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Statement on Mayor’s Addressing Crime Trends Now Act

“As we work together to reduce crime and hold people accountable, I’ll be reviewing the Mayor’s latest proposal. I’m looking forward to reading the details of her bill, when she shares it with the Council. At least one element of her proposal – the effort to combat retail theft – aligns with legislation I am working on. 

“There are several public safety bills that deserve the Council’s attention now, including Councilmember Robert White’s Whole of Government Response to Crime Act, which I co-sponsored, my bill to increase recruitment to the police department’s Cadet program, and the permanent version of Councilmember Pinto’s public safety bill, which I voted to support in July. 

“In addition, the city must make the best use of the tools it already has at its disposal, some of which could better serve public safety, such as: more use of mobile cameras in crime hot spots, redistribution of MPD resources to areas with the most violent crime, securing full re-accreditation of the crime lab, appointing a permanent director of the Office of Neighborhood Safety and Engagement, improving the closure rate on homicides, and fixing the failing 911 call center.  

“The District can’t prevent and respond to crime if dispatch can’t successfully send first responders to the scene, the crime lab can’t process evidence, and the U.S. Attorney won’t prosecute. 

“I continue to engage with the police department, the crime lab, and other executive department agencies. I look forward to working with the Mayor and my Council colleagues on crafting new legislation and making our existing ecosystem more effective.”

 

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Related

The facts don’t lie: curfews are not effective at addressing youth crime.
The teen curfew law up for a final vote in the D.C. Council on Tuesday would expire at the end of 2028, under a new amendment being proposed by Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau, D-Ward 1. A second amendment by Nadeau would prevent police from bringing teens detained solely for a curfew violation to a detention center.
Councilmember Nadeau made the following remarks today ahead of the Council vote on the Juvenile Curfew Amendment Act of 2026 (Bill 26-461) on Tuesday, April 21. Councilmember Nadeau voted no. The measure was approved on first reading by a vote of 8-5.

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