DC mayor fires back at House Oversight Committee over 'politically motivated' crime statistics report
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser criticized an interim House Oversight Committee report on the city's crime statistics, saying the findings were driven by politics rather than a complete investigation.Fox News Digital...
By Fox News · Fox News
D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser criticized an interim House Oversight Committee report on the city's crime statistics, saying the findings were driven by politics rather than a complete investigation. Fox News Digital obtained a letter Bowser sent on Monday to House Oversight Committee Chair James Comer, R-Ky., and ranking member Rep. Robert Garcia, D-Calif. "Since the outset, my Administration has fully cooperated with the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform (Committee) investigation into allegations concerning publicly reported crime statistics by the District of Columbia's Metropolitan Police Department ," Bowser said in part. "That cooperation was intended to educate the Committee about the complex subject of crime reporting, address the public misrepresentations about crime in the nation's capital, and identify policies and processes that could be improved to ensure transparent, high-quality crime data. The Committee's interim report is a disappointing rejection of that good faith approach and instead reflects a rush to judgement in order to serve a politically motivated timeline and release a report whose outcome appears to have been determined before the investigation began." RANK-AND-FILE DC OFFICERS ACCUSE SUPERIORS OF DOWNGRADING CRIMES TO MASK REAL LEVELS: REPORT The committee’s 22-page report claims that outgoing Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) Chief Pamela Smith, who announced her resignation on Dec. 8, oversaw an unprecedented system of intervention in crime reporting . It alleges that Smith, who is expected to remain in the position through the end of the year, pressured commanders on numerous occasions, and at times instructed them to downgrade offenses and avoid classifications that would appear on the city's daily crime report. The findings, based on eight transcribed interviews with MPD district commanders, describe a toxic management environment in which accuracy was sacrificed for optics, and career officials faced public humiliati…