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Fact check: Has the D.C. had any murders in the last 30 days
1. Summary of the results
Based on the available analyses, yes, D.C. has had murders in the last 30 days. The evidence shows that there have been at least two murders since President Trump's executive order taking control of the Metropolitan Police Department [1].
However, the timing is crucial: while there were murders in the broader timeframe, there were no murders reported since August 13 [1]. This created a 12-day streak without homicides that was subsequently broken by a deadly shooting in southeast Washington [2]. The analyses indicate that 99 homicides occurred by August 2025, compared to 112 at the same time in 2024, representing a decrease from the previous year [3].
2. Missing context/alternative viewpoints
The original question lacks important context about D.C.'s broader crime trends. The analyses reveal that homicides decreased by 32% from 2023 to 2024 and by 12% from 2024 to 2025 [4]. Additionally, D.C. has experienced multiple murder-free periods throughout the year, including stretches from May 4-11, April 11-17, and a two-week period from February 25 through March 12 [4].
The question also doesn't account for the political context surrounding Trump's federal takeover of D.C. law enforcement, which has become a focal point for measuring crime statistics [1]. This federal intervention creates a specific timeframe that officials and media are using to evaluate crime trends.
Missing from the analyses is granular day-by-day data that would provide a complete picture of the exact number of murders in the past 30 days, as the sources focus more on specific periods around the federal takeover rather than a comprehensive 30-day count.
3. Potential misinformation/bias in the original statement
The original question appears neutral and factual in nature, simply asking for recent murder statistics. However, the framing could potentially be used to support different political narratives depending on the answer.
Political figures and law enforcement officials would benefit from different interpretations of these statistics. Those supporting Trump's federal intervention could emphasize the 12-day murder-free streak and overall yearly decreases [2] [4], while critics might focus on the fact that murders did occur within the 30-day timeframe and that the streak was broken [2].
The analyses suggest that crime statistics are being closely monitored in the context of federal intervention, which creates an environment where data interpretation could be influenced by political motivations rather than objective crime analysis [1].