Retail stores in Washington, D.C. are displaying images of products on their shelves instead of the items themselves, as the U.S. capital continues to suffer a plague of shoplifting and robberies. CVS Pharmacy on H Street Northeast has even placed pictures of toilet paper on otherwise empty shelves in an to prevent theft:
https://twitter.com/JoeyMannarinoUS/status/1717992284023566807
Another CVS location in D.C.’s Columbia Heights has placed many items behind locked cages, the aisles of empty shelves decorated with profane graffiti. Crime in the American capital has reached crisis levels. Violent crime is up 41 percent over last year – the city has seen a 33 percent increase in homicides and a 70 percent increase in robberies. According to D.C.’s Metropolitan Police Department theft is up 21 percent, with 10,673 incidents reported so far in 2023. Motor vehicle theft has seen a 101 percent increase compared to 2022.
I checked out the Columbia Heights CVS for myself the other weekend. pic.twitter.com/1fMIlIrjV5
— John Fubka (@JohnFubka) October 26, 2023
The U.S. Senate Sergeant at Arms Karen Gibson has warned Members of Congress and their staff not to stop and help strangers along the road side. Criminals are feigning car trouble and the need for assistance in order create opportunities to steal the vehicles of would be good samaritans.
In July the Washington, D.C. city council passed emergency legislation in an effort to crack down on out-of-control violent crime. Despite provisions aimed at keeping offenders off the streets prior to their trial date, the legislation made little impact. On Monday of this week, D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser introduced legislation to roll-back many of the soft-on-crime reforms the city adopted in the wake of the death of George Floyd and the Black Lives Matter protests.