In a move that is as performative
as sending battleships to fight a cartel, the Trump Justice Department is
investigating whether the D.C. Police Department manipulated data to make crime
rates appear lower. This move, confirmed by “two senior law enforcement officials,”
comes on the heels of Donald Trump falsely claiming there was a crime epidemic
in the nation’s capital to justify his attempted takeover of law enforcement.
Yet earlier this year, Trump’s favorite failed U.S. Attorney nominee, Ed
Martin, had celebrated the favorable numbers.
Trump needed to save face. Hence
the investigation. Trump, by the way, took to social media to post about the
probe: "D.C. gave Fake Crime numbers in order to create a false illusion
of safety. This is a very bad and dangerous thing to do, and they are under
serious investigation for so doing!" he wrote on Truth Social.
Predictably, he’s tying this to his decision to send federal law enforcement
officers and the D.C. National Guard onto the city’s streets.
When asked what the post meant,
Trump responded, "They are giving us phony crime
stats."
The origin of the federal
investigation, overseen by new U.S. Attorney and former Fox News Host Jeanine
Pirro, appears to be an investigation conducted by the Metropolitan Police
Department itself. Back in May, they suspended a commander as they began looking
into allegations, which he denied, that he altered crime data.
NBC reported that “This
investigation, however, is expected to go much further, looking at other police
and city officials for possible wrongdoing.” That’s odd for a number of
reasons. First off, it’s unlikely that the D.C. police would be aggressively investigating
if there were a high-level conspiracy inside the Department.
The commander under investigation
would almost certainly have raised those allegations himself to protect his
position. Even if there is any truth to this, it’s unclear what the charges—let
alone federal charges—would be. It would more likely be an administrative
matter. There’s nothing unusual about the numbers coming out of the District.
They mirror the nationwide drop in crime during the Biden
administration. In fact, D.C. slightly underperforms that curve.
Occam’s razor suggests that the
simplest explanation is usually the best one. Trump is trying to justify his
unpopular strongman tactic in D.C. This is a familiar refrain we’ve heard from
him before—calling for a phony investigation to give him room to maneuver.
Under the Biden, Obama, or Bush
administrations, word of an investigation like this would have been viewed as
one being conducted in good faith. But there is no more presumption of
regularity with this administration, which has stretched the limits of the rule
of law and even now has launched criminal investigations into Trump enemies
like New York Attorney General Letitia James and Democratic Senator Adam
Schiff, despite claims from DOJ officials during their confirmations that there
was no revenge agenda. This is exactly what we warned about before the
election. Using prosecutions as a political weapon is the hallmark of a
would-be dictator in a banana republic.
An investigation like this might
not seem like a big deal given the broader scope of events this week. Sometimes
it’s the details that let us see the forest.
If connecting the dots between
law and politics feels confusing, that’s because it often is—and most of the
time, the threads are invisible unless you’ve spent years inside the system.
That’s what I do here: break down the complexities so they’re clear, useful,
and grounded in expertise. If you value that kind of analysis, subscribe
to Civil Discourse, if you don’t already, and stay connected to the
bigger picture.
We’re in this together,
-Joyce Vance
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