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    DC police chief retains command after deal with Trump administration

    KahawaTungu ReporterBy KahawaTungu ReporterAugust 16, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
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    The Trump administration rescinded an order replacing the District of Columbia’s police chief after an emergency court hearing.

    Washington DC’s police chief Pamela Smith will retain control of the force after the city sued over US Attorney General Pam Bondi naming the head of the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) as the district’s “emergency police commissioner”.

    The lawsuit asked a judge to void Bondi’s order and stop the DEA head from taking any position of command in the force.

    After the hearing, the justice department agreed to remove the DEA head as the emergency police chief, filing a new order that made him an intermediary between the administration and police.

    The city’s attorney general Brian Schwalb said that his “expectation is the key issue with respect to control and command of our MPD has been resolved”.

    Judge Ana Reyes said that, under the act the Trump administration used to take over the police service, Washington DC Mayor Muriel Bowser must follow White House directives.

    But she said it does not grant the administration full control of the police force. The new order also directs the mayor’s office to cooperate with federal immigration enforcement and enforcement related to the “unlawful occupancy of public spaces”.

    Both sides said they will continue arguments over immigration policy next week. In a statement on Friday evening, Bondi accused Schwalb of continuing “to oppose our efforts to improve public safety” in the city and said the administration remains “committed to working closely with Mayor Bowser”.

    President Donald Trump on Monday declared he would use federal law enforcement to crack down on crime in Washington.

    He has since sent in hundreds of National Guard members and other federal agents to clear homeless encampments, run checkpoints and otherwise bolster law enforcement, citing a 1970s law known as the Home Rule Act that allows him to use MPD for “federal purposes” that he “may deem necessary and appropriate”.

    Late Thursday, Bondi wrote in an order that DEA Administrator Terry Cole would assume “all of the powers and duties” of local Police Chief Pamela Smith. The chief “must receive approval from Commissioner Cole before issuing any further directives to the MPD”, according to the order.

    Almost immediately, Mayor Bowser and Schwalb struck back, saying the order was “unlawful” and telling Chief Smith that she did not have to follow it.

    “If effectuated, the Bondi Order would upend the command structure of MPD, endangering the safety of the public and law enforcement officers alike,” Smith wrote in a declaration filed in the suit on Friday.

    “In my nearly three decades in law enforcement, I have never seen a single government action that would cause a greater threat to law and order than this dangerous directive.”

    In the last few days, armoured vehicles have lined up near monuments and other tourist sites, and drivers have been stopped on a popular nightlife corridor. Helicopters from the police force for the national park system have swept through the sky. Altogether, officials expect 800 troops to be deployed to the district, as well as 500 federal law enforcement agents, such as the FBI.

    Bowser, a Democrat, has said there is no emergency and Trump’s move is an “authoritarian push”.

    Trump is reportedly the first president to federalise the MPD, but the government has sought to intervene in DC policing before.

    In 1989, then President George HW Bush provided around 200 National Guard troops to support local police during a period of chronically high crime involving crack cocaine, with the understanding they would not patrol the streets.

    More recently, the National Guard was sent to protect the capitol after the 6 January 2021 attack and, before that, in response to the 2020 protests following the killing of George Floyd.

    Bondi said on X on Friday that federal officers had made 189 arrests, including 39 on gun offenses.

    Trump has said crime has worsened in Washington DC, but analysis by BBC Verify suggests a different trend.

    Violent offences fell after peaking in 2023, and in 2024, they hit their lowest level in 30 years, according to figures published by DC police.

    They are continuing to fall, preliminary data for 2025 suggests.

    Violent crime overall has fallen 26% this year compared to the same point in 2024, and robbery is down 28%, according to the police department.

    Since taking office, Trump has also deployed National Guard troops to Los Angeles in an effort to quell protests over deportation raids by Immigration and Customs Enforcement.

    By BBC News

    Email your news TIPS to Editor@Kahawatungu.com — this is our only official communication channel

    Washington DC's police chief Pamela Smith
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