Washington, D.C
Search underway for 3 suspects in carjacking spree across DC

Police seek for three suspects accused of a carjacking spree in D.C. (PHOTO: Metropolitan Police Division)
WASHINGTON – Police are looking for three carjacking suspects accused of stealing two automobiles and making an attempt to take a 3rd throughout a spree spanning simply over half-hour in D.C. on Thursday.
Based on the Metropolitan Police Division, the primary incident occurred round 2:32 p.m. within the 4400 block of Benning Street Northeast. Police say the suspects, who arrived on the scene in one other automotive, exited their car and took the sufferer’s automotive at gunpoint. The suspects then fled the scene with each autos.
About six minutes later, the suspects approached a sufferer within the 3100 block of Nash Place Southeast. The suspects pulled our their weapons and demanded the automotive from the sufferer, however finally the suspects fled the scene with out taking any property.
Then half-hour after that, round 3:08 p.m., the suspect once more tried to carjack a car within the 3800 block of Minnesota Avenue Northeast. Police say the suspects approached the sufferer and demanded his keys and property. The sufferer complied, and the suspects left the scene within the stolen automotive and the suspect car noticed on the first scene.
Police launched the next photograph of the suspect car, described as a grey 2018 Toyota Camry, final seen with Maryland tags 6FB1855:

Suspect Car. (PHOTO: Metropolitan Police Division)
In addition they launched the next photographs of the 2 autos stolen through the spree:

Stolen autos. (PHOTO: Metropolitan Police Division)
Anybody with data on the incidents or the whereabouts of the suspects is requested to name police at 202-727-9099 or ship a textual content message tip to 50411. A reward of as much as $10,000 is being provided for data that results in arrests and convictions within the case.

Washington, D.C
DC police commander suspended, accused of changing crime statistics

A D.C. police commander is under investigation for allegedly making changes to crime statistics in his district.
The Metropolitan Police Department confirmed Michael Pulliam was placed on paid administrative leave in mid-May — just a week after Pulliam filed an equal employment opportunity complaint against an assistant chief and the police union accused the department of deliberately falsifying crime data.
The union claims police supervisors in the department manipulate crime data to make it appear violent crime has fallen considerably compared to last year.
Pulliam — the former commander of the 3rd District that patrols Adams Morgan and Columbia Heights — was placed on leave with pay and told he was under investigation for questionable changes to crime data, five law enforcement sources familiar with the investigation told News4.
That came about a week after he filed a complaint against Executive Assistant Chief of Police Andre Wright, according to three law enforcement sources familiar with the complaint.
Pulliam denied the allegations against him.
“When our members respond to the scene of a felony offense where there is a victim reporting that a felony occurred, inevitably there will be a lieutenant or a captain that will show up on that scene and direct those members to take a report for a lesser offense,” Fraternal Order of Police Chairman Gregg Pemberton said. “So, instead of taking a report for a shooting or a stabbing or a carjacking, they will order that officer to take a report for a theft or an injured person to the hospital or a felony assault, which is not the same type of classification.”
The police department’s command staff is focusing on two categories in order to get the numbers to fall, Pemberton said: armed with a dangerous weapon and injured person to the hospital.
“When management officials are directing officers to take reports for felony assault, or if they’re going back into police databases and changing offenses to felony assault, felony assault is not a category of crime that’s listed on the department’s daily crime stats,” Pemberton said. “It’s also not something that’s a requirement of the FBI’s uniform crime reporting program. So, by changing criminal offenses from, for example, ADW bat or ADW gun to felony assault, that would avoid both the MPD and the FBI from reporting that as a part one or a felony offense.”
The union has been gathering evidence for some time now by looking at reports and talking with officers all over the city, Pemberton said.
“What we’ve heard through our members and through members of management that were willing to talk with the union is that this is a directive from the command staff, is that they wanna make sure that these classifications of these reports are adjusted over time to make sure that the overall crime stats stay down,” Pemberton said. “And this is deliberately done.”
As of last Monday when News4 spoke with Pemberton, D.C. crime data shows violent crime was down 28%. Thursday, the department’s website said violent crime is down 25% when compared to the same time last year, and overall crime is down 8%.
“That’s preposterous,” Pemberton said. “There’s absolutely no way crime could be down 28%. Last year they suggested that it went down 34%.”
In April, Pulliam’s wife, Capt. Rachel Pulliam, was transferred by Chief Pamela Smith from the Youth Division to midnights in the 7th District.
Subsequently, according to three sources familiar with the incident and the timing of everything, Wright ordered Cmdr. Pulliam to pack up his wife’s belongings from Youth Division and move them on his own to his wife’s new assignment in 7D.
He viewed the order as retaliatory and a misuse of authority, sources familiar with the complaint said.
About a week later, Cmdr. Pulliam’s police powers were revoked, five law enforcement sources told News4.
Chief Smith told News4 she can’t comment on an ongoing investigation.
As for the claims made by the union, Smith released this statement: “The Metropolitan Police Department is committed to upholding the trust and the confidence of the public. Any irregularity in crime data brought to my attention will be addressed immediately. I do not condone any official reclassifying criminal offenses outside the guidelines set in MPD policy. Any allegation of this behavior will be dealt with through our internal processes, which will ensure those members are held accountable. I have the utmost confidence in the command staff leadership currently in place across the Metropolitan Police Department.”
Wright declined to comment to News4.
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Washington, D.C
New organization rallies in support of the RFK Stadium deal – WTOP News

A new grassroots campaign has been formed in support of plans to bring the Washington Commanders back to D.C. with a new stadium at the RFK site.
A new grassroots campaign has been formed in support of plans to bring the Washington Commanders back to the nation’s capital. The group is called “RFK Now!” and co-chair Tiffany Tate said their hope is to encourage the D.C. Council to green light the project.
“We needed that vote yesterday,” Tate said.
Tate, who’s a small-business owner in D.C., said she believes the project is a big economic development opportunity for the city and a way to bring in more jobs, affordable housing and the beautification of public areas.
She said the campaign, which is part of the advocacy group Opportunity D.C., includes business owners, nonprofits and their employees, and residents of D.C.
“That is what is so powerful about our group. It is really a snapshot into D.C.,” Tate said.
The $3.7 billion deal to bring the Commanders back to town could cost taxpayers more than $1 billion for the infrastructure of the stadium and the building of parking garages.
Some critics of the plan have raised concerns over the use of taxpayer dollars for the project. Mayor Muriel Bowser’s administration argued a large portion of the money for the deal, $500 million, would come from a ballpark fund, which was originally used to pay for Nationals Park, being redirected to the RFK Stadium site redevelopment.
Tax revenue for that fund comes from businesses that make $5 million or more each year in income.
Tate said she believes the project is the best way to bring housing, including affordable housing and jobs, to Southeast D.C.
“Right now, there’s nothing out there. There’s no renting, there’s no homes for purchase. There is absolutely nothing,” Tate said.
Tate said the members of the RFK Now campaign have been going door-to-door, hoping to drum up support for the project. She said the reaction to the project has been mixed, with some 100% on board and others believing this deal is about one thing only — bringing the Commanders back to D.C.
The D.C. Council added the funding for the project into its 2026 budget, which will receive a final vote on July 28. While the funding is in the budget, the terms of the deal aren’t, meaning there will be a separate hearing on the stadium, with the first hearing scheduled for July 29 and a vote expected in the fall.
Tate said her fear is that if the council waits too long, the team could look elsewhere.
“If Virginia or Maryland calls the Commanders back to their areas, we lose out on that, and who knows what that area will become in another 30, 40, 50 years,” she said.
Some of the council’s vocal critics of the project, among them Council member Charles Allen, argued that mixed-use development and affordable housing could be brought to the RFK Campus without the stadium as an anchor.
“You don’t need a stadium to be an anchor, but you need an anchor. And right now, we have a huge opportunity of billions of dollars to invest in revitalizing that area that is nothing now,” Tate said.
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Washington, D.C
DC leaders working on programs to relieve congestion across the city

WASHINGTON – With more and more delivery vehicles on the roads. D.C. is trying to figure out ways to ease some of the congestion at curbs.
There are several pilot programs in play right now to deal with all the delivery drivers and vehicles—mopeds, Amazon, UPS and FedEx trucks.
There is also new legislation proposed by Ward 6 Councilmember Charles Allen that would charge drivers for parking using cameras mounted on poles by reading their license plates.
What they’re saying:
“I don’t need to bill someone lots of money to pull over for parking. If you only need five minutes, let’s make it cheap—25 cents, very little amounts—but just manage that better and that’s what the cameras and technology can help us do,” Allen said. “My goal is, I want to keep that travel lane clear.”
Allen said that model been piloted in cities like Pittsburgh and Boston and has been fairly successful.
FOX 5 spoke with D.C. Department of Transportation Director Sharon Kershbaum to break down some of the other pilot programs they are hoping can help.
First, they are turning some high-traffic dense corridors into super-short-term parking—think ten minutes or half an hour at most.
“So if the commercial corridor has things like hair salons or vet clinic, we know those areas still need an hour or two hours of parking, but when you have a strip that has a lot of fast-casual restaurants, those are the ones that work best for the 10-minute parking,” Kershbaum said.
That way, food delivery drivers can park and pick up quicker without taking up too much curb space.
Next, they are trying to replace big 18-wheeler delivery vehicles on congested roads by hubbing them and having smaller vehicles or even pedal or E-bikes pick up packages and do the drop-offs.
And finally, on Tuesday, DDOT issued permits for those Kiwibots—the little food delivery robots you’ve probably seen or heard of—to operate on the campuses of both Howard University and George Washington University.
“Curbside is always a challenge for us,” Kershbaum said. “There’s not enough supply to meet demand so we have to be really innovative to use what we can.”
Local perspective:
Jonah Bliss with Curbivore, which he calls a community gathering around the future of transportation and delivery, said the District seems to be moving in the right direction with the changes.
“Because we leave our curbs unpriced, so to speak, especially in D.C., there’s a perverse incentive to grab every inch of curb you can, park your truck illegally in the no loading zone,” Bliss said.
DDOT is also offering nearly 70 free E-bikes to delivery drivers who want to trade in their mopeds, many of which are illegal and unlicensed in the District.
Again, these are all pilot programs in specific areas, so they will test them out and see exactly what works to implement city-wide.
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