The Ultimate Townhall Media Experience Has Arrived
Minnesota Just Admitted That Illegals Can Vote in Their Elections
Well, That's Certainly an Interesting Donor You Have, Mikie Sherrill
RFK Jr's Wife Wasn't Going to Let the Clowns on The View Get...
HBO Host Has a Total Meltdown Over CBS News' New Editor-in-Chief
Why Did Democrats Lose White Men? John Fetterman Has the Answer.
Zohran Mamdani Will Make NYC a Haven for Sex Traffickers
The White Houses Response to the 'No Kings' Protests: 'Who Cares?'
Bondi’s Senate Performance Should Be Required Study for GOP Members of Congress
The Direct Path to Affordable Medicines
Why Has the World Not Woken Up to Iran's Execution Spree?
Nutrition Education Is the First Bite to a Healthier America
The Middle East: Juxtaposing Israel's Just Military Victories and the Moral Defeat of...
Trump Set the Stage for Strategic Engagement With the Caucasus – Now Congress...
Bipartisan Bill Aims to Combat Organized Retail Theft
Tipsheet
Premium

CBP Got a Call of a Carjacking in Progress in DC. Here's What Happened Next.

AP Photo/Eric Gay

Since President Trump’s federal takeover of D.C. police, safety in the nation’s capital has drastically improved. Robberies are down 46 percent, carjackings fell by 83 percent, and violent crime is down 22 percent, according to the White House. Dozens of homeless encampments have also been cleared, gang members have been locked up, 111 firearms have been seized, and there have been more than 1,000 total arrests since Aug. 7. 

Still, that doesn’t mean every criminal has been rooted out. On Monday, U.S. Customs and Border Protection agents received a call as they were making D.C. “safe and beautiful” about a carjacking in progress. 

“Agents immediately responded to the area and stopped the fleeing suspect,” CBP said on X. “The suspect was arrested and will be charged with multiple criminal offenses. CBP will continue to support all presidential executive orders and assure DC is safe again.”

Carjackings were previously among the biggest crime issues plaguing the city, with GOP Sen. Markwayne Mullin even admitting it's why he won't wear a seatbelt when driving around the nation's capital. 

"I don’t want to be stuck in my vehicle when I need to exit in a hurry, because I got a seatbelt around me and that — and I wear my seatbelt all the time, but in Washington, D.C., I do not because it is so prevalent,” he told Fox News earlier this month.  "And I don't want the same thing happening to me what's happened to a lot of people that work on the Hill." 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos