However, the same week also saw a surge in immigration enforcement that sparked political and social concerns. Federal data showed that roughly 300 undocumented individuals were arrested in Washington, D.C. between August 7 and August 19 — more than ten times the city’s typical weekly average of 12 arrests, according to the Deportation Data Project at UC Berkeley. ICE officials acknowledged working in tandem with MPD officers, intervening during stops or questioning when immigration violations surfaced. The administration insisted that many of those arrested were linked to other crimes or outstanding warrants, but CNN reported it could not independently verify how many cases involved criminal charges beyond immigration status. Critics, including D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser, accused the federal government of prioritizing immigration crackdowns and encampment sweeps over community safety, suggesting that the operation’s true focus extended beyond curbing violent crime. While the White House framed the dual approach as necessary for public safety, local leaders warned that mass immigration arrests could erode trust between law enforcement and immigrant communities, raising questions about the broader implications of Trump’s federal intervention in the capital.
Trump’s DC Crime Crackdown Already Produces Big Results
