DC council chair says accusations of ‘cooking’ crime statistics is a lie


Summary

Cooking the books

The D.C. City Council chairman said the head of the police union is lying about senior officers purposefully changing felonies to lesser crimes to make the district appear safer.

Investigations

The DOJ, Congress and Metro Police are investigating whether crimes were under reported to keep statistics low.

$1.1 billion

D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser simultaneously called for the restoration of $1.1 billion to the city's budget to give cops a pay raise.


Full story

The chairman of the District of Columbia City Council is accusing the head of the local police union of lying about crime statistics in the district. D.C. Police Union Chairman Gregg Pemberton said lieutenants and captains are ordering officers who respond to felonies to write reports for lesser offenses, a tactic that’s being described as “cooking the books.”

When asked by House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, if Pemberton is lying, Council Chairman Phil Mendelson quickly and unequivocally said, “Yes.”

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Jordan followed up and cited testimony from a lawsuit in which senior officers were accused of altering crime statistics to make the city appear safer on paper. 

“Sounds like you guys are cooking the books there. According to, this is under oath, from the deposition from this case,” Jordan said.

Mendelson wouldn’t say more, citing ongoing investigations into the matter by the Department of Justice, House Oversight Committee and the Metropolitan Police Department.

In response to Mendelson’s accusation, Pemberton said, “I hope that Chairman Mendelson has time to correct or amend his testimony, before he himself is investigated for perjury and lying to Congress.”

Hearing and funding

The accusation was made during a House Oversight Committee hearing, which focused on crime in the district. Democrats and district leadership repeatedly called for the restoration of $1.1 billion that was stripped from their budget after Congress passed a spending bill that forced D.C. to keep its 2024 spending level for 2025. 

That additional $1.1 billion largely went to public safety and education.

“So lack of full autonomy also prevents us from using the money that we raised in taxes, like happened this year, taxes that we raised in the district cut from our approved budget, which forced us to cut services, including the pay raises that our police officers are due, being delayed until this October,” Mayor Muriel Bowser said.

The mayor aims to increase the Metropolitan Police Department’s staffing to 4,000 officers; they currently have 3,400. The council just approved a 13% pay raise for officers and improved retirement benefits as an incentive to stay with the department longer.

Bowser said that if they had the $1.1 billion back, they could hire 300 officers per year, increase recruitment bonuses and invest in patrol cars and training facilities.

The continuing resolution to keep the federal government funded for seven weeks beyond Sept. 30 includes a provision to restore district funding. It’s not yet clear if Congress will be able to pass the measure in time. They have 12 days.

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Why this story matters

The story highlights a dispute over the accuracy of crime statistics in the district as well as debates over local funding and the implications of congressional oversight on the district's autonomy and public safety policies.

Local autonomy and federal oversight

Ongoing federal involvement, including funding decisions and investigations, demonstrates the limited budgetary and policymaking power of D.C. compared to other U.S. cities.

Public safety funding

Debates over police staffing, pay raises, and resource allocation underscore broader concerns about how budget shortfalls and congressional actions affect the city's ability to address crime and retain officers.

SAN provides
Unbiased. Straight Facts.

Don’t just take our word for it.


Certified balanced reporting

According to media bias experts at AllSides

AllSides Certified Balanced May 2025

Transparent and credible

Awarded a perfect reliability rating from NewsGuard

100/100

Welcome back to trustworthy journalism.

Find out more

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