the people,' said Foreman. 'There is a little bit of fear - some Democrats aren't as bold and outspoken as others. I don't want to keep talking about the issues in Georgia and then hoping that the Republican control fixes it. I want the Democratic Party to step up and be the change.'In 2021, Bryan County was named the fastest growing county in the state, according to U.S. Census data. With its growing population comes opportunities for Governor Gubernatorial Candidate and Democratic Senator Jason Esteves to flip red voters blue. Foreman was recently appointed to President of the BCDC and since then, he has been working diligently to ensure residents feel the presence of Democrats in their community. He spoke before a large crowd at a rally last month protesting Trump's Big Beautiful Bill and has attended a handful of other rallies. The party also hosted a community Q&A earlier this month with leaders from around the reigon, including Alderman Kurtis Purtee of Savannah and Commissioner Justin Frazier of Liberty County. Democratic gubernatorial and Senator Jason Esteves visited Savannah Aug. 3 as part of his campaign tour but said he plans to come back to South Georgia to talk to voters in Bryan County at a later date. Esteves said the goal is not necessarily to turn the entire county blue, but to earn some of the republican votes, even if it is a small percentage. 'Does it mean that we win the county? No, but have we made progress and does that mean we have a Democrat as governor? Yes, and that's the kind of progress that we're going to be making not only in Bryan County but across the state," said Esteves. But it's a tall order in a state led by sitting Gov. Brian Kemp that swung back to red in the 2024 presidential election and in a country with a Republican-majority House and Senate. Esteves said one of his primary goals is to highlight issues within the economy, such as a lack of affordable housing or the need to provide capital for entrepreneurs to start their own business. His number one goal is to keep the conversation of affordability in all aspects at the forefront of his conversation when talking to voters. 'I think if Democrats talk to voters and in counties like Bryan County or a blue county about how we're going to keep and grow the money in their pockets, then we can win by building a broad-based coalition,' said Esteves. 'What voters want to talk about is how we can help make life more affordable for them so that they can afford a place to live, food on the table and health care.' Esteves wears hats that may appeal to a variety of voters. He is a lawyer, business owner of an urgent care and two breakfast restaurants and a former middle school social science public school teacher. Still, his political stint has been a relatively recent endeavor as the state Democratic Party treasurer since 2019, and the District 35 Senator since 2023, representing Douglas and parts of Fulton County. 'It was former President Barak Obama who said we need to stop looking for Messiahs, we need to stop looking for someone to save us,' said Esteves. 'We have to do the hard work to save ourselves. No one is coming to save us in this state. We're not going to celebrity our way to victory - it's nothing but hard work and meeting voters where they are." Foreman said he is seeing an increase in membership numbers in the Bryan County Democratic Committee not only from newcomers to the area but from the existing Democratic base in the county. 'On the statewide issues, they are realizing that these issues are all the same,' said Foreman. 'I feel like people are open to new leadership and new conversations. The base of Democrats in Bryan County, they are growing. They're not the loudest but they're present and they're starting to get louder.' Foreman is calling on his community to get involved at the local level. 'Richmond Hill municipal qualifying is coming up in August and we need people ready to step forward and run,' said Foreman. 'If you've ever considered being that voice for change — this is the moment. I want you to be involved. I need you to be involved.' Latrice Williams is a general assignment reporter covering Bryan and Effingham County. She can be reached at lwilliams6@ Jillian Magtoto contributed to this story. This article originally appeared on Savannah Morning News: Corey Foreman and Jason Esteves talk politics among democratic party Solve the daily Crossword

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store