DC Council Reduces Criminal Penalties Amid Violent Crime Wave
Council votes to lighten punishment for gun crimes after homicides double in 10 years
Washington, D.C., police respond to a shooting / Getty Images Philip Caldwell • November 16, 2022 12:45 pm
The Washington, D.C., city council on Tuesday voted to dramatically reform the city’s criminal code, reducing penalties for offenses including illegal gun possession and carjacking, even as D.C. has seen a spike in homicides in recent years.
The legislation, which requires the approval of Mayor Muriel Bowser (D.), would eliminate mandatory minimum sentences for most crimes, the Washington Post reported, and lower the maximum sentences for crimes such as carjacking and robbery.
The reforms to the city’s criminal code come as homicides in D.C. spiked 14 percent in 2021 from 2020. The 226 killings in 2021 are more than double the 88 homicides the city saw in 2012.
Tuesday’s vote marks the second time this month that the council approved the legislation, which is required for bills in D.C. to advance. This week’s deliberation over the bill was contentious, as some council members challenged the bill’s provisions that would lower the maximum penalty for carrying a pistol without a license and possession of a gun as a felon to two years in prison.
Councilwoman Brooke Pinto (D.) proposed an amendment that would have increased maximum sentences for illegally carrying and possessing firearms, but it was rejected by a majority of the council. Public safety committee chairman Charles Allen (D.) said the amendment was not supported by data showing it would improve public safety, according to the Post‘s reporting.
“For supporters of this amendment, I hear you saying we need to raise penalties to meet this moment, to send a message. But I ask you to show your work,” Allen said. “At some point, this council needs to reckon with what it means to have one of the highest incarceration rates per capita in the free world and yet endure this kind of violence.”
Criminal justice reform advocates supported the legislation on the basis that it would reduce racial disparities in incarceration. Jinwoo Charles Park, head of a city commission to reform the criminal code, said he opposed the amendment to raise penalties for gun crimes because “increases in the average sentence for these offenses would have a disproportionate effect on African-American defendants,” the Post reported.
Allen has rebuffed characterizations of
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