August 20, 2025 D.C.’s Murder Rate Is More Than
500% Higher Than The Average State D.C.’s murder rate ran 169 percent higher than
Louisiana’s, the deadliest state, and an astonishing 523 percent higher
than that of the average state. John R. Lott Jr.
Democrats insist Washington, D.C., doesn’t face a crime problem.
On a podcast last week, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D–NY,
claimed, “I walk around all the time. I wake up early in the morning
… And I feel perfectly safe.” He dismissed Republican concerns about
safety as “full of it,” but, of course, Schumer
doesn’t go anywhere without his security detail. In a similar vein,
D.C. Councilmember Charles Allen
called the federalization of law enforcement “unnecessary,
unwarranted,” and the D.C. Council emphasized that crime rates are at
“the lowest rates we’ve seen in 30 years.”
Yet even MSNBC host Joe Scarborough admitted that Democrats privately
acknowledge the problem. On his show last week, he said Democrats had
called him in recent days,
saying, “Washington
should have gotten involved years ago. This place is dangerous, it’s a
mess, it’s a wreck.” Scarborough noted that those same Democrats then
rush to Twitter to attack Republicans, denouncing federal intervention as
“the worst outrage of all time.”
Those who have visited a CVS or Walgreens in D.C. can see the reality:
Everything sits behind plexiglass. That isn’t surprising, since the
city’s property crime rate
runs 49 percent higher than the most crime-ridden state.
So what do the numbers really show?
First, the debate centers only on crimes reported to police which are
far fewer than the crimes actually committed. Nationally, victims
report about 40 percent of violent crimes and 30 percent of property
crimes. When criminals face little risk of being caught or punished,
reporting drops even further. Given D.C.’s high crime levels, the gap
between actual crime and reported crime is likely to be far wider than
the national average.
Second, the D.C. police department itself faces
serious credibility issues. For years, the police union and
individual officers have accused leadership of manipulating statistics
downgrading felonies to misdemeanors and misclassifying incidents to keep
them out of the official totals reported to the city and the FBI. For
example, one officer alleged that a case of domestic violence in which an
individual received a deep cut was reclassified by a captain as “sick
person to the hospital,” when the officer had originally categorized it
as an “assault with a dangerous weapon.” Residents also complain that
even crimes resulting in felony convictions sometimes disappear from
D.C.’s recorded numbers.
According to the union, the problem is
only getting worse, even as city leaders boast about supposed drops
in crime.
But let’s put those concerns aside and
turn to the FBI’s final 2023 crime data. Even by reported numbers
alone, D.C.’s crime rates remain shockingly high compared to those of the
rest of the country. Whether compared to states since many Democrats
want D.C. to become the 51st state or to cities, the district stands
out for all the wrong reasons.
When measured against states, D.C.’s violent crime rate was 54 percent
higher than New Mexico, the most dangerous state, and 220 percent higher
than the national average. Against cities, D.C. outpaced every one of the
20 largest cities and ranked second highest among the 25 most
populous.
The murder rate looks even worse. D.C.’s murder rate ran 169 percent
higher than Louisiana’s, the deadliest state, and an astonishing 523
percent higher than that of the average state. No city in the top 20 came
close. Philadelphia had the second-highest murder rate in that group,
with 26 murders per 100,000 people, yet D.C.’s rate was 50 percent
higher. Among the 25 largest cities, D.C. ranked second overall.
Robbery paints the bleakest picture. D.C.’s robbery rate was 370 percent
higher than Maryland, the worst state, and a staggering 955 percent
higher than that of the average state. Among the 25 most populous cities,
D.C. ranked first in robberies. Across all 796 U.S. cities with more than
50,000 residents, D.C. still ranked third.
While D.C. isn’t setting record rape or aggravated assault rates, it is
191 percent and 140 percent above the average rate for states.
While Democrats continue to deny the crime crisis, the D.C. business
community has cried out for “urgent” help. “We . . . are writing to
express our deep concern about the alarming increase in violent crime
across our city,” members of D.C.’s business trade association community
wrote to the D.C. mayor and city council last year. “Washington,
D.C., is quickly becoming a national outlier in rising crime, and the
trends are alarming.”
“Crime is out of control, and our officers are stretched beyond their
limits,” D.C. police union Chair Gregg Pemberton
warned on Aug. 11.
But the new FBI agents and National Guard soldiers can make a real
difference.
And the initial crime data is promising. In the first seven days since
Trump announced federal control, compared to the seven days before, the
D.C. police union
reported robberies dropped 46 percent, carjackings plunged 83
percent, car thefts fell 21 percent, violent crime declined by 22
percent, and assaults with a deadly weapon decreased by 6
percent.
The evidence makes clear that Washington, D.C., faces one of the worst
crime problems in the nation. This is true even if one ignores the claims
that D.C. is manipulating its crime numbers and that the large gap
between reported and total crime is likely larger for D.C.
Democrats may downplay the crisis, but the data show that the district
outpaces every state and nearly every major city in violent and property
crime, murder, and robbery. Until Democrats confront reality instead of
dismissing concerns, residents and businesses will continue to pay the
price.