Washington, D.C
15-year-old girl pleads guilty, testifies in brutal murder of DC man – WTOP News
The trial is ongoing for the five girls who brutally beat 64-year-old Reggie Brown to death in Northwest D.C. last year.
A trial is ongoing for the five girls who brutally beat 64-year-old Reggie Brown to death in Northwest D.C. last year.
Now, two of the five girls have pleaded guilty in Brown’s death, which happened along Georgia Avenue last October.
NBC Washington reporter and WTOP alum Paul Wagner joined WTOP’s Shawn Anderson and Anne Kramer to talk more about the developments in the case.
WTOP’s Shawn Anderson and Anne Kramer talk to Paul Wagner about the murder of Reggie Brown.
The transcript below has been lightly edited for clarity.
Anne Kramer: Paul, thanks for joining us. What happened in court, in regards to this case, and where are we in this trial?
Paul Wagner: So we’re almost at the end of the government’s case. There was a lot of arguments between lawyers over what evidence could come in. What we did learn is that there was a woman who was approached by detectives and asked if she could identify any of the five girls that were caught on camera that night, walking up Georgia Avenue. Because there are certain rules that reporters have to abide by, I can’t say where this woman worked, but it is an interesting connection and she was able to identify two of the girls.
The other thing we learned is that the brutal beating that was actually recorded by one of the girls that night was actually emailed to the detective a couple of weeks after the beating, and he testified that that video was emailed to him by a social worker. It looks like Thursday is going to be very interesting, where we’ve been told that there’ll be some Instagram messages that will be shown to the judge, and we’re anticipating that that could be quite interesting.
Shawn Anderson: Now, it was just yesterday that you told us we had compelling and chilling testimony from a 15-year-old girl who had pleaded guilty and is now testifying against a couple of her friends. She explained the teens went out and attacked this man because they were “bored.” Tell us more about that.
Wagner: Yeah, that was pretty shocking. I got to say, sitting there in the courtroom, I didn’t know what to expect from this 15-year-old. She is locked up and will be locked up for three years, but she testified under a grant of immunity, and yes, Shawn and Anne, she said that she and her friends were out looking for someone to beat up that night. And when the prosecutor said, ‘Well, why? Why were you doing that?’ And she said, ‘We were bored.’
Now, there’s another major aspect of this case, and there was a man that actually instigated all of this. The detectives call him “Blue Coat” because they don’t know who he is. But Wednesday, we saw a video of him taking Reggie Brown across Georgia Avenue by the collar and then throwing him up against a wall at the Domino’s Pizza there at Sheridan Street. And that’s how this all began. This 15-year-old, who testified Tuesday, said that they had walked up to Blue Coat and asked if they could join in. Could they beat him up too? And Blue Coat said, ‘Sure.’ There had been previous testimony that Blue Coat had threatened the girls with a gun and said that if they didn’t join in, that he would shoot them.
But this 15-year-old testified that that did not happen. That was not correct. He never threatened them.
One other thing we did learn, too, is that a second girl has now pled guilty. It’s unclear what she’s pled guilty to. It happened during a status hearing, and so that wasn’t open to reporters. Of the five girls that are charged in this case, two have now pled guilty. Two are now on trial, and one more will go on trial next year.
Kramer: Curious if it’s in any court documents, anything that you’ve seen or heard, or if there’s any kind of connection to an organized crime or a gang, or are they just all friends?
Wagner: No, the testimony was that these were all friends. They hung out at a rec center. That was the testimony Tuesday. That night, they had gone to a skate park, and they were just hanging out. Like she said, they were just bored. Just five girls that somehow, allegedly, joined in this beating of this 64-year-old disabled man. And I’ve got to tell you, the video, which the public will never see, because it’s going to be sealed in the juvenile matter, is one of the most brutal videos I’ve ever seen in my life.
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Washington, D.C
Trump targets Washington mayoral nominee ahead of DC election
US President Donald Trump escalated his criticism of Democratic mayoral nominee Janeese Lewis George, describing her as a “communist” and warning that her policy agenda could negatively affect Washington, DC, ahead of the city’s November mayoral election. Trump made the remarks on his Truth Social platform, placing crime, immigration and policing at the center of his criticism.Trump attacks Democratic agenda
In his statement, Trump claimed George supports measures including reducing prison populations, expanding sanctuary city policies, opposing Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), restoring cashless bail, cutting police funding and resisting anti-crime initiatives. He argued that such proposals would weaken public safety in the US capital and reverse recent improvements.
George becomes favorite after primary victory
Janeese Lewis George secured the Democratic nomination earlier this month after winning the party’s mayoral primary in Washington, DC. Given the city’s strong Democratic voting base, her victory has positioned her as the leading candidate to succeed outgoing Mayor Muriel Bowser in the November general election.
Trump vows to protect Washington
Trump insisted that his administration would not allow Washington, DC, to be “destroyed,” arguing that the city has become significantly safer through crime reduction efforts and urban renewal projects. He also announced that he intends to meet with George, while describing the US capital as “again a Safe and Prestigious Community.”
Repeating his criticism, Trump said: “Many people, including myself, have worked long and hard to get it there, and we will not let it be destroyed by a Communist adherent who has no intention to, MAKE WASHINGTON GREAT AGAIN!”
Washington, D.C
Trump lashes out at Washington, DC, mayoral nominee
Berk Kutay Gokmen
28 June 2026•Update: 28 June 2026
US President Donald Trump on Sunday criticized Democratic mayoral nominee Janeese Lewis George, calling her a “communist” and attacking her policy positions ahead of Washington, DC’s mayoral election.
“Janeese Lewis George, the Communist who is almost certainly going to be elected Mayor of Washington, D.C., has stated that she wants to empty the prisons, make D.C. a Sanctuary City, oppose ICE, welcome Criminal Illegal Aliens back into our beloved Capital, resist Anti-Crime Crackdowns, Defund the Police, continue and expand Cashless Bail, and so many other Capital destroying ‘things’,” Trump wrote on his Truth Social platform.
George won the Democratic primary for mayor of Washington, DC, earlier this month, securing her party’s nomination in the heavily Democratic city and becoming the likely successor to outgoing Mayor Muriel Bowser after the November general election.
Trump said he would not allow Washington, DC, to be “destroyed.”
“In the end, it will never work out, nor will I let it even have a chance because I have worked too hard to make Washington, D.C., the Envy of the World, with almost No Crime, and a Beautification process that has been second to none,” he said.
Trump also said he would “meet with Janeese Lewis George,” adding that Washington, DC, is “again a Safe and Prestigious Community.”
“Many people, including myself, have worked long and hard to get it there, and we will not let it be destroyed by a Communist adherent who has no intention to, MAKE WASHINGTON GREAT AGAIN!” he added.
Washington, D.C
Kirstin Downey: Hawaiʻi Is Rock Solid At This New Display In DC
Just in time for the Fourth of July, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., has rolled out a big new exhibit highlighting nature in all its glory, with specimens from across America. But the Hawaiʻi offerings are a bit of a dud.
The Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History is a vast repository, occupying a stately edifice on the National Mall. It holds some 148 million objects, including more than a million from Hawaiʻi, including eight priceless feathered cloaks, but when the institution’s curators picked out one item to exemplify each state for this exhibit, they gave Hawaiʻi a rock.
Yes, a rock.
Seen in person, it’s a striking black clump of glittering pāhoehoe lava, and of course we are proud of our lava, but it comes across as, well, underwhelming.
Millions of visitors are expected to arrive in Washington, D.C. in the next two weeks. Many will be drawn by the fanfare associated with the 250th anniversary of the signing of the Declaration of Independence. In the eyes of many Americans, President Trump has tainted the occasion by claiming personal sponsorship of it.
To be fair, the city is looking pretty good, decked out in its finery for the events, and some improvements have been made. Flags are flying; the lawns look green and lush. The scene is drawing large crowds of tourists from all over the world, cheerfully milling about and popping into the many free museums that line the mall.
There are also some notable exceptions: The reflecting pond by the Lincoln Memorial is definitely tainted by algae infiltration. There’s also a bit of slime attached to what was reportedly a no-bid job for the renovation work by a Trump donor.
Also to be fair here: Hawaiʻi has had difficulties with its own reflecting pool, the now-waterless water feature at the State Capitol.

Amid the ongoing partisan warfare, Hawaiʻi’s state government, along with about 10 other Democratic-controlled states, has decided not to participate in the D.C. festivities. That includes the Great American State Fair, now being set up on the National Mall, which will host some 56 themed pavilions where individual states are expected to highlight what they believe makes them special. Sprawling over 10 city blocks, crowned by a 110-foot ferris wheel, the festival will feature concerts, military flyovers, fireworks displays, movie screenings and exhibit spaces representing the nation’s states and territories.
In a statement, Erika Engle, a spokeswoman for Gov. Josh Green, said the state is not officially participating, adding that no funds had been allotted for it by the Legislature or Congress.
She added that Washington, D.C, “is 5,000 miles away.”
That’s a distance that hasn’t previously inhibited the governor, whose peregrinations to the nation’s capital have almost qualified him as a frequent flyer.
This is supposed to be a sign of how Hawaiʻi’s leaders are effectively rejecting Trump. As if Trump cares whether Hawaiʻi participates or not.
It’s a strange place to make a stand. July Fourth is bigger than any president. The signing of the Declaration of Independence represents a rare kind of bravery. The 56 signers risked their lives to sign it, knowing they would have a target on their backs, placed there by King George III, one of the world’s most powerful monarchs.
In fact, people who signed resolutions against the king in the past could expect persecution not just in this life but in the next. In England in the 1630s, the autocratic King Charles I decided to bypass the elected body and instead to rule by executive order. Discarding established law and tradition, he disbanded Parliament for 11 years.
The English people thought that was high-handed and, amid a set of bloody civil wars that killed 200,000 people, he was eventually executed. But when his son was restored to the throne in 1660, the 59 people who had signed the former king’s death warrant were themselves hunted down. Many were drawn and quartered; the lucky were imprisoned for life.
Oliver Cromwell, the Parliamentary ringleader, had already died but his corpse was exhumed and he was hanged. His body was hung in chains and his decapitated head was impaled on a pike and put on public display for 20 years. Almost 100 years later, his embalmed head was still being carted about as a gruesome trophy, even as the signers of the Declaration of Independence put pen to paper.
Back in 1776, the memory of what vengeful kings do to their enemies was high in the minds of those who were publicly protesting Charles II’s autocratic heir, George III. In fact, one of the first ships built and commissioned by the Connecticut General Assembly, launched just two weeks before the Declaration of Independence was signed, was named the Oliver Cromwell.
Democracy has had its ups and downs.
Back to the exhibit at the Smithsonian.
The goal of the curators was to reflect America’s natural diversity and how humans interact with it. In dozens of exhibits spread over 5,000 square feet, visitors can learn about the oddities and idiosyncrasies in the natural world, from rocks to birds to butterflies to snakes to fossils to plants and also how humans have incorporated these items into crafts and artistry. It touched on the problems of animal extinction and climate change.
A video graphic allows people to track bird migration routes across the continental United States.
One display explains the long history of traditional blacksmithing in Guam, another provides examples of Samoan siapo bark cloth.
In addition to several lava rocks representing Hawaiʻi, the exhibit also featured a lovely Niʻihau snail shell necklace and a goby fish from Kāneʻohe Bay, which the exhibition touted as one of the largest sheltered bodies of water in Hawaiʻi, known for its living corals.
But more striking symbols of Hawaiʻi seemed notably sparse and some obvious elements are missing. How nice it would have been to see a feathered cape or an example of one of the brightly colored lizards that have played such an important role in Hawaiian mythology. I would have liked to have seen more of Hawaiʻi’s beautiful birds and butterflies.
Another thing that appears to have gone missing are Hawaiian philanthropic donors making the case for the state’s natural splendors. The display’s list of financial sponsors shows philanthropy from both blue and red states but nothing from Hawaiʻi.
That’s partly because we are suffering another form of extinction. We have a lot fewer large companies based in Hawaiʻi than we once did, and so there are fewer corporate sponsors. Even Hawaiian Airlines, once a mainstay of exhibits like this that appeal to frequent travelers, has been subsumed into an airline from another state.
We do have more billionaires than we once did, of course, but they own estates in so many places that it is hard to know what they actually consider home.
They just better not steal our rocks.

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