
Gangs in Haiti kill 2 elite police officers in latest attack against law enforcement
The officers attacked late Tuesday were members of a new specialized unit tasked with patrolling Kenscoff, a once peaceful farming community that gangs are trying to seize. It is located near the capital, Port-au-Prince, of which 90% is already controlled by gangs.
Lionel Lazarre, deputy spokesperson for Haiti's National Police, told The Associated Press that the policemen were inside an armored vehicle that became stuck in a ditch dug by gangs and were killed as they tried to escape.
In a video posted on social media, gang members gloated over boots, automatic weapons, bulletproof vests and other items they seized from police during the attack. They also posted gruesome videos of the officers killed.
The killings come less than a month after three other police officers and an informant were killed in Haiti's central region, which gangs have repeatedly attacked. A fourth officer also remains missing in that case.
Some 1,520 people were reported killed and another 600 injured across Haiti from April to the end of June, with 24% of them injured or killed by gangs, according to the latest U.N. report.
Haitian police are working with Kenyan officers leading a U.N.-backed mission that is struggling to quell gang violence. The multinational force was supposed to be on the ground with more than 2,500 uniformed personnel but has less than 1,000, said Ulrika Richardson, the outgoing U.N. humanitarian coordinator for Haiti.
Speaking at U.N. headquarters in New York on Tuesday, she described the situation on the ground as 'alarming and urgent,' calling it 'very strikingly horrific' in Port-au-Prince, where she lived and worked.
Richardson said 1.3 million people have been displaced by gang violence, 2 million people are facing emergency levels of food insecurity, and two out of three hospitals in the capital are not functioning.
She also noted that there's a lack of political will at many different levels and a lack of money. As an example, she said, the $900 million humanitarian response plan for Haiti, which is only 9% funded, is 'the lowest level of funding for any response plan in the world.'
Richardson warned that Haiti's gangs have now plunged into regional organized crime including trafficking in drugs, arms and people.
___
Associated Press press reporter Edith M. Lederer at the U.N. contributed.
____
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Woman, 49, killed in freak drowning accident after falling into RAIN BARREL outside her home
A North Carolina woman's autopsy revealed that she died by drowning after falling into a rain barrel on her property. Karin Ottenberg, 49, was reported missing late last year after being last seen at around 10.30 am on on December 22. Days later, Ottenberg was found dead at her home on Harrison street in Wilmington, according to a police spokesperson. Ottenberg was allegedly found in an 'obscure location' that her family, friends and law enforcement had walked past, according to WECT. She was discovered submerged in a rain barrel next to the back deck of her home. 'The barrel opening was approximately 18 inches, the height approximately 40 inches. The decedent's head was submerged and the water height in the barrel was approximately 18 inches,' reads the report. The report states that Ottengerg's cause of death was asphyxia via drowning after the autopsy revealed pulmonary edema. Pulmonary edema is a condition where there's an abnormal buildup of fluid in the lungs. No foul play or suicide is suspected in the case, and it remains unclear how Ottenberg ended up inside the rain barrel. Responders think she reached over the deck rail and down into the barrel for something when she fell in. According to her obituary, Ottenberg was 'a devoted mother, daughter, sister, and friend whose warmth and kindness touched all who knew her'. She graduated from New Hanover High School in 1993 and went on to earn an Associate of Arts degree from Cape Fear Community College, and then a Bachelor of Arts in Education from the University of North Carolina at Wilmington. Ottenberg had many careers throughout her life. She worked as a waitress, an art teacher and a banker. She found her true calling in horticulture and spent the majority of her professional life nurturing plants, flowers, bushes and trees. Ottenberg had two children, Isabella and Bodey. The obituary states she cherished each moment she spent at Bodey's soccer games and celebrated Isabella's involvement with Surfers Healing. She was an animal lover and opened her home to various creatures, from worms to cats, dogs and tadpoles. Ottenberg's genuine affection extended beyond her family and pets, she also had a 'vast network of friends who adored her spirit and generosity,' according to her obituary. The 49-year-old is survived by her mother, brother, children, uncles, stepmother and numerous special cousins, who 'held a dear place in her heart'.


Daily Mail
an hour ago
- Daily Mail
Anti-Trump activist's bid to debunk DC crime wave backfires
However, the account was quickly inundated with comments from locals that only served to prove that Trump 's law enforcement takeover is warranted. The X account wrote: 'Hey DC , let's push back against the negative narrative about our city. Share why you love our beautiful home and help show the world the real DC.' Testimonials came in thick and fast from people who had been the victims of serious crimes - who were happy that the National Guard are being deployed. 'I've been held up at gunpoint, had my car broken into 3 times, and had my bike stolen. My credit card has been skimmed too many times to count and I can't send my kids to public school here because they're a joke,' wrote Bret Manley, a children's book author based in the D.C. area. Multiple people wrote that they or people they knew have been robbed or mugged in front of police officers who declined to intervene. 'My car was broken into. One friend had a car stolen from in front of his place, another was carjacked at gun point. I've had to assist someone who was shot while I was just trying to drunkenly make my way home from a bar,' another person wrote. '[expletive] you. Thank god for the new enforcement.' Grayson Quay, a conservative writer and former editor at The Daily Caller, wrote about a time he was assaulted on the Metro. 'It was really cool when a guy headbutted me on the metro after I asked him to stop blasting music through his phone speakers,' he wrote. 'And then there was the time a [expletive] spat on me for no reason.' Tim Kennedy, a producer for outlet The Daily Signal, recalled a quadruple shooting at King Street Oyster Bar in August 2024 that killed two people. 'The D.C. chief of police blamed the restaurant for not properly locking up their patio at night,' Kennedy wrote. 'No, this actually happened.' The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) released a statement at the time saying that the restaurant, which was closed at the time of the shooting, failed to secure its patio and allowed people to gather. 'Without preventative measures, the open patio contributed to the group establishing themselves and continue to grow, leading to the gun violence that resulted in four people being shot, two of which are deceased, and significant property damage,' the department said in a statement. Other commenters talked about the mental toll of living in a city with high crime, including conservative political strategist Sarah Selip. 'As a woman #TheRealDC means carrying pepper spray day and night. Not wearing headphones after dark. Taking off your engagement ring when walking the dogs,' she wrote. The more constructive replies to Washingtonian Problems accused the account of being tone deaf and unwilling to acknowledge reality. 'It's a beautiful city but it's not negativity to admit that the crime is out of control,' one person wrote. The same day Washingtonian Problems made this post attempting to 'push back against the negative narrative about our city,' a man was shot to death in D.C.'s Logan Circle neighborhood. As of August 2025, violent crime has plummeted by 26 percent since last year, according to the MPD . Homicide is down 11 percent, while sexual abuse offenses have been cut in half. However, there is potentially reason to doubt these statistics, since MPD placed 3rd District Commander Michael Pulliam on leave last month over accusations of manipulating crime data. D.C. Police Union Chairman Gregg Pemberton told NBC 4 he doesn't believe there has been as large of a crime drop as local officials have claimed. 'There's potentially a drop from where we were in 2023. I think that there's a possibility that crime has come down. But the department is reporting that in 2024, crime went down 35 percent -- violent crime – and another 25 percent through August of this year,' Pemberton said. 'That is preposterous to suggest that cumulatively we've seen 60-plus percent drops in violent crime from where we were in '23, because we're out on the street. We know the calls we're responding to,' he added. Since Trump took over the MPD and mobilized the National Guard, the White House claimed that more than 100 people have been arrested.


The Guardian
an hour ago
- The Guardian
Protesters confront federal officers as Trump tightens grip on DC policing
Protesters heckled federal law enforcement officials as they reportedly stopped dozens of cars at a checkpoint along a busy street in Washington DC on Wednesday night, underscoring tensions after Donald Trump announced he was taking control of the city's police department and deploying the national guard in the city. Around 20 law enforcement officers, some of whom appeared to be from the Department of Homeland Security, pulled over drivers for infractions like broken taillights and not wearing seatbelts, according to the Washington Post. At least one woman was reportedly arrested as more than 100 protesters gathered and reportedly yelled things like 'get off our streets,' according to NBC News. Some protesters began warning drivers to avoid the area, the outlet reported. Nearly 800 national guard troops have begun arriving in the city this week. The White House says officials have made more than 100 arrests since Trump announced the takeover on Monday. The Metropolitan police department said it made 74 arrests on Wednesday and has made 217 arrests since Monday. DC's Home Rule Act of 1973 allows the president to take control of the city's police force for 30 days for 'federal purposes' that the president 'may deem necessary and appropriate'. Trump has suggested he will seek to extend that past 30 days. Doing so would require authorization from Congress. Chuck Schumer, the Democratic leader in the US Senate, said on Wednesday that his party would not support Trump's efforts to extend the takeover. 'No fucking way', Schumer said during a podcast interview with Aaron Parnas. 'We'll fight him tooth and nail.' If Congress doesn't grant the extension, Trump suggested on Wednesday he could declare an emergency to unilaterally extend the takeover. 'If it's a national emergency we can do it without Congress, but we expect to be before Congress very quickly,' Trump said. Trump has portrayed America's capitol city as a crime-ridden metropolis. Violent crime hit a 30-year low in 2024 after a spike in 2023. 'We don't live in a dirty city,' Washington DC mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat, told community groups on Tuesday. 'We are not 700,000 scumbags and punks. We don't have neighborhoods that should be bulldozed. We have to be clear about our story.' Phil Mendelson, a Democrat serving as the chair of the Washington DC city council, told the Washington Post that despite Trump's politicization of the takeover, the relationship between law enforcement agencies had actually been collaborative. 'I think collaborating with MPD and providing additional resources can only be for the good,' he said. 'But the president has a national platform, and he's painted the city as a cesspool of crime. We know that's not true, but that is damaging to the city.'