Trump’s takeover of Washington law enforcement begins as National Guard troops arrive
- On Monday, August 11, 2025, President Donald Trump ordered federal authorities to assume oversight of the Washington, D.C. police force and authorized the deployment of approximately 800 National Guard members to support local law enforcement efforts.
- Trump’s move came after he officially labeled the situation in D.C. a crime crisis, pointing to recent widely publicized incidents and portraying the city as disorderly, despite evidence indicating that crime rates have generally been declining.
- Mayor Muriel Bowser expressed her commitment to collaborating with federal authorities while maintaining that the local police chief should retain command, and she highlighted that this situation aligns with a political narrative concerning urban crime and law enforcement.
- The city’s court system faces about 25% judicial vacancies and two judges on leave, causing a bottleneck in processing cases despite planned White House efforts to nominate more judges to ease backlog.
- The federal takeover and troop deployment will last until September 25, 2025, and while some residents protested these measures, officials expect increased law enforcement might reduce crime further amid ongoing political debate.
321 Articles
321 Articles
All eyes on Washington, and naught but deafening silence from the District's loudest defender
Eleanor Holmes Norton, DC's 88-year-old delegate for 18 terms, remains largely silent as Trump deploys federal forces to Washington DC amid questions about her fitness to serve
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According to the US president's will, all homeless people should leave the parks of the US capital and be accommodated "far away" – if necessary in prison
Donald Trump announced early this week the transfer of troops from the National Guard to Washington DC to fight capital crime, accusing local police of corruption.
The National Guard troops began to deploy in Washington Tuesday night, when President Donald Trump’s plan to use the federal government to suppress crime in the city began to take shape. About a dozen members of the National Guard appeared in five military vehicles near the Washington Monument as the sun went down, a crude juxtaposition to a peaceful night scene of people trotting with headphones and walking their dogs. An army officer said the …
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