The D.C. Council is set to decide Tuesday whether a man who spent 27 years behind bars for murder should serve on a city commission that drafts and modifies criminal sentencing guidelines — a nomination that is likely to spark heated debate.
Washington, D.C
Should a man convicted of murder help set D.C. sentencing guidelines?

Castón, who did not respond to requests for comment, was released from prison last year, nearly three decades after he killed an 18-year-old man in a 1994 parking lot shooting. In 2021, while still a prisoner, he was elected to the D.C. Advisory Neighborhood Commission, becoming the first incarcerated person voted into public office in the city.
Council Chairman Phil Mendelson (D), who nominated Castón to the 12-member sentencing commission, said in an interview that the panel expressed interest in having a previously incarcerated person join the group. Linden Fry, the commission’s executive director, said members began discussing the addition of a person who had been incarcerated after they learned “how other sentencing commissions in the United States have added returned citizen members.”
“A formerly incarcerated, justice-involved individual can offer a relevant and unique point of view unavailable to other members,” Fry said.
But Matthew M. Graves, the U.S. attorney for the District, whose office prosecutes felony cases in the city, questioned Castón’s integrity in a letter to Mendelson. Graves said the nominee would likely advocate for lesser sentencing ranges that would make it even harder for prosecutors to secure prison time for people convicted of firearms violations in the nation’s capital.
At a council hearing in December, Castón said, “If confirmed, I would be a fierce advocate for sentences that balance accountability, public well-being and human dignity.”
The debate over Castón is yet another instance of discord among top local officials about how to ensure public safety and make the criminal justice system more efficient in the District, which has been enduring spikes in violence, including homicides. More people were slain in D.C. in 2023 than in any year since 1997. The Bowser administration, Graves’s office and some judges repeatedly and publicly pointed fingers of blame at one another last year over aspects of the city’s crime crisis.
Minimum and maximum sentences for crimes are established by District law, and D.C. Superior Court judges impose prison time within those ranges. In deciding what a particular sentences should be, judges rely on a manual containing elaborate formulas for calculating an appropriate prison term based partly on a defendant’s criminal background and the specifics of the offense.
The resulting guidelines are advisory, and judges can depart from them — although data published by the commission last year showed that judges’ sentences hewed to the recommendations in nearly 97 percent of felony cases. The sentencing commission governs the manual and any revisions to it.
Castón would be the D.C. Council’s voting representative on the commission. But whether a man with a murder conviction should be part of that process has prompted debate among top D.C. officials, revealing the depths of ideological fissures among some of them. Council member Brooke Pinto (D-Ward 2), chairwoman of the council’s public safety committee, said she would not support Castón’s nomination, suggesting he lacks expertise in “the nuanced landscape of our D.C. sentencing guidelines.”
After Graves outlined his reservations in a letter, Mendelson responded by expressing support for Castón and accusing Graves of blaming the sentencing commission for problems created by the U.S. attorney’s office.
In the days leading up to Tuesday’s vote, Graves and Mendelson sparred in letters over the merits of Castón’s nomination. Gregg Pemberton, the chairman of the police union, also opposed the nomination, while a D.C. police spokesman said the department would work with all members of the commission.
Nazgol Ghandnoosh, a voting member of the commission who was appointed by the Superior Court chief judge, said Castón would add key insight to the group.
“Trying to identify problems with this nomination is completely misguided in terms of having meaningful conversations about what to do about crime,” she said. Ghandnoosh is the co-director of research at the Sentencing Project, a group that advocates to “minimize imprisonment.”
Asked about Castón’s vision for criminal justice and sentencing, Mendelson acknowledged that he did not probe Castón’s positions, saying he was primarily focused on his background as a formerly incarcerated person.
Castón, who has advocated for restorative justice and prison reform, has also done consulting and work with criminal justice organizations such as the Justice Policy Institute, which advocates against mass incarceration and seeks to reduce disparities in the justice system. But Mendelson disagreed that Castón’s appointment as the council’s voice on the commission would be a statement on the direction the council hoped to take criminal justice reform in the city.
“It’s not a policy position but a perspective,” Mendelson said.
Graves, in a Jan. 2 letter to Mendelson, raised questions about Castón’s past. He pointed to a 2021 decision by a Superior Court judge to deny his petition for early release under a D.C. law meant to give fresh chances to people who have been imprisoned for many years. The judge wrote that the court was “highly troubled by a specific characteristic that has been displayed consistently throughout his post-conviction history that seems at odds with any claim to integrity.”
Castón claimed innocence before he accepted responsibility for the murder. Mendelson, in a memo to the Council on Monday, acknowledged that Castón “pursued an innocence claim which was denied repeatedly because it was false.” But Mendelson highlighted a judge’s finding that Castón also made “enormous strides” while incarcerated.
In his letter, Graves blamed the commission for inadequate sentencing outcomes in the District. In 2022, according to Graves, 57 percent of people sentenced on his office’s most commonly charged firearms offense — carrying a pistol without a license — were sentenced to probation. An additional 30 percent received relatively short jail terms.
“These outcomes are a feature, not a bug, of the District’s Guidelines,” Graves said in the letter.
At a Dec. 5 breakfast with the council, Graves expounded on his problems with the existing sentencing guidelines and called for a “wholesale” review of the manual. In that meeting, he specifically criticized a 2018 change by the commission, when members eased sentencing guidelines for people with prior felony convictions who are found guilty of illegal gun possession.
“The fact that this is so defense-friendly really isn’t surprising if you look at the composition on [the commission],” Graves said at the breakfast. “There are voting members on that commission who are explicitly associated with organizations that are in the decarceral movement. … If people are fine with that, that’s fine to have these guidelines. But if they want to change, then you have to look at who are the voting members on the commission?”
Mendelson said it is misleading for Graves to blame guidelines that have been around for two decades.
“Focusing on the sentencing commission is turning the spotlight somewhere else,” Mendelson said, pointing to Graves’s prosecution rate. The U.S. attorney’s office declined to prosecute 56 percent of cases in D.C. in fiscal year 2023, which ended Sept. 30. Graves has pointed to problems with the city’s crime lab, which went two years without certification in some departments, and court decisions that restrict police actions and make prosecutions in gun cases difficult.
The debate over Castón’s nomination comes as every corner of D.C.’s criminal justice system is under public scrutiny. In respond to rising crime, officials began turning away from progressive strategies enacted in recent years. Instead, Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D), new Police Chief Pamela A. Smith and some lawmakers have cited the need for greater accountability, advocating for tougher sentences for adults and juveniles who commit violent crimes.

Washington, D.C
DC teen charged with murder for allegedly hitting man with car before robbing him

WASHINGTON, D.C. (7News) — A D.C. teen has been charged with first-degree murder after using his car to ram into a man, rob him and attempt to access his bank accounts from an ATM, according to U.S. Attorney Jeanine Ferris Pirro.
Kyree Young, 17, followed the victim, Donnel Bracket Phillips, 55, from an ATM near the intersection of 12th Street and U Street NW on May 7 around 4:15 a.m.
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Young hit Phillips with his white Hyundai Santa Fe before robbing him, according to court documents. He then attempted to get access to Phillips’s financial accounts at the same ATM that Philips was using moments prior.
When Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) officers got to the scene, they found Phillips lying in the roadway. He was unconscious and not breathing.
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Phillips was rushed to the hospital but unfortunately died from his injuries.
Young’s vehicle was later found and detectives gathered enough evidence to identify him as the suspect. On Wednesday, Young appeared before Superior Court Magistrate Judge Robert J. Hildum, who found probable cause that Young committed first-degree murder while armed and ordered him to be held without bond as he waits for trial.
The case is being investigated by MPD and the Federal Bureau of Investigation Washington Field Division.
U.S. Attorney Pirro also said they are investigating potential accomplices to Young.
Washington, D.C
July 4th 2025 Fireworks, Events Around Washington, D.C.

WASHINGTON, DC — Independence Day falls on a Friday in 2025, kicking off a star-spangled three-day weekend packed with fireworks, festivals and other Fourth of July fun in and around the District of Columbia.
To help you fit it all in on your 4th of July calendar, Patch has put together a guide to what’s going on in Washington, D.C. and the surrounding areas.
July 4 Festivities For 2025
Many people will be heading to D.C. for the big 4th of July Celebration on the National Mall. The National Park Service has posted a schedule of events, maps and other information online to make sure you’re in the best spot to watch the 17.5-minute fireworks display when it starts at 9:09 p.m., weather-permitting.
Viewing from the National Mall
- Plan to arrive early, and to protect yourself from heat-related illness. See Directions and Plan Your Visit.
- Viewing areas on the National Mall near the Washington Monument and Reflecting Pool will be accessible only through secure access points.
- Consider wearing hearing protection. These fireworks are big and loud.
- Consider wearing eye protection to protect yourself from incidental falling debris (ash).
- Consider not bringing pets (some are scared of the loud booms).
- Immediately following the fireworks, areas along Independence Avenue between the Lincoln Memorial and World War II Memorial will be closed for safety checks related to the fireworks launch site. The road and sidewalks will re-open after cleanup crews have completed their inspection and removed any hazardous materials.
Fireworks may be cancelled due to inclement weather
The fireworks display may be delayed or cancelled if there is inclement weather, such as driving rain, high winds, lightning and/or low ceiling cloud cover in the area. Sign up for automated alerts by texting JULY4DC to 888777.
Other Viewing Areas
National Independence Day Parade
The parade kicks off at 11:45 a.m. at 7th Street and Constitution Avenue NW and proceeds west to 17th Street, wrapping up about 2 p.m.
Marching bands, fife and drum corps, floats, military units, giant balloons, equestrian, drill teams and more take part in the celebration of America’s birthday. Learn more here.
A Capitol Fourth Concert
This star-studded salute to Independence Day is broadcast live from 8 to 9:30 p.m. on the West Lawn of the United States Capitol and is free and open to the public. Gates open at 3 p.m. More information is at www.pbs.org/a-capitol-fourth.
Origins Of Independence Day Holiday
Independence Day commemorates the adoption of the Declaration of Independence by the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776. In that document, the 13 original colonies declared their independence from Great Britain.
During the pivotal summer of 1776, the pre-Revolutionary celebrations honoring King George III’s birthday were replaced with mock funerals as a symbolic break from the crown.
It was an exciting time in Philadelphia — the Continental Congress voted to break from the crown and, two days later on July 4, the Declaration of Independence was adopted by the original 13 colonies —New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland. Virginia, North Carolina, South Carolina and Georgia — to adopt the Declaration of Independence.
The first annual commemoration of the nation’s independence was in Philadelphia on July 4, 1777, while the Revolutionary War was ongoing. Fireworks have been part of Fourth of July festivities since the first celebration in Philadelphia.
Today, Americans celebrate with fireworks, parades, concerts, and family gatherings and barbecues. Celebrations, though, predate by centuries the designation of Independence Day as a federal holiday, which didn’t happen until 1941.
Washington, D.C
Investigators look for new leads in off-duty DC police officer’s 1995 murder

Almost 30 years after an off-duty D.C. police officer was found shot to death in her Silver Spring home, police are looking for new leads in the case. Police charged her boyfriend with murder, but dropped the charge two months later, and the homicide remains unsolved.
On Sept. 16, 1995, Kenneth Wonsom told police he went to the store just after 3 a.m. and returned to the apartment to find the front door open and 24-year-old Deena Campbell dead inside.
“He described it as being approximately 3 inches ajar when he got home,” Montgomery County police Det. Paula Hamill said. “He had said that he locked the bottom and top lock upon leaving at 3:20 a.m.”
When police arrived, they found the keys in the door.
Several witnesses told investigators they heard gunshots around the time Wonsom says he left the apartment, Hamill said.
“We had a specific witness that heard five gunshots, and Deena Campbell was in fact shot five times,” she said.
Campbell’s police-issued service weapon was missing and was never found.
Investigators also discovered a message Wonsom left on Campbell’s answering machine: “Hey, boo, I’m on my way home. I was just calling to see if you wanted something. I should be there — it’s 4:05 — I should be there about 15, 20 minutes. I’m stopping to get some Listerine and a couple of sodas. Love you. Bye bye.”
But in his interview police, Wonsom told investigators those where the items Campbell already asked him to go to the store for, Hamill said.
Investigators also learning Campbell told friends she was scared of Wonsom and wanted to move out of the apartment.
“One of her beat partners that she worked with in D.C. that, like, worked in an adjoining beat with her, she had spoken to him as recently as Thursday before she was killed — so, two nights before — and told him if I don’t come show up for work on Saturday, then you’ll know he killed me,” Hamill said.
The state’s attorney’s office will not say why the murder charge was dropped.
Juanita Eggleston, who was a police cadet with Campbell and served on the D.C. police force with her, said she can’t believe her friend has been gone almost 30 years.
“That’s a long time, a very long time,” she said. “I believe in this world there’s karma in the world. What you put out in the world you get back.”
News4 called and left messages for Wonsom but hasn’t heard back.
Hamill said she is still looking for help in the case.
“Or even moving forward from 29 years to now, anybody that has heard any information about Deena Campbell or what may have happened to her,” she said.
“I have peace but I will have better peace when we get to a resolution,” Eggleston said.
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