小萝莉影视

DC leaders debate solutions as District sees 45th homicide

D.C. police cars are seen in this February 2016 小萝莉影视 file photo. (小萝莉影视/Dave Dildine)

D.C. leaders are searching for answers and proposing policy聽changes to quell the violence as the city’s homicide rate continues to climb.

Just after 1:30 a.m. Sunday, D.C. police officers rushed into an apartment building at the corner of Wagner Street and Skyland Place, SE to find Montray Brown dying from multiple gunshot wounds, police said. Brown was 28 years old.

This is the 45th homicide in the District this year, according to police statistics. It’s a rising figure that’s increasingly disconcerting city leaders and law enforcement.

In her new budget, Mayor Muriel Bowser wants to add a few hundred sworn police officers to get the department to 4,000. However, following a recent homicide in Ward 7, Councilmember Vince Gray issued a statement saying in part, “the sheer deployment of more police officers is insufficient to stem the tide of violence that continues to plague our communities across Wards 7 and 8.”

Gray supports a violence interruption program out of Attorney General Karl Racine’s office that’s seeing success, but Gray is also to offer tax incentives to D.C. first responders. It’s in the early stages.

Named the “First Responder Income Tax Exclusion Amendment Act of 2019,” the legislation is assigned to the Committee on the Judiciary and Public Safety. However, it does not outline in detail how much of a tax incentive is proposed for D.C. police officers and firefighters.


Video courtesy NBC Washington.

Megan Cloherty

An award-winning journalist, Megan Cloherty is podcast host and producer of the 鈥22 Hours: An American Nightmare.鈥 She previously served as 小萝莉影视 Investigative Reporter covering breaking news, crime and courts.

Federal 小萝莉影视 Network Logo
Log in to your 小萝莉影视 account for notifications and alerts customized for you.