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FBI moves to dispatch 120 agents to D.C. streets as Trump vows crackdown on crime

FBI moves to dispatch 120 agents to D.C. streets as Trump vows crackdown on crime

Boston Globe9 hours ago
The deployment of FBI agents to deal with local crime puts agents from the bureau's counterintelligence, public corruption and other divisions with minimal training in traffic stops out on the streets in potentially dangerous encounters, diverting them from their typical jobs at the bureau. And it comes as Trump is publicly portraying the city as rampant with violent crime - even as the mayor refutes that characterization, pointing to police data showing a drop in violent crime.
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Last week, Trump ordered federal law enforcement agents from several agencies to be deployed on city streets and called for more juveniles to be charged in the adult justice system.
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Staffing assignments this weekend reveal for the first time how many new FBI resources the Trump administration could divert to local crime and the frustration it has caused within the bureau.
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In recent days, the administration has authorized up to 120 agents, largely from the FBI's Washington Field Office, to work overnight shifts for at least one week alongside D.C. police and other federal law enforcement officers in the nation's capital, according to the people familiar with those efforts, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss specifics of a staffing plan that has not been made public. FBI agents generally do not have authority to make traffic stops, and the people said the agents' roles could include supporting the other agencies during traffic stops.
The FBI also is dispatching agents from outside D.C., including Philadelphia, to help with the surge of federal law enforcement in the District, according to multiple people familiar with the plans.
Federal land is scattered across Washington, and local enforcement often works alongside federal law enforcement to patrol these and surrounding areas. But the U.S. Park Police and Secret Service - which have more experience patrolling streets - typically do this work, not the FBI.
The Secret Service and the U.S. Secret Service Uniformed Division have also been directed to launch special patrols in D.C., according to a White House official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the operation.
The Trump administration has not asked the D.C. police department - the chief law enforcement agency responsible for policing local crime - on how best to deploy these federal resources, according to a senior official with the department, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak about the matter.
Because D.C. is not a state, the federal government has unique authority to exert control over the city - even amid objections from the residents and locally elected government. The Home Rule Act of 1973 gave D.C. residents the ability to elect their own mayor and council members. A federal takeover of the D.C. police force would be an extraordinary assertion of power in a place where local leaders have few avenues to resist federal encroachment.
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'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,' the FBI said in a statement Sunday morning.
Trump has been ramping up his criticisms on the nation's capital in recent days. Last week, the president posted on social media a photo of a former U.S. DOGE Service staffer who was injured in an attempted carjacking. Soon after the attack, D.C. police arrested a 15-year-old boy and girl from Maryland and charged them with unarmed carjacking.
'I'm going to make our Capital safer and more beautiful than it ever was before,' Trump wrote in a Truth Social post Sunday morning. 'It's all going to happen very fast, just like the Border.'
In a different social media post on Sunday, Trump said the 10 a.m. White House news conference on Monday will be about the city's cleanliness, its physical renovation and its general condition.
'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,' Trump said in that afternoon Truth Social post.
Bowser (D) has been pushing back against Trump's characterization of the city she leads, pointing out on MSNBC on Sunday morning that crime rates have been dropping in the nation's capital.
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In D.C., violent crime is down 26 percent compared with this time in 2024, according to D.C. police data. Homicides are down 12 percent.
D.C. police have made about 900 juvenile arrests this year - almost 20 percent fewer than during the same time frame last year. About 200 of those charges are for violent crimes and at least four dozen are for carjacking.
'If the priority is to show force in an American city, we know he can do that here,' Bowser, who said she last spoke to Trump a few weeks ago, said on MSNBC. 'But it won't be because there's a spike in crime.'
The reassignment of FBI agents has further demoralized some agents in the Washington Field Office, who believe they have little expertise or training in thwarting carjackers and were already angered by a spate of firings inside the agency that they deemed were unwarranted. Last week, the Trump administration ousted with no explanation FBI personnel across the country, including the head of the Washington Field Office.
In 2020, the first Trump administration dispatched FBI agents, mostly from the Washington Field Office, to respond to the racial justice protests that June in the nation's capital. The Trump administration had wanted a federal presence in the streets as a deterrent to rioters or protesters who might try to vandalize federal property.
Several agents were captured in a photograph taking a knee in what was viewed as a gesture of solidarity to protesters marching against racial injustice - an image that went viral and fueled accusations from conservatives that the bureau harbors a liberal agenda. But people familiar with the FBI have said agents are not trained for riot control and were placed in an untenable position as they knelt down, trying to defuse a tense situation.
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In the first months of the current Trump administration, officials reassigned several of those agents who were captured in that photo from nearly five years ago.
'If D.C. doesn't get its act together, and quickly, we will have no choice but to take Federal control of the City, and run this City how it should be run, and put criminals on notice that they're not going to get away with it anymore,' Trump wrote on social media last week in a post that included a bloody image of the injured former DOGE staffer.
This spring, Trump ordered the creation of the 'D.C. Safe and Beautiful Task Force,' a vehicle for his long-held fixations on quality-of-life issues in the city, including homeless encampments and graffiti.
On Sunday, homeless advocates and D.C. residents criticized Trump's threats to remove homeless people from D.C. as inhumane, costly and impractical.
'That money could be better spent getting folks housing and support' Jesse Rabinowitz, campaign and communications director at the National Homelessness Law Center, said of the federal law enforcement presence in the District.
Deborah Goosby, a 67-year-old homeless woman, sat in her usual spot greeting shoppers outside a D.C. grocery store on Sunday morning.
'That's never going to happen,' she said after hearing that Trump wanted to send people experiencing homelessness far from the nation's capital. 'They can't make me leave.'
Natalie Allison, Emily Davies and Paul Kiefer contributed to this report.
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Trump to Deploy More Federal Forces on Washington, D.C.
Trump to Deploy More Federal Forces on Washington, D.C.

Yahoo

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  • Yahoo

Trump to Deploy More Federal Forces on Washington, D.C.

President Donald Trump speaks to the media as he departs the White House in Washington, DC. on August 01, 2025. Credit - Win McNamee—Getty Images President Donald Trump is expected on Monday to announce plans to use federal resources to crack down on crime in Washington, D.C., and remove homeless people from the city's public spaces, a move that local leaders are condemning as an overriding of local control of the city based on false pretenses. Data show that violent crime in the nation's capital is down significantly from a peak in 2023. But Trump paints a different picture. Trump described Washington as 'one of the most dangerous cities anywhere in the World' in a post on Truth Social Saturday. On Sunday, Trump wrote, 'I'm going to make our Capital safer and more beautiful than it ever was before. The Homeless have to move out, IMMEDIATELY. We will give you places to stay, but FAR from the Capital.' In recent days, Trump has deployed federal officers from the U.S. Park Police, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the FBI, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, and the U.S. Marshals Service on night patrols in D.C., according to ATF's X account. Trump has considered deploying the National Guard in Washington, D.C. to address crime. If he follows through, it would be a rare use of military forces on U.S. soil and a potential violation of the Posse Comitatus Act that restricts the military from being used as a police force for domestic law enforcement. During racial justice protests in June 2020, Trump sent uniformed National Guard troops to Lafayette Park in front of the White House to help clear the park of protestors. Washington, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, said on MSNBC on Sunday that Trump's statements comparing the capital to a 'war-torn country' are 'hyperbolic and false.' According to city police data, violent crime in D.C. is down by 26% so far in 2025 compared to the year before. Trump's focus on public safety in the capital comes after former U.S. DOGE Service software engineer Edward Coristine, who is known by the nickname 'Big Balls,' was injured during an alleged carjacking in DC early in the morning on Aug. 3. Contact us at letters@

‘It's like you're paying a little tax': Jeffrey Tobolski, ex-McCook mayor and Cook commissioner, faces sentencing in series of shakedowns
‘It's like you're paying a little tax': Jeffrey Tobolski, ex-McCook mayor and Cook commissioner, faces sentencing in series of shakedowns

Chicago Tribune

time5 minutes ago

  • Chicago Tribune

‘It's like you're paying a little tax': Jeffrey Tobolski, ex-McCook mayor and Cook commissioner, faces sentencing in series of shakedowns

Jeffrey Tobolski's traveled a well-worn path in Chicago-area politics, from following in the footsteps of his late father as mayor of the tiny west suburban town of McCook to double-dipping as a Cook County commissioner. But Tobolski's career also had another familiar, darker ring to it. For years, federal prosecutors say, he used his elected offices to create a fiefdom of graft, shaking down business owners who needed liquor licenses, forcing a developer to install air conditioning in his home for free, and even enlisting McCook's police chief as his personal bag man. After the FBI raided Tobolski's offices in the fall of 2019, he became the poster boy in a burgeoning federal corruption probe that eventually brought down nearly a dozen suburban elected officials and political operatives, including Tobolski's chief of staff and other close associates. The case unfolded like a cliched version of mid-level Chicago corruption: the wired-up executive entertaining politicos at his suburban cigar lounge, secret contracts siphoning funds from red light cameras to a mob-connected businessman, and a mayor handing over an envelope of bribe money at a Crestwood pancake house called Stacked. On Monday, five years after pleading guilty and agreeing to cooperate in the investigation, Tobolski is finally set to be sentenced at the Dirksen U.S. Courthouse, a place he's never publicly appeared due to pandemic-era restrictions in place at the time he was charged. Prosecutors have asked U.S. District Chief Judge Virginia Kendall for a 5 1/2-year prison sentence, writing in a recent court filing that Tobolski 'went on an aggressive and persistent cash grab to enrich himself' at his constituents' expense, regularly demanding cash payments and other benefits from people seeking to do business in McCook and elsewhere in the Chicago area. 'Tobolski did this by misusing the inherent authority of his position to instill fear (in) everyday businessmen, such that they felt they had no choice but to pay Tobolski,' Assistant U.S. Attorney Tiffany Ardam wrote. Tobolski's lawyers, meanwhile, are asking for leniency, pointing to his extensive cooperation in the case, which led to the successful prosecution of others. They also told the judge in a recent filing that the shame of media coverage coupled with the loss of his livelihood have already amounted to severe punishment. 'Any general deterrent effect of this case has already occurred, meaning that the type and length of his sentence will add little to no marginal general-deterrent value,' wrote attorneys James Vanzant and David Sterba. In all, Tobolski admitted to accepting more than a quarter of a million dollars in bribes or extortion payments over the years. He also was showered with a variety of other benefits, including cash, cigars, dinners, holiday gifts, sporting event tickets, and those free air-conditioning units, which a developer installed at Tobolski's home at a cost of $18,000. During the investigation, Tobolski was secretly recorded joking about how corrupt he was, prosecutors say, at one point stating sarcastically, 'You know I don't take any money in McCook, ever. I'm as legitimate as they come.' His then-chief-of-staff, Patrick Doherty, was caught on another wiretap talking with an associate about the prospect of doing business in Tobolski's notoriously corrupt administration. 'It's all contingent on what you can give,' Doherty told the associate, Omar Maani, about the obligatory campaign donations to Doherty's boss, according to court records. Maani, who was secretly recording the September 2019 conversation for the FBI, said, 'It's like you're paying a little tax.' 'Right. Juice,' Doherty replied, according to court records. 'Street juice….I hope we can get it before (Tobolski) goes to jail. I hope we can retire.' Tobolski, 60, pleaded guilty in September 2020 to conspiring with McCook's then-police chief, Mario DePasquale, to extort a restaurant owner who needed permission to host events serving alcohol. At the time, Tobolski doubled as McCook's liquor commissioner. Tobolski also pleaded guilty to filing a false tax return in 2018 where he underreported his income by at least $66,000, at least $10,000 of which was bribe money, according to his plea agreement. The document stated he also misreported his income in returns filed each year from 2012 to 2017. In their memo asking for a 67-month prison term, prosecutors called Tobolski's use of his police chief as his bagman 'especially egregious.' At DePasquale's sentencing hearing last year, the victim, the former owner of the Pub at the Max facility in McCook, testified how in July 2018, after he'd come up short with a payment, DePasquale warned him that the boss would not be happy. The man said his license was revoked by the city the next day, putting him out of business. 'That was one of the worst days I have in my life,' the victim testified in a thick Greek accent. DePasquale's attorney said his client felt compelled to go along with Tobolski, whom he called 'one of the most vile and corrupt people that one could possibly imagine.' 'He created in the western suburbs an almost unfathomable, Wild West-like atmosphere, where everybody was fair game for them,' attorney Jonathan Minkus said. 'And the mayor made it clear to DePasquale from the get-go that if he refused to go along, he'd lose his job.' 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'The heart of the matter is that we just got him back,' his daughter wrote. jmeisner@

With anti-DEI and ESG battles, Trump is waging war against freedom
With anti-DEI and ESG battles, Trump is waging war against freedom

The Hill

time5 minutes ago

  • The Hill

With anti-DEI and ESG battles, Trump is waging war against freedom

In this first year of President Trump's second presidency, we are witnessing his outright contempt for freedom. We cannot let it prevail. Take free speech, for example. He claims he has 'brought free speech back to America,' yet he tolerates only the speech he finds acceptable. He punishes those who don't agree with him, including universities, law firms, and businesses that have policies Trump doesn't like. DEI and ESG are two of them. DEI emphasizes diversity, equity, and inclusion in the workforce, while ESG focuses on environmental stewardship, social justice, and good governance. Using executive orders and fiat, the president punishes states, businesses, and universities for these policies. In Trump's America, public and private institutions are not free to adopt policies and practices they consider important to their values and success. Trump's contempt for diversity extends to immigration. He panders to the element in America that believes migrants and immigrants are ' poisoning the blood of our country.' Actually, diversity adds character and strength to society, much as it does in nature. Trump invites us to indulge in intolerance, fear, and hegemony by characterizing the tired, poor, and terrified people at our borders as rapists, drug dealers, and 'very bad people.' Yet nobody works harder at being model citizens than people who have lived without liberty, security, and opportunity. On the first day of his second term as president, Trump called DEI programs in the federal government 'radical and wasteful.' He's entitled to his opinion as the CEO of the federal government, but he overreaches by using federal grants and contracts as a cudgel against DEI policies in universities and businesses. He is not the CEO of society. Trump argues that hiring policies should be based on merit rather than on sex and race, as though those attributes are mutually exclusive. 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