logo
FBI sending 120 agents into DC streets as Trump targets carjacking and crime in capital

FBI sending 120 agents into DC streets as Trump targets carjacking and crime in capital

Independent2 days ago
Amid President Donald Trump's crime crackdown in Washington, D.C., the FBI has started sending about 120 agents on overnight shifts to help local law enforcement battle carjackings and other violent crime, according to The Washington Post.
This comes as Trump has threatened a federal takeover of the city, even as data shows violent crime plummeting in the nation's capital. The president was recently outraged after a young administration staffer was reportedly assaulted in an attempted carjacking.
On Saturday, Trump announced that a Monday press conference would end violent crime in Washington. On Sunday, he took to Truth Social again, this time to call on the city's homeless to 'clear out' 'immediately.' The president compared his crime-battling action to his work restricting illegal immigration at the southern border.
The FBI agents from the bureau's counterintelligence, public corruption, and other units are now set to take part in traffic stops, for which they lack the proper training, The Post noted.
Trump ordered federal law enforcement agents from a number of agencies to be sent into city streets last week, and he said more juveniles should be charged in the justice system as adults.
The paper found that the diversion to local crime has caused frustration at the FBI. Most of the 120 agents authorized by the administration to battle crime alongside D.C. police come from the Washington Field Office. FBI agents usually don't have the authority to conduct traffic stops, and people familiar with the situation told The Post that the agents could be dispatched to support other agencies.
Federal land is all across the nation's capital, and local law enforcement often works side by side with federal agents to patrol it. However, these duties usually fall to the U.S. Park Police and the Secret Service, and not the FBI.
Anonymous top officials in the D.C. police department told The Post that the Trump administration hasn't asked how to deploy these additional resources. As D.C. is not a state, federal authorities can exert more control over the city even as residents and local elected leaders protest.
D.C. residents elect their own mayor and city council following the 1973 Home Rule Act. However, a federal takeover of Washington's police department would be an unusual use of power in a city where local leaders have few ways to resist federal intrusions.
On Sunday morning, the FBI told The Post in a statement that 'Agents from the FBI Washington Field Office continue to participate in the increased federal law enforcement presence in D.C., which includes assisting our law enforcement partners.'
Trump took to Truth Social on Sunday afternoon to call out the city's mayor.
'The Mayor of D.C., Muriel Bowser, is a good person who has tried, but she has been given many chances, and the Crime Numbers get worse, and the City only gets dirtier and less attractive,' he said.
Appearing on MSNBC on Sunday, Bowser said Washington was "not experiencing a crime spike."
"It is true that we had a terrible spike in crime in 2023, but this is not 2023," she said. "We have spent over the last two years driving down violent crime in this city, driving it down to a 30-year low."
The capital's police department reported that violent crime in the first seven months of this year was down by 26 percent compared with 2024. Overall, crime was down roughly seven percent.
'If the priority is to show force in an American city, we know he can do that here,' Bowser added. 'But it won't be because there's a spike in crime.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Democrat crisis exposed by DailyMail+ Power List…with woeful public support for all presidential contenders… as celebrities top liberal leadership wish list instead
Democrat crisis exposed by DailyMail+ Power List…with woeful public support for all presidential contenders… as celebrities top liberal leadership wish list instead

Daily Mail​

time17 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Democrat crisis exposed by DailyMail+ Power List…with woeful public support for all presidential contenders… as celebrities top liberal leadership wish list instead

The Democrats have been in free fall since Donald Trump's humiliating defeat of Kamala Harris in the . The party lost the White House after an aging Joe Biden stepped aside for a younger vice president widely regarded as the stronger candidate. They were wrong. Your browser does not support iframes. Your browser does not support iframes.

When Trump and Putin go head-to-head, who wins?
When Trump and Putin go head-to-head, who wins?

The Independent

time19 minutes ago

  • The Independent

When Trump and Putin go head-to-head, who wins?

Even by Donald Trump 's standards, his pre-match assessment of how his bilateral meeting with his Russian counterpart will play out was bullish. 'We're going to have a meeting with Vladimir Putin,' he told a news conference at the White House. 'And at the end of that meeting – probably in the first two minutes – I'll know exactly whether or not a deal can be made. Cos that's what I do – I make deals.' It's typical Trump: boastful, bereft of meaning and utterly unconvincing. On Friday, when Trump welcomes the Russian president to talks in Alaska, like a python eyeing a particularly plump suckling piglet, Putin will squeeze the spirit out of him, and then eat him for breakfast, as he has on each and every occasion when this tragically unevenly matched pair have had cause to interact. Steve Witkoff, Trump's equally hapless envoy, has already served as an amuse-bouche for the predatory Putin. The cunning and ruthless former KGB officer will soon get the better of this hapless real estate bumbler, too – because the central fact about Trump is hiding in plain sight and requires no detailed psychological profiling: The guy's all over the place. When Trump heads to Alaska – he actually said he was going to Russia, but it makes no difference – we should be very, very nervous. It's strange, in a way, because Trump has indicated in recent weeks that he's 'disappointed' with Putin, and suspects he's being played – but he refuses to be 'done' with him. The White House correspondent was right to ask Trump how he would 'probably' know whether a deal was possible within 120 seconds, hardly enough time for Trump to get the bottle of mineral water open. Does Trump really possess some infallible supernatural power that can sense how the immediate future will unfold? If so, where is the evidence for this extraordinary gift? Certainly not in the mixed success he has had in business. Let us not dwell on the two supposed breakthrough summits with Kim Jong-un, which failed to deliver on Trump's bizarre desire to build another golf resort, on the North Korean coast. The last Trump-Putin summit, in 2018, in then-neutral Finland, was marked by the grotesque spectacle of the American president deriding his own intelligence services in favour of taking the word of the Russian leader. There was no Russian interference in American elections, Trump declared: 'President Putin says it's not Russia. I don't see any reason why it would be.' When the wilfully naive Trump had one-to-one talks with the Russian strongman, they were accompanied only by a Russian interpreter. Trump got nothing out of Putin on the crisis in Syria, was persuaded that the Russian secret service could interview their own spies caught by the Americans, and at the end of the summit no agreements were announced. Such was the spectacle that there was much talk of the Russians having Kompromat – dirt – on Trump. The Russian dictator was even asked about it; he joked about what American businessmen get up to in Moscow. Given the pressure he is coming under for refusing to release the so-called Epstein files, Trump might be a distracted man as he negotiates Ukraine's freedom away. In other words, it is Putin who understands the art of the deal. He knows what he wants, and he knows he cannot lose. He has already won the propaganda prize of transforming himself from the pariah leader of a rogue state into looking like a co-equal partner of the United States, carving Europe into spheres of influence as Stalin and Roosevelt once did. Then, as now, the smaller nations, and even the British represented by Winston Churchill, had to accept the fait accompli arrived at by Russia and America. It is no surprise that, in the peace process, President Zelensky, President Macron, Chancellor Merz and Keir Starmer will play but a minor part, if any. For all the speculation ahead of the meeting, we all know how it will play out. Putin will demand that most, if not all, of the eastern provinces of Ukraine, plus Crimea, become de facto parts of Russia. There will only be a ceasefire if this precondition is met by Trump, secretly or openly. In return, Zelensky might be offered the return of a bit of the Black Sea coast – 'oceanside prime real estate', in Trump-speak. Trump will bully Zelensky into accepting this easy Russian win. If Zelensky or the Ukrainian people reject the 'deal', Trump will abandon them. Putin can then get on with his slow but unrelenting offensives and, eventually, the Russian meat-grinder will prevail. Ukraine will be extinguished, Putin will be ready for his next meal, and America might just wake up and realise what the hell is going on, even if Trump remains in denial. Either way – deal or no deal in Alaska – Putin ends up with a lot of Ukrainian territory.

Pentagon is already calling National Guard in other states looking for units that could help in DC
Pentagon is already calling National Guard in other states looking for units that could help in DC

The Independent

time19 minutes ago

  • The Independent

Pentagon is already calling National Guard in other states looking for units that could help in DC

President Donald Trump 's decision to activate around 800 National Guard troops in Washington, D.C., to tackle street crime has forced the Pentagon to look to other states for help. Trump announced his decision to federalize D.C.'s police department at a White House press conference on Monday at which he was flanked by Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who said that reinforcements could be called up if the Guard encounters resistance from protesters, adding that 'specialized units' might be included in their number. However, a senior Army official has since told The New York Times that the current deployment of D.C. Guard is likely to be sufficient for the task in hand. The Department of Defense has reportedly moved to ensure the Guard's duties in Washington are kept to a safe minimum, with one official telling the Times that 'soldiers with M-16s who have been trained to kill adversaries' will not be placed in policing roles. The mission has nevertheless been criticized, with Dr Carrie A Lee, former chair of the department of national security and strategy at the Army War College, telling the newspaper: 'This is part of a pattern where the administration is using and appropriating military resources for nonmilitary domestic goals. 'Whether it's immigration or going against drug cartels or crime in Washington, it's very clear, to me at least, that this administration sees the military as a one-size-fits-all solution to accomplishing its domestic political priorities.' Trump has previously dispatched the Guard to the U.S. southern border with Mexico and to Los Angeles in June to help quell anti-ICE demonstrations. Guardsmen have since reportedly described that experience as bad for morale, obliterating much of the good will they had earned from helping to extinguish California's wildfires in January and expressed a fear it could harm future enlistment drives. The step also had a negative impact on the president's own approval ratings. At his press conference on Monday, Trump pledged to 'rescue' the city from 'crime, bloodshed, bedlam and squalor and worse,' despite the city's much-improved crime statistics suggesting there was no need or justification. But the president nevertheless insisted: 'Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people, and we're not going to let it happen anymore.'

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