❓WHAT HAPPENED: President Donald J. Trump’s claim that there has been a significant decrease in killings in Washington, D.C. is correct and borne out by police data.
👤WHO WAS INVOLVED: President Trump and the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD).
📍WHEN & WHERE: The statement was made on Saturday, January 3, 2026, with data reflecting crime rates in Washington, D.C. in 2025.
💬KEY QUOTE: “We haven’t had a killing in a long period of time, six, seven months,” Trump said. – Donald Trump
🎯IMPACT: The falling crime rates followed President Trump’s issuance of an Executive Order in August that placed the MPD under direct federal control and deployed over 2,000 National Guard troops to the city.
President Donald J. Trump‘s claim that violent crime has drastically plummeted in Washington, D.C.—in large part due to his deployment of National Guard troops to deter criminal behavior and assist the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD)—is borne out by law enforcement data. While the President’s specific assertion that the city hasn’t “had a killing in a long period of time, six, seven months” was not technically correct, Washington, D.C. experienced a significant decrease overall in violent crime in 2025 when compared to 2024.
“I just have to congratulate our military, Pete [Hegseth], and everybody in our National Guard, cause the job that they have done—whether it is in Washington, D.C., where we have a totally safe city, where it was one of the most unsafe cities anywhere in the world, frankly… and now we have no crime in Washington, D.C,” President Trump said during a news conference on Saturday, adding: “We haven’t had a killing in a long period of time, six, seven months. We used to have two, on average two a week in Washington, our capital, we don’t have that anymore.”
MPD data lists five murders in the nation’s capital in December. However, when compared to the prior year, 2025 saw a 29 percent reduction in incidents of violent crime, with the number of homicides falling by an astounding 32 percent.
The falling crime rates followed President Trump’s issuance of an Executive Order in early August of last year, which invoked Section 740 of the D.C. Home Rule Act. This action placed the MPD under direct federal control and directed the deployment of over 2,000 National Guard troops to the city. “We’re going to take our capital back,” Trump vowed at the time. In December of last year, Secretary of War Pete Hegseth authorized the extension of the National Guard deployment in the capital until February 2026.
Currently, there are 2,389 National Guardsmen stationed in Washington, D.C., with 960 from the District itself and 1,427 from Alabama, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, Ohio, South Carolina, Tennessee, and West Virginia.
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