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Members of the District of Columbia National Guard patrol in front of the White House as a woman rides past on a scooter, Aug. 16, 2025, in Washington. (AP)
Trump said Washington, DC, ‘always’ has ‘a murder a week.’ That’s wrong
If Your Time is short
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As of the afternoon of Aug. 25, the last homicide recorded in Washington, D.C., happened Aug. 13.
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It’s not unheard of for the city to have a homicide-free week. The city had a stretch of more than two weeks in February and March with no homicides.
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Experts who study crime trends look at longer periods, such as a few years, to establish crime trends.
President Donald Trump said sending National Guard troops to Washington, D.C., to reduce crime has paid off.
While speaking about his crime-fighting initiatives on Aug. 25, Trump said: "In the last 11 days, again, I hate to say it, because it sounds so ridiculous, but in the last 11 days, we've had no murders, and that's the first time that's taken place in years, actually, years, we always have a murder a week."
Trump later added, "So for 11 days there have been no murders. The record goes back years where that's happened. They haven't seen that happen in years."
Trump made similar statements in recent days. Shortly before he spoke, Trump said in a Truth Social post, "There have been no murders in 9 days, something which hasn’t happened in years." On Aug. 22, he said, "There have been no murders in D.C. in the last week. That's the first time in anybody's memory that you haven't had a murder in a week."
Trump’s actions have drawn strong reactions from residents and politicians. A Washington Post poll found a majority of Washington, D.C., residents oppose Trump’s recent orders. House Speaker Mike Johnson said the 11-day streak tops the list of reasons that Trump deserves a Nobel Peace Prize.
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On top of consulting the district’s crime dashboard, we asked the White House if it had evidence we should consider about Trump’s district homicide statistics.
Spokesperson Taylor Rogers told PolitiFact in an email that Trump’s action "has stopped the senseless killings, removed over one thousand violent criminals from the streets, and overall crime has decreased." The White House did not share additional data.
Trump’s underlying metric for his shifting statistic is off: There was a stretch of more than two weeks earlier this year with no murders. And crime statistics experts say that while a homicide-free week is positive, it doesn’t say much about crime trends, safety or public perceptions of safety.
Washington, D.C., has had stretches of around a week — or more — without homicides
The district’s crime dashboard shows a homicide Aug. 11, the date Trump issued his executive order declaring a crime emergency in Washington, D.C. The next reported homicide took place Aug. 13. At the time Trump made his statements, that was the last one in August. (One note: The dashboard is frequently updated when police learn of new homicides, so the numbers can change.)
For 2025, the longest stretch without a homicide happened about six months ago: A homicide occurred Feb. 24 and the next one was sometime between the night of March 13 and the early morning hours of March 14, which is a stretch of about 16 days.
There were no homicides May 4 through May 11, an eight-day span.
In 2024, there were three reported homicides Aug. 3 and then the next one occurred Aug. 13, which means there were no homicides for nine days. That example shows a shortcoming about Trump’s statement: There could be one homicide per week for two weeks in a row, or multiple homicides in one week followed by a week with none, so a homicide-free week may not mean much in the context of a longer stretch of time.
"It is not particularly uncommon for Washington, D.C., to go more than a week without a murder," said Thomas Abt, founding director of the University of Maryland’s Center for the Study and Practice of Violence Reduction.
Abt worked in the Office of Justice Programs at the Justice Department during former President Barack Obama’s presidency.
A week doesn’t constitute a crime trend
A week of data doesn’t amount to a trend or tell us much about overall safety, experts said.
Homicides are far less common than other crimes: There had been about 101 homicides reported in Washington, D.C., in 2025 as of Aug. 25. (A new reported homicide occurred Aug. 26.) In the same time, Metropolitan Police data shows, there have been nine times that number of robberies and thousands of thefts. (The district’s data uses the word "homicide," which is the legal term referring to a person killing another person, including lawfully. Trump uses the more narrow term "murder," which means an unlawful intentional killing.)
"Homicides are already pretty rare," said Tahir Duckett, executive director at the Center for Innovations in Community Safety at Georgetown Law. "So when the murder rate drops, it doesn't necessarily make people feel more safe in their day to day lives or change their behavior."
Research shows that people’s feelings about safety are only loosely connected to actual crime rates.
"Other factors — everything from neighborhood design, lighting, and the availability of green spaces to their access to health care — also play a role," Duckett said in an email, citing research.
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Experts who study crime generally compare crimes and crime rates over longer periods. And comparing this year-to date with the same time period in the previous year showed that violent crimes including murder dropped before Trump’s actions.
"Every day without murder is a good day, but it’s not a particularly meaningful way of measuring crime," Abt said.
There is a degree of year-to-year volatility with homicide numbers based on factors such as a shooter’s skills, the type of weapon and if the victim received medical help in time, said Northeastern University criminology professor James Alan Fox.
"One year is not enough time to establish a reliable trend; certainly a week or two is even less reliable," Fox said.
Statistically, we should expect a few homicide-free weeks. Based on the 101 reported homicides year-to-date as of the time that Trump spoke, that averaged roughly three per week. That means there is a 5% chance that a week would have no homicides, Fox said. Over a year, that would equal two to three weeks with no homicides.
Our ruling
Trump said Aug. 25, "We always have a murder a week" in Washington, D.C.
That ignores that a two-week stretch earlier in 2025 had no reported homicides.
Criminologists caution that one week of data does not say much about the crime trends. Crime experts generally compare crimes and crime rates over longer periods, such as years.
We rate this statement False.
RELATED: Trump exaggerates Washington, DC, crime while ordering police takeover and National Guard deployment
RELATED: How does Washington, D.C.’s homicide rate compare with other countries?
Our Sources
CSPAN, President Trump Signs Executive Orders on Reducing Crime, Aug. 25, 2025
Factbase, Remarks: Donald Trump Signs an Executive Order on Cashless Bail, Aug. 25, 2025
Factbase, Press Gaggle: Donald Trump Speaks to Reporters at The People's House, Aug. 22, 2025
House Speaker Mike Johnson, X post, Aug. 25, 2025
Metropolitan Police Department, 2025 Year-to-Date Crime Comparison, Aug. 25, 2025
Metropolitan Police Department, All crimes Aug. 12-Aug. 25, Accessed Aug. 25, 2025
Metropolitan Police Department, Homicides in 2025 year to date, Accessed Aug. 25, 2025
Metropolitan Police Department, Homicides in 2024, Accessed Aug. 25, 2025
Washington Post, We asked 604 D.C. residents about Trump’s takeover. Here’s what they said. Aug. 20, 2025
New York Times, Crime Gone in a Week? The Politics Behind Trump’s Federal Crackdown. Aug. 25, 2025
White House, Declaring a crime emergency in the District of Columbia, Aug. 11, 2025
Social Indicators Research, Perception or Reality, What Matters Most When it Comes to Crime in Your Neighbourhood? Nov. 13, 2013
Journal of Criminal Justice, The effects of neighborhood conditions on perceptions of safety, September-October 2002
CNN, Fact check: Trump’s barrage of false claims about crime in Washington, DC, Aug. 25, 2025
Telephone interview, James Alan Fox, Northeastern University criminology professor, Aug. 25, 2025
Email interview, Thomas Abt, founding director of the University of Maryland’s Center for the Study and Practice of Violence Reduction and associate research professor in the department of Criminology and Criminal Justice, Aug. 25, 2025
Email interview, Tahir Duckett executive director at the Center for Innovations in Community Safety at Georgetown Law, Aug. 25, 2025
Email interview, Jeff Asher, AH Datalytics analyst, Aug. 25, 2025
Email interview, Taylor Rogers, White House spokesperson, Aug, 25, 2025
Email interview, Ernesto Lopez, Council on Criminal Justice senior research specialist, Aug. 25, 2025
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Trump said Washington, DC, ‘always’ has ‘a murder a week.’ That’s wrong
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