Trump
Rails About Youth Crime, a Focus of D.C. Leaders for Decades
Concerns
came to a head during the pandemic, when carjackings surged and many of those
arrested were children. Carjackings and other crimes have declined
considerably.
Campbell
Robertson Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs
By
Campbell Robertson and Nicholas Bogel-Burroughs
Aug. 15,
2025
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/08/15/us/trump-juvenile-crime-dc-data.html
The
arrest of two 15-year-olds after a government worker was attacked last week on
a Washington, D.C., street was going to attract attention in a city where
violent crimes committed by young people have long gripped the public
consciousness.
But the
man who was assaulted in what he said was an attempted carjacking was not just
any government worker — he was a high-profile Trump administration employee.
And in the days that followed, the president lashed out, claiming the city was
overrun by “roving mobs of wild youth” and renewing his threats to take over
the city.
On
Monday, President Trump announced he was placing the District of Columbia’s
police department under federal control and sending in the National Guard, as
he and his top prosecutor for the city declared they were fed up with what they
say is rampant lawlessness among young people in the city.
“I see
too much violent crime being committed by young punks who think that they can
get together in gangs and crews and beat the hell out of you or anyone else,”
said Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.
Crime
committed by teenagers has for decades been a focus of the city’s leaders — and
often a point of political tension. Calls to take a tougher line on juvenile
crime run up against efforts to address the extreme poverty and other
entrenched socioeconomic problems that many experts say underlie youth crime.
Concerns
about youth crime came to a head during the pandemic, when the number of
carjackings soared in Washington, D.C., and in cities across the country. Most
of those arrested, to the alarm of residents and law enforcement officials,
were children. Carjackings appear to have declined considerably in the last
year and a half, and the arrest rates for young people in Washington are
roughly what they were six years ago.
Young
people now make up roughly 7 percent of the annual arrests in the city, a share
on par with Boston, a city of similar size. This share is comparable to the
national average for juvenile arrests, according to the nonprofit Council on
Criminal Justice. City-by-city comparisons can be difficult to make because
there is wide variation in how law enforcement agencies classify and track
juvenile arrests.
But
violent encounters involving young people, like the fatal beating of a disabled
man by five girls in 2023, tend to provoke a visceral reaction that often seems
immune to facts and data. And though such encounters can happen in any
community, they take place on a singular stage in Washington, which sits in the
shadow — and at the mercy — of the White House and Congress.
As he
announced the federal takeover, the president called the city “a nightmare of
murder and crime” and declared that “caravans of mass youth rampage through
city streets at all times of the day.”
Over the
past 15 years, there have been spikes and declines in juvenile crime in
Washington, but overall, the number of youth arrests annually has fallen by
roughly half. This is in part, some juvenile defense lawyers said, because of
an emphasis on prevention, and programs focusing on adolescent behavioral
health and city-funded support for new parents.
The most
recent spike came during the pandemic and in the months immediately following,
with an acute outbreak of carjacking. In 2023, at the peak of this outbreak,
the District of Columbia police reported 957 carjackings, an average of more
than two a day, a 650 percent increase from six years earlier.
A
majority of those carjackings went unsolved, leaving the identities of the
criminals unknown. But most of those who have been arrested have been young, in
some cases not even teenagers.
“Why
would we have a 12-year-old, a 13-year-old, a 14-year-old carjacking in our
city?” Pamela Smith, chief of the District of Columbia Metropolitan Police
Department, asked at a news conference in April. “They’re not even old enough
to drive a car.”
Carjacking
became almost a social phenomenon for young people during the years of pandemic
isolation. Teenagers often carried out robberies in groups, in some cases
streaming carjackings on TikTok or Instagram.
Some
carjackings in Washington turned deadly, including one in 2021 that resulted in
murder charges for two girls, 13 and 15, who caused an Uber Eats driver to
crash his car after assaulting him with a stun gun.
And
though there was a surge in carjackings nationwide, nowhere is it more likely
than in the nation’s capitol that a victim would be person of significant
political influence, even a congressman.
But the
number of carjackings in Washington has dropped along with crime overall over
the past year and a half, following the surge in violent crime in 2023. In
July, 16 carjackings were reported, fewer than in any month since May 2020. The
proportion of young people among those arrested in connection with carjackings
has fallen as well.
“The
pandemic really decimated our social services systems,” said Penelope Spain, a
founder of Open City Advocates, which provides legal and other services for
children in Washington’s juvenile justice system. It was not surprising that
crime surged among young people in poor neighborhoods when critical support
services dwindled, she said. And as government agencies and community groups
“worked to address those underlying needs,” Ms. Spain said, “it is not
surprising that crime has gone down.”
Brooke
Pinto, a member of the District of Columbia Council, has pushed some of the
toughest juvenile justice bills in the council. She said she was pleased with
the efforts the city had made on crime and that the deployment of the National
Guard was not going to help.
But she
said serious crimes involving young people remained especially troubling, even
as the data showed progress.
“Any time
I hear a case of a 12-year-old picking up a gun and shooting someone else,
something has gone seriously wrong with our city and our country,” she said in
an interview.
While Ms.
Pirro has accused the city of “coddling” young people accused of serious crime,
Mayor Muriel Bowser and some of her allies insist that they have been
aggressive in trying to curb juvenile crime. The city has declared curfews in
certain neighborhoods to prevent large gatherings of young people that have
occasionally included robberies and other problems.
This
year, nearly half of young people charged with crimes were detained after their
initial hearings, a rate substantially higher than the national average. The
office of the District of Columbia attorney general said in a statement that it
had pursued charges in so many cases that “the mayor had to issue an emergency
order to create more space” at the city’s crowded juvenile detention
facilities.
In
Washington, serious crimes in which an adult is charged are prosecuted by the
U.S. attorney’s office, in contrast to other jurisdictions, where most such
cases would be handled by a local prosector. The city’s attorney general, who
is elected, prosecutes most crimes involving people 17 and younger, though the
U.S. attorney can directly file charges in local court against a person 16 or
older who is charged with certain crimes, including murder, rape or armed
robbery.
Ms. Pirro
has insisted that consequences are still not tough enough, arguing for the
repeal of District of Columbia laws that give judges more leeway in sentencing
or reducing prison terms for people who were convicted of adult crimes when
they were under 25.
Some who
work with children in the district’s juvenile justice system said that research
and experience had shown repeatedly that overly punitive methods don’t work,
trapping young people in a cycle of lawlessness rather than giving them the
tools to build a healthy and productive life.
“I had a
client reach out to me a couple of months ago,” said Will Mount, a defense
lawyer who represents children in the city. The client “had at least six or
seven serious carjacking offenses” in his teens, Mr. Mount said. Now, “he’s 23
years old, he’s married, he has a child, and he’s a plumber. He called me up to
say he’s doing really well.”
“We can’t
give up on kids,” Mr. Mount said. “That’s really the lesson here.”
Susan C.
Beachy contributed research.
Campbell
Robertson reports for The Times on Delaware, the District of Columbia,
Kentucky, Maryland, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and West Virginia.
Nicholas
Bogel-Burroughs reports on national stories across the United States with a
focus on criminal justice. He is from upstate New York.


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