
This article may contain commentary
which reflects the authorâs opinion.
President Donald Trumpâs federalization of Washington, D.C., on the heels of declaring a âcrime emergencyâ on Monday was met with mixed reactions, but it has also launched a conversation among residents and members of the media about a subject that, for years, has been hidden in plain view.
For instance, ABC News anchor Kyra Phillips mentioned on-air hours after Trumpâs declaration that she was âjumpedâ just two blocks away from her Washington, D.C. studio âwithin the last two years.â
Violent crime in the nationâs capital has reportedly dropped since 2023, according to data from the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) cited by The Washington Post on Monday. Still, Phillips pointed out that multiple alleged incidents have taken place near ABC Newsâ Washington, D.C., bureau â including two network employees who were reportedly among the victims.
âWeâve been talking so much about the numbers and yeah, usually thatâs how you play devilâs advocate, is you talk about, âOh, well stats say crime is down.â However, I can tell you firsthand here in downtown D.C. where we work right here around our bureau just in the past six months, you know, there were two people shot,â Phillips said. âOne person died literally two blocks down here from the bureau.â
âIt was within the last two years that I actually was jumped walking just two blocks down from here. And then just this morning one of my coworkers said her car was stolen a block away from the bureau,â she continued.
âSo we can talk about the numbers going down, but crime is happening every single day because weâre all experiencing it firsthand while working and living down here,â Phillips continued.
While violent crime in Washington, D.C., is reportedly down 26% compared to 2024, the MPDâs crime tracker shows there have still been 99 homicides in the city so far in 2025.
Meanwhile, D.C. Police Commander Michael Pulliam is under investigation over allegations that he manipulated crime statistics, NBC4 Washington reported in July. The department suspended him, but Pulliam has denied any wrongdoing.
Other Washington-based media figures also acknowledged that Trumpâs crime crackdown is overdue.
Morning Joe host Joe Scarborough criticized his Democrat âfriendsâ who, he said, have privately admitted that âWashington should have gotten involved years agoâ to address D.C.âs crime âmess,â yet publicly took to Twitter to express outrage over Trumpâs announcement of a federal crackdown.
âPeople have been calling me over the past couple days, going, you know: âWashington, should have gotten involved years ago. This place is dangerous. Itâs a mess. Itâs a wreckâ and whatever. And then theyâll go on Twitter, go: âThis is the worst outrage of all time, these shockingâââ Scarborough said.
âWhich I understand, itâs like people need to express their concerns about Donald Trump going too far. We saw what happened back in 2020 with the National Guard. Certainly canât have any repeat of that. Donât want the federalization of the entire city,â he continued. âBut man, I donât care what the crime statistics say. Crime has been a problem in this city for the 32 years Iâve been living inside and outside of the city.
âMika and I, weâre talking to somebody who lives in the city, these are all Democrats who said, âyou know, our friends wonât walk more than three blocks in D.C. at night without feelingâŠâ â complete opposite of New York City, where I walk 40-50 blocks at night and not think twice about it in New York City, in Midtown, Downtown. I mean, New York is a safe, safe place,â he added.
âWashington, D.C.? Man, itâs door to door. I mean, I get one of those bikes â you know me, I love riding the bikes around â Iâll ride around and I go door to door. I donât slow down. Itâs very dangerous there,â the host noted.