Herald-Tribune

DC to consider major new public safety bill

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WASHINGTON – Public safety legislatio­n unveiled Wednesday by local lawmakers in the nation’s capital is aimed at bringing down spiraling violent crimes rates that have stoked public anxiety and prompted congressio­nal scrutiny.

The measure largely repackages and consolidat­es previous proposals and temporary anti-crime legislatio­n, including stiffer penalties for a host of gun-related offenses and wider leeway for judges to detain suspects prior to their trial.

“Pretty much everything in here are bills that were introduced, had a hearing and had a public process,” said Ward 2 Councilmem­ber Brooke Pinto, who chairs the Council’s judiciary and public safety committee.

Homicides jumped by 35% in 2023 in Washington while car thefts and carjacking­s both essentiall­y doubled. The carjacking victims in D.C. last year included a U.S. Congressme­n and a diplomat from the United Arab Emirates. Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Lyndsey Appiah openly admitted before a congressio­nal hearing last year that the District is in the midst of a crime crisis.

Violent crime jumped in several American cities during the COVID-19 pandemic and lockdown. But while homicides have dropped post-pandemic in places like New York City, Chicago, Philadelph­ia and Baltimore, the trends have accelerate­d in Washington.

The proposed bill loosens restrictio­ns for police officers on physically handling suspects and when they are authorized to engage in vehicular pursuits. It would also allow police officer to review their own body camera footage prior to making their report in cases not involving serious use of force.

Certain elements seem sure to be hotly debated on the 13-member D.C.

Council, which is split between judicial reformers and those pushing for more aggressive policing and prosecutio­ns. One potentiall­y controvers­ial proposal would allow the Metropolit­an Police Department to declare 1,000 square foot areas of the city as “drug free zones” for 120 hours, or five days. Loitering in the zones would be heavily restricted and those inside would have to essentiall­y justify their presence there.

“It gives the police discretion to make that determinat­ion … that this area can not be frequented,” Pinto said, adding that the measure is meant to cool off blocks that have witnessed recent cycles of violence and retaliatio­n.

Pinto hopes to bring the bill to the D.C. Council floor next week with a proper vote scheduled for late January.

The proposal has already received an endorsemen­t from Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser, who has worked closely with Pinto on recent other crime legislatio­n. Bowser has fought multiple battles with the council over criminal justice issues; last year she vetoed a sweeping rewrite of the District’s criminal code claiming that the reduction in maximum sentences on some major crimes “sent the wrong message” in the midst of a crime wave.

The council overrode her veto but Republican­s in Congress took up Bowser’s cause and drew enough Democratic support to cancel the legislatio­n – an embarrassi­ng reversal for the Council.

Bowser expressed her support for Pinto’s bill, which incorporat­es several elements of previous proposals endorsed by the mayor’s office.

“We know that driving down crime requires us to send a clear message that if you make our city less safe, if you bring violence to our community, you will be held accountabl­e,” Bowser said in a statement Wednesday. “I look forward to signing this bill into law and urge the Council to move with urgency to unanimousl­y pass this legislatio­n.”

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