What Caused the D.C. Crime Wave?
Don't blame criminal justice reform or a lack of social spending for D.C.'s crime spike. Blame government mismanagement.

"It was a very safe city." So said Mike Waters, owner of a pub in D.C.'s long-gentrified Dupont Circle area, in a neighborhood Zoom meeting this past January, neatly encapsulating a seemingly sudden deterioration in public safety.
Violent crimes rose 39 percent in Washington, D.C., last year, including a 67 percent jump in robberies. Homicides increased a stunning 35 percent. Property crime rose 24 percent, with 3,756 motor vehicle thefts in 2022 becoming 6,829 in 2023. The city's 911 system struggled to handle 1.77 million calls, more per capita than anywhere else in the country.
The trend did not spare the powerful. In February 2023, an attacker in an apartment elevator grabbed Rep. Angie Craig (D–Minn.) by the neck. In October, three masked gunmen carjacked Rep. Henry Cuellar (D–Texas) in the trendy Navy Yard neighborhood. And in February, a former D.C. election official, Mike Gill, was shot dead in his car while picking up his wife just off K Street. Business owners citywide deal with brazen thefts.
This did not reflect a national trend. The rest of the country saw a 13 percent drop in homicides in 2023, a reduction evident in many major cities: New York (down 11 percent), Chicago (down 13 percent), Los Angeles (down 16 percent), Atlanta (down 18 percent), Philadelphia (down 21 percent), Baltimore (down 25 percent). But in Washington, crime went up and up and up, peaking in summer 2023 and now declining somewhat but still elevated.
If your image of Washington was shaped by the urban decline of the 1970s, the crack trade of the 1980s, or the municipal bankruptcy of the 1990s, you might not realize that until recently the city has been generally prosperous, growing, and safe. Construction cranes dotted the city as population grew from 572,059 in 2000 to 689,545 in 2020. Neighborhoods that burned in the riots of the 1960s became places to be. Zip codes 20002 and 20003 recently topped the country for new apartment construction. D.C.'s budget went from basket case to record surpluses and rainy day funds, even enabling some income and business tax cuts.
What caused this crime spike? Several narratives are competing, some more compelling than others. One year on, there is now strong evidence of two things that didn't cause it—and two things that did.
Criminal Justice Reform Didn't Cause the Crime Spike
Mayor Muriel Bowser, a Democrat now in her 10th year on the job, oversees 40,000 government employees alongside a 13-member D.C. Council (11 Democrats, two independents). The Metropolitan Police Department (MPD), the local police force, reports to her. But the city is also home to the U.S. Capitol Police, the U.S. Marshals Service, the Secret Service, Park Police for National Park Service jurisdictions, the Metro Transit Police, various university police forces, and even the Smithsonian Office of Protection Services and U.S. Mint Police. Juvenile prosecutions are handled by the local elected attorney general, but adult prosecutions are the job of the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, who is appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate with no involvement by the local population.
The mayor's narrative on the crime crisis goes like this: She's doing everything she can to be tough on crime, but a series of D.C. Council actions since 2016 have changed the public safety "ecosystem"—her favorite word here—for the worse. Among the actions: shifting the focus of juvenile facilities toward rehabilitation (2016), reducing nonviolent offender sentences (2016), changing fare evasion from a criminal to a civil matter (2018), allowing release of adults convicted as juveniles after they served 15 years (2019), prohibiting police chokeholds and removing restrictions on officer discipline (2020), a cut in proposed MPD funding (2021), an aborted effort to pull police officers out of schools (2021), reducing mandatory minimum sentences (2022–23), and easing street vendor licenses (2023). As crime took hold in 2023, the Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives persuaded Senate Democrats and President Joe Biden to overturn the sentencing reform and officer discipline measures. (Because the District of Columbia is a federal jurisdiction, the U.S. government has tighter control over it than it does over other cities.)
This theory has gained traction, spurring two ongoing recall efforts of sitting council members. But left unanswered, to quote the D.C. crime blogger Joe Friday, is "why laws passed in roughly 2016–2020 would have no effect until 2023." Also, other U.S. cities have passed many similar laws, even more sweeping ones, and not seen a crime spike. Sentencing reform advocates, perhaps stung that years of their Revised Criminal Code effort were reversed in one congressional vote, have argued that there is little evidence that carjackers will be more deterred by a 45-year maximum sentence than a 20-year maximum sentence. They said their reform merely aligned statutory sentences with the actual sentences being given by judges, and they pointed out that D.C. still had longer carjacking sentences than many of the states that sent the objecting Republicans to Congress. Even the 2021 MPD budget "cut" was a classic government sleight-of-hand: $559 million in 2020 spending was proposed to be cut to $545 million in 2021, but after later adjustments actual MPD spending that year was up to $575 million.
Indeed, as the public opinion pendulum swung in favor of tough-on-crime measures in 2023, Bowser's wish list of changes was very limited. Her "Safer Stronger" bill in May asked for more surveillance cameras, enhanced penalties for assaulting bus drivers, and a crackdown on guns. By October, Safer, Stronger 2.0 wanted to criminalize loitering, create a new crime category for organized retail theft, expand pretrial detention, and prohibit mask wearing. The Secure DC law, which she signed with fanfare in March 2024 after a cowed D.C. Council passed it unanimously, included Safer Stronger 2.0; it also eased police vehicular pursuit rules, expanded DNA collection from arrestees, and changed when police officers can review their body camera footage. These sound more like a scattershot grab bag of ideas than any fundamental reworking of what caused the 2023 crime wave.
Ignoring 'Root Causes' Didn't Cause the Crime Spike
Fare evasion on Washington's WMATA subway system jumped along with other crimes, increasing fivefold in the early months of 2023. WMATA has been sensitive about enforcement of nonviolent crimes since transit cops searched, handcuffed, and booked a 12-year-old girl for eating french fries on a station platform in 2000, earning them national condemnation for overkill. In 2018, the D.C. Council (along with some other cities) changed fare enforcement from a criminal matter (like robbery) to a civil matter (like a parking ticket).
As the sight of people hopping faregates became common in 2023, reaction polarized. One group pressed for enforcement. The anti-crime tweeter Potomac Fever wrote that otherwise, the "rest of us were suckers for following the rules and paying our fares everyday." WMATA—both wanting the fare money and hoping to persuade suburban jurisdictions to increase subsidies—successfully pressed the D.C. Council to tweak its law, began installing tougher faregates, and deployed Metro Transit Police at some exits. On the other side of the issue, progressive activists argued that stronger enforcement would likely cost more than the uncollected fares, that it would primarily target people of color, and that a better approach would be enhanced social programs such as making Metro free of charge.
The dynamic plays out in D.C. repeatedly. Is the answer to grocery store theft more police or more food stamps? Should teens awaiting trial for violent crimes be jailed or counseled? Should the first responders to many incidents be police officers or social workers? Perhaps the difference is overstated: Both "root cause" policies such as job training and "enforcement" policies such as more police win more than 80 percent support in polls. But by September, crowds were anxious for action and less interested in underlying long-term causes. "They did not want to hear another word about how I was going to fix crime in five years," observed Democratic Councilmember Robert White.
Part of the frustration likely stems from the fact that D.C. already spends a lot on "root cause" solutions. In every fare-evasion crackdown announcement, WMATA made sure to note that it offers reduced fares for low-income individuals. The Brookings Institution ranks D.C.'s cash assistance to needy families to be ninth-most generous among the states. D.C. Medicaid spending per enrollee is fifth-highest. Overall, the city spends $7 billion a year on human support services, for a place of just under 700,000 people. If spending on poverty solved crime, D.C. should be one of the best-performing states.
One prominent "root cause" public safety effort is violence interruption, modeled after a successful program in Oakland, California. This identified the 1 percent of people driving much of the violence and located individuals (clergy, former gang members, community leaders) best positioned to intervene and offer resources for those interested in an alternative path. D.C.'s spending on violence interruption grew sharply from $2 million in 2018 to $27 million in 2023. But again, sharply rising crime rates meant, at best, that the program was not impactful enough.
The Kids Helped Cause the Crime Spike
On July 12, 2022, TikTok user @robbierayyy uploaded a video showing how to use a USB cable to bypass the ignition and start certain Kia car models. The video quickly went viral, and the "Kia challenge" sparked a nationwide rash of thefts of Kias (and also Hyundais) not otherwise equipped with immobilizers.
In D.C., carjackings began to spike in late 2022 into early 2023, at a pace of three a day. This was followed by a spike in robberies and other crimes. Joe Friday, the anonymous crime blogger, hypothesizes that "violent criminals (adults and juveniles) realized that they could easily use stolen cars to move around undetected, escape from robberies and even use them to facilitate carjackings of other vehicles." D.C. carjackings finally eased after the summer, after new MPD Chief Pamela Smith adopted a more proactive strategy—and after manufacturers distributed immobilizers and steering wheel locks.
By then, carjacking and other crimes had become normalized for many D.C. juveniles. MPD officers say most carjackers were younger than age 20—sometimes much younger. An MPD lieutenant reported that most arrested suspects say they did it for fun with friends, often using them to commit other crimes. A viral Instagram video showed two D.C. teens arguing about whether committing carjacking and armed robbery was worse than murder, clearly not worried about the consequences.
Truancy also rose in the same time period, with 43 percent of students chronically absent (missing 10 or more days) in 2022–23, up from 27 percent in 2019–20. At the high school level, 60 percent were chronically absent; in the poorest schools in Wards 7 and 8, the rate was more than 75 percent. An October 2022 study of D.C. children found that above-average unexcused school absences is a risk factor highly associated with future criminal arrest, and in early 2024 neighborhood commissioners began pressing the mayor for better monitoring of this "early warning sign."

Government Mismanagement Helped Cause the Crime Spike
In D.C., mismanagement has plagued the U.S. attorney's office, the crime lab, and the city police department—and this may deserve the lion's share of blame for the crisis.
Let's start with the prosecutor. When congressional Republicans complain that "woke" D.C. is "soft on crime," they usually leave out that all adult prosecutions in the city are done by the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, Matthew Graves—a federal appointee that local residents have no role in hiring, firing, or overseeing. In most other cities, elected district attorneys or attorneys general have this job, and they must follow public demands or face consequences.
In the first decade of the 2000s, the U.S. attorney for D.C. prosecuted more than 70 percent of arrests. In 2016 the percentage began to slide downward, falling below 50 percent in 2021 (Graves took the job that year) and hitting 33 percent in 2022. After some attention was drawn to the decline, the number recovered a bit to a still-low 44 percent in 2023. Felony prosecutions fell from more than 80 percent to about 50 percent in 2022, then rose to 60 percent in 2023. The U.S. attorney declined to prosecute 58 percent of all arrests for theft in 2021 and 2022, which as Joe Friday said "undermined the certainty of punishment for theft in DC."
Precisely why the prosecution rate has been falling is less clear. Graves has variously claimed that the statistic is unimportant, blamed the crime lab or the MPD, noted that victims do not always press charges, or referenced tough case law or defendant-friendly D.C. juries and judges. But Graves usually offers no explanation at all, even in brazen cases. For example, a man arrested after exposing himself to 24 preschoolers on a public street and bloodily assaulting their two teachers had been arrested three weeks earlier for indecent exposure, two months before that for punching a restaurant employee, the year before that for trespassing, and in 2018 for attempted murder. The system keeps freeing him. Graves has yet to explain why.
But just as the drop in prosecution rate coincided with the rise in crime, the stepped-up prosecution rate after mid-2023 did coincide with the decline in crime. Increased or decreased likelihood of being charged has an impact. David Muhammad of the National Institute for Criminal Justice Reform said lack of consequences came up "over and over again" in interviews and "needs to be taken seriously."
D.C. is an outlier on its low prosecution rate: Philadelphia's is 96 percent, Chicago's is 86 percent, Manhattan's is 84 percent, Detroit's is 67 percent, and so forth. Unless Congress is willing to let the city assume control of prosecutions, D.C. citizens will have little recourse to change Graves' mind beyond public pressure and media attention.
Now consider the city crime lab. In April 2021, it lost its accreditation and stopped processing evidence for prosecutions. It has yet to fully regain it.
The loss of accreditation came after years of endemic problems, including faulty results, prosecutors interfering with test results, and firings of whistleblowers. The Bowser administration promised to promptly pursue reaccreditation, but it then got bogged down in a dispute with the D.C. Council about whether the lab should be part of the MPD (Bowser's view) or not (the council's). That matter was not resolved until June 2023—the peak of the crime surge—and the lab finally regained its biology and chemistry accreditations in December. Firearms accreditation remains in work.
During this entire period, processing of evidence for the MPD and the U.S. attorney has had to be outsourced to other labs, public and private. Many of these labs had little spare capacity, so the result has been backlogs, and probably dropped prosecutions. As of April 2023 770 DNA samples from violent crime cases sat in a backlog. Fingerprint "hits," one measure of testing, fell from 1,828 in 2020 to 601 in 2022. The number of rape kits tested within three months dropped from 98 percent to 81 percent.
The 2023 crime wave arguably ended the political dysfunction that held up the crime lab's reaccreditation. But the lack of a functioning crime lab likely contributed to the sense that you could get away with crimes. Prosecutions are hard, after all, without evidence.
Then there's the MPD. Bowser has attributed some of the crime wave to the long-term drop in MPD staffing, which fell from 4,010 sworn officers in 2013 under her predecessor to 3,337 in 2023. But again, the most considerable drop (in 2021, from 3,799 to 3,580) predated the spike in crime. To identify the more important problems at the MPD, look at what changed for the better when Smith took over.
When Smith took the job in June 2023, the crime spike was already apparent. Word quickly spread through the force that the new chief wanted to see changes. Area commanders were expected to do weekly walks in the community with residents, patrols would be proactive rather than just waiting in cars for a call, and greater efforts would be made to deter repeat offenders. Smith unveiled a Real-Time Crime Center connecting D.C.'s myriad federal police forces with hers. Arrests per officer nudged upward after halving in 2020.
These perhaps feel like obvious actions for a city police force, especially one in the middle of a crime wave. But they were not happening before June.
One lingering issue may be one of the hardest to tackle: The best officers with the most seniority can choose to stay in the "easiest" parts of the city (Wards 1 and 3), leaving the greenest or least proactive officers to get sent to where crime is heaviest (Wards 7 and 8). This leads to skills mismatch and a community sense of being neglected.
We in D.C. now wait to see what 2024 will bring. No one wants to see yet more death and mayhem. But that means asking serious questions of all our officials and insisting on thorough answers, enabling us all to learn the right lessons from the recent spike in crime.
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Don't blame criminal justice reform even though the city, according to the article, was doing fine I til it was implemented.
This is like Warren saying inflation is because corporations suddenly got greedy.
Or is it another 'they didn't do it right, we'll do it right*this time*'? Like the commies keep saying.
US corporation profits in 2020: $1.8 trillion. US corporation profits in 2023: $3.1 trillion. An increase of $1.3 trillion. Increased amount US consumers paid attributable to inflation in 2023: $1.3 trillion.
EdG brain-cell count in 2020 = 2. Brain-cell count 2023 = 1.
I figure the residents of DC just saw the politicians committing massive crimes, and decided to emulate them.
Juveniles don’t fear consequences, and the woke Prosecutor appointed as Obama left office doesn’t prosecute 2/3 felonies.
Obviously nothing to do with woke notions of CJR,
The Jooos did it
The article does the exact same thing with the prosecutor. Don't believe Republican claims that the prosecutor is woke and soft on crime, and then the article goes on to prove them right.
The Hench is back...wasn't he with the old far left woke lobby controlling the LP a few years ago? He lives in DC? Ha ha ha...why am I not suprised.
The problem in DC is a lack of law and order..too much welfare, too many single moms, too much allowance and rational of bad behavior. Bring in a Frank Rizzo..a good old Italian American Cop to enforce good behavior. And have zero tolerance for bad culture...
The long term solution is to radically downsize the entire Federal Govt...
Knocking a few punks heads usually sends the message and lowers crime.
>D.C. is an outlier on its low prosecution rate:
You had your CJR before anyone else in the country though - hence the low prosecution rate.
The U.S. attorney declined to prosecute 58 percent of all arrests for theft in 2021 and 2022, which as Joe Friday said "undermined the certainty of punishment for theft in DC."
It is funny that the article calls out Matthew Graves, a political prosecutor, who has lowered prosecution rates as mentioned but has also spent inordinate amount of resources going after J6 attendees with a goal of 2-3000 convictions for mostly non violent attendees (over 70%) while ignoring the other crime in D.C.
Yeah the J6 lawfare obviously affects prosecution and conviction stats. But no mention here for Reasons.
J6 was a single outlier, and smart people leave those out when looking for trends. Dishonest people include them to further a narrative. And even if it was included, a smart person would see it was a small number compared to the total.
Uhhh, bud, those prosecutions are continuing. They didn't prosecute everybody on the 7th and it's all done by now.
How does that refute my point?
Not completely. However, it may be a strong indicator of misplaced priorities on the part of the government.
The inordinate pressure on one public, political event contrasts mightily with the lack of prosecution on everyday crimes.
Outliers aren't useful for identifying trends, but they are often revealing
Oooh, sarc goes on the attack instead of addressing the issue he himself brought up, that j6 is an outlier because it happened once.
3+ years of prosecutions is one hell of a trend.
In sarc’s defense, he’s quite dim.
Pour Sarc.
GFY
How many criminal cases were prosecuted in DC Superior Court in 2023 and how many of those cases were J6 cases?
EdG asks someone else to do his homework. That's a result of his brain-cell count: 1.
And the obvious double speak of prosecutor refusing to prosecute but don't you dare blame CJR for it's enacted goals.
(D)ifferent priorities!
The Hench is scared of Trump like most of the old LP hacks..and a focus on identity politics...
"What Caused the D.C. Crime Wave?"
Wow, start the weekend with an easy one, right?
Democrats.
Next question - - -
It’s only a crime wave when important people are victims.
And until laws can be changed to make "crimes" legal.
Reason has become a parody of itself
Wrapped in an enigma?
Even Democrats are stepping away from the open borders bullshit because unlike Cosmotarians, the fucking Democrats need to keep winning elections to maintain the power and grift empires they’ve built for themselves.
Emptytheprisons is the next stupid idea they have to publicly denounce if they want to keep Brandon in place.
I’ve been told it’s antisemitism to criticize Soros, racist to criticize crime, xenophobic and racist to criticize public charge illegal immigration and finally NIMBY and racist to criticize HUD or subsidized housing projects.
Yup, it's the whole woke oppression menu defense.
“I’ve been told it’s antisemitism to criticize Soros”
But it’s all right for Progressives to be antisemitic about any other Jews.
Antisemitic to criticize Soros, but perfectly reasonable to harass and threaten Jewish Americans on campus and on the street.
According to democrats like AOC.
Can you criticize Israel? AIPAC? Or is that not allowed? Nixon had the best take on Israeli firsters in America...America First not Israel
Reason is more like the “let’s hire more bureaucrats, economists, think tanks and data analysts” in other words, grow government — to figure out what’s going on here. We need more data!
There is not one fucking thing any government or bureaucrat, think tank, urban planner, ngo, data engineer, data compiler, data analyst or central planning economist can do about generations of fatherless children or people that breed into dysfunction and violence (see Jihadis).
Bukele & Milei are showing us the way to fix our mess. Wonder how bad it has to get before tough measures become the norm?
and example of CJR and Economic reforms in that order
and in both cases they almost(?) had to let cancers metastasize before growing the cohones to deal with the problems
Telling a certian demographic their woes are due to systematic racism and not their abhorrent culture/behavior gets more of the abhorrent behavior, not less racism.
It was a wave of niggers that caused the crime wave, duh
Margaret Sanger, is that you?
No, it is all those honkeys riding around in The General Lee car jacking people.
https://opendata.dc.gov/datasets/adult-arrests/about
Hey, but if you hack their car and aren’t violent, it’s just a misdemeanor.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/dc-md-va/2024/06/07/carjacking-crash-psychological-exam-kayla-brown/
Oh look, a new Buttplug sockpuppet, but this time he's being honest about his racism.
All democrats are vicious racists. Always have been.
'The trend did not spare the powerful. In February 2023, an attacker in an apartment elevator grabbed Rep. Angie Craig (D–Minn.) by the neck. In October, three masked gunmen carjacked Rep. Henry Cuellar (D–Texas) in the trendy Navy Yard neighborhood. And in February, a former D.C. election official, Mike Gill, was shot dead in his car while picking up his wife just off K Street.'
Didn't these victims of oppression forced into lives of crime know that Democrats are on their side?
George Soros.
100% George Soros.
Do these figures include new hires in the academy?
My impression is that most academies take a year to turn trainees into legal cops with arrest powers. There's a year's lag from cause to effect.
In general, this article makes no allowance for that delay. You don't replace the chief today and get new results tomorrow.
And I missing something that you’d expect to see an increase in crime AFTER a drop in the number of cops?
Fewer cops >> fewer arrests >> more people realizing there’s less risk in committing crime >> more people committing more crimes?
The number of arrests does not equal the number of crimes committed and reported.
It's all deflection. If it's not a perfect correlation then it must not exist in order to shift blame from their policies and beliefs.
In other Fun News for the Paranoid, the WSJ ran this article today:
How to Keep Your Car From Spying on You
New features on cars and phone apps can track where you go, when and how fast—among many other things. Here’s what to do about it.
In the review by the Mozilla Foundation (linked in the article):
It’s Official: Cars Are the Worst Product Category We Have Ever Reviewed for Privacy
All 25 car brands we researched earned our *Privacy Not Included warning label -- making cars the official worst category of products for privacy that we have ever reviewed.
Nissan earned its second-to-last spot for collecting some of the creepiest categories of data we have ever seen. It’s worth reading the review in full, but you should know it includes your “sexual activity.” Not to be out done, Kia also mentions they can collect information about your “sex life” in their privacy policy. Oh, and six car companies say they can collect your “genetic information” or “genetic characteristics.” Yes, reading car privacy policies is a scary endeavor.
I want my 1972 MGB back.
What would be really interesting is to see how long it would take for there to bel legislation mandating such intrusive spying after a company comes up with a privacy car - one that merely serves the function of taking you from A to B comfortably and safely.
This is worth it if for no other reason than reading a story about crime by a Henchman.
Democratic Party having a monopoly on DC city government elected positions. Will be interesting what happens to the swamp post empire collapse.
Will be interesting to see how much damage they can wreak before it all collapses.
New Biden mandates private auto manufacturers.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/autos/news/biden-administration-sets-50-miles-per-gallon-fuel-economy-standard-for-2031/ar-BB1nPRzr
From the article:
“The Biden Administration has taken several steps to get more drivers into electric vehicles and investing in a network of public chargers”.
Yes, WaPo really wrote that. the “NETWORK”, as of 2024, is eight chargers (8) as in 4+4 with billions of tax dollars evaporating into this racket.
WaPo different management same propaganda.
The climate racket is the rationing Marxist dystopia that will encompass every calorie you consume and breath you take. Hope does not lie in the proles.
"What Caused the D.C. Crime Wave?"
What did you expect?
The social workers didn't say "please" and "thank you" to the violent criminals.
Several things caused the recent national crimewave (from 2020 til now):
1. COVID lockdowns, giving people more idle time
2. COVID stimulus checks, giving people more cash so they don't have to work so they have more idle time
3. Coddling the vandals and hooligans who got away with vandalism and hooliganism during the George Floyd riots
4. Telling millions of people they are entitled to "reparations" for things that happened hundreds of years ago
5. Deciding that since crimes are committed disproportionately by certain socioeconomically disadvantage groups, it's more fair to not prosecute those criminals instead of trying to improve economic conditions for everyone.
6. Releasing dangerous criminals back into the population to allow them to commit more crimes.
7. Showing tolerance for criminality by not prosecuting smaller crimes (e.g. shoplifting if the amount is under 1K)
3-7 falls under "criminal justice reform".
1. It's 2024. The lockdown ended years ago.
2. It's was 1,800 bucks. Years ago.
Saw an interesting t-shirt the other day:
"I'll tell you what's wrong with society today, no one drinks from the skulls of their enemies anymore."
Do you think more Democrats want to see Trump's skull, or more Republicans want to see Biden's skull?
(I think Democrats win this one even without ballot shenanigans.)
Most of the GOP hates Trump and loves Biden.
The RINOs aren't RINOs - they're the party mainstream, Democrat light, the loyal opposition. They don't want the power like the D's do, they just want the perks.
No one drives their enemies before them or listens to the lamentations of their women either.
That is best.
Man... I have to listen to the lamentation of women at home already. Why do I want to listen to the lamentations of foreign women while I'm at work?
Articles like this is why guys spend a portion of every day thinking about the Roman empire.
When a city manages to accomplish the theft of $32 trillion from kid's piggybanks all over the US - and the author doesn't include that in a crime wave, then I don't consider anything in DC a crime wave. It's just redistribution of ill-gotten proceeds around a city (and its burbs) composed 100% of criminals. The redistribution should really be far more violent. And televised so that at least everyone else could enjoy it.
Gee, JFucked, we hoped you died. Please fuck off and do so.
Most crimes are concentrated around certain neighborhoods and tend to be committed by a certain demographic. These places effectively drive the crime rate of the entire city.
My guess is that the crime is spiking in some areas of DC and police cannot contain it. The local economy seems to be centered on government, IT and financial sector, meaning job opportunities for black youth might be scant. Who knows what the pandemic did to their economy.
25% of the less than 700,000 population works for the government. So 1/4 of the entire (small) region creates nothing. When the government employees and tech bros do spend, it won’t be in the poor part of town. The tale of two cities might be more pronounced in that kind of environment.
The crime rate is really high if you include the taxes.
Cut the Federal Govt by 90%, crime goes away
I think most crime waves are simply cyclical.
But right now we are pretty much seeing all kinds of vandalism and destruction of property by leftists and we keep seeing more of it because no one is being arrested. Or expelled. Or deported.
Right now Hamas supporters and leftists are rioting outside the White House. Nothing will happen because the government approves of leftist rioters. Had it been Proud Boys or Pro-Lifers, they’d all be in jail by now, facing serious sentences.
Biden doesn’t dare move against them. He’s desperate to carry Michigan in November. Which has a large Muslim population. So he has to pander to these radicals. He also has to pander to Jewish voters. So he pays lip service to backing Israel, while actively funding Hamas and Iran.
Democrats are living contradictions. Simultaneously supporting two diametrically opposing positions. And now it’s finally beginning to tear them apart.
I can’t wait for their convention in Chicago. I’ll be popping the popcorn.
You want the crime stopped? Let the hoodlums loose on Capitol Hill for a week. I promise you, there will be legislation ready to sign the following week to address crime.
Until they feel the blow of the mugger, feel the shame and humiliation of being stripped of their goods on the streets, the Congress-critters will do nothing.
Since it is DC, Congress has a unique role here. Let the Congress-critters 'feel our pain' and things will change.
"Is the answer to grocery store theft more police or more food stamps?"
The answer to crime is tribute?
Did the stimulus checks reduce crime? There is your answer.
Don't blame criminal justice reform or a lack of social spending for D.C.'s crime spike. Blame government mismanagement.
Hey, dumbass, criminal justice reform has been at the very heart of government mismanagement.
DC has ALWAYS been mismanaged, but there was a new tool in the mismanagement tool box. Which is why crime spiked amidst all the normal mismanagement.
Gee, I can't figure that out either. There must be some commonality to all this crime but I can't quite put my finger on it.
Or just maybe it's the people responsible for running D.C. like Mayor Bowow. Just as in every other major city run by a certain demographic that is descending, no, charging into massive failure and self destruction in the name of equity and criminal justice reform, which actually means, you can get away with murder.
Contractors in Oakland, Ca. refuse to attend to repairing potholes in the streets for fear of crime and violence.
Frisco has emptied out entire city blocks of businesses due to crime and the city government threatens to imprison any business owner with jail if they don't give six months notice before closure.
Philthydelphia's Kensington St. remains a major fentanyl laced drug haven with no hope of cleaning up.
Chicago is on its way to another lead filled non demonized summer of shootings and other mayhem thanks to Brandon Johnson . Chicago's esteemed D.A. Kim Foxx now plans to ditch evidence found during traffic stops. I'm sure that will lessen the demonizing of her constituents.
Chicago to date:
Shot and killed :203
Shot and wounded: 954
Total shot:1157
Total homicides: 236
Stats courtesy Hey Jackass
All you have to do is peruse the website CWB Chicago and see what's happening. This is happening in D.C. and every other city.
Go soft on crime and expect more of the same and even worse.
Ever since crack head Marion Barry was elected, D.C. has continued its headlong descent into irrelevance just as the fraudulent government that pretends to work for the people.
Joe Bishop-Henchman is the former Libertarian Party head, who resigned in disgrace after he attempted to disenfranchise the New Hampshire LP and replace it with a "new" NH LP more to his liking.
The Hench is a far left "social" libertarian. The Fed or Puberty Blockers? For the far lefties pretending to be libertarians it is always puberty blockers over ending the Fed...