The saga of the 2002 Pershing Park mass arrests goes on! Former D.C. police chief Charles Ramsey had little to say about the incident when he took the stand last week. ("I didn't order anybody to destroy anything," testified Ramsey last Thursday. Oh, really?) But Ron Harris, an attorney for the police during an investigation by the D.C. Council into the arrests, did have something interesting to confess: according to Fox 5, Harris admitted on Friday that he deliberately lied to the Council about the inclusion of a document in the case's evidence -- a document that still hasn't been found. Lovely.
Pershing Park Lawyer Admits Lying To Council
Detective: Former D.C. Police Chief Ordered Pershing Park Arrests
If you haven't been following the step-by-step progress of the ongoing Pershing Park case (that's the 2002 mass arrests of some 400 protesters by D.C. police, still playing out in endless legal wrangling), you might have missed the big development that surfaced Wednesday. City Paper's Jason Cherkis has been all over this story for ... forever, and yesterday he reported that a new affidavit from veteran D.C. Police Det. Paul Hustler points the finger directly at former D.C. Police Chief Charles Ramsey as having ordered the arrests himself. This is a big deal, because Ramsey has consistently maintained in hearings and depositions related to this case that he did not order the arrests. This is the quote from Hustler's affidavit:
"As I walked closer, about five or six feet away from them, I heard Chief Ramsey say, 'We're going to lock them up and teach them a lesson.'"The Post and the Examiner also ran stories on this today, so see them for more. It's clear that Hustler's testimony could raise serious questions about whether Ramsey committed perjury.
Former D.C. Police Chief Fares Well in First Year
Charles Ramsey can't be too jealous of his former protégé and now D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier. After all, he's got good numbers; she doesn't. In his first year as Philadelphia's Police Commissioner, the District's former top cop saw a 15 percent decline in homicides, handing Mayor Michael Nutter a substantial victory in his pledge to reduce citywide crime. Lanier, on the other hand, had to deal with a second straight year of increases in the District's homicide tally, the first back-to-back jump since 1990-91. Lanier and Ramsey did rely on similarly controversial police tactics to clamp down on crime though, with Lanier resorting to police checkpoints outside of Trindad and Ramsey allowing officers to more aggressively stop, question and frisk Philadelphia residents.
Go Home Already: Easy Does It
>> Oh noes! The Ron Paul blimp launch was delayed, and rescheduled for its D.C. appearance on Wednesday at 3 p.m. [via Wonkette] >> D.C.'s Beacon House Falcons of Edgewood Terrace won Pop Warner Football’s Pee Wee Division I Super Bowl championship on Saturday. [Notions Capital] >> Former D.C. Police Chief Charles Ramsey no longer thinks handgun bans are such a good idea now that he works for a city that doesn't have one....
Former Police Chief Ramsey Heads to Philadelphia
Former D.C. Police Chief Charles Ramsey has been named police commissioner of Philadelphia by Mayor-elect Michael Nutter, reports the Associated Press. Ramsey came to D.C. in 1998 after serving for 31 years in his hometown of Chicago, and became Washington's longest-serving police chief in more than three decades, serving as top cop in the District until the end of 2006, when he was replaced by incoming Mayor Adrian Fenty. Since we've had a little bit...
Morning Roundup: Sad and Sadder Edition
Good morning, Washington. Have you recovered from yesterday's local sports emotional rollercoaster yet? The Nationals bid farewell to RFK, and managed to close out their time there with a 5-3 victory over the Phillies. The Redskins, on the other hand, well ... we might still not be ready to talk about that last drive. Yet despite the despondent football fans across the region this morning, we get the sense that no one is sadder than...
Morning Roundup: Surprise Surplus Edition
Good morning, Washington. Yesterday we started the Morning Roundup by noting the early stages of what seems likely to be the end of Sen. Larry Craig's political career. Today we have cheerier news: the resumption of another senator's work. Sen. Tim Johnson is back on the job after suffering a brain hemorrhage eight months ago. D.C. Has A Budget Surplus: NBC4 has the goods. Apparently the city collected about $100 million more in tax...
Fenty, Lanier Unveil New Crime Strategy
Summer is fast approaching, and that means public pools, barbeques and the inevitable jump in crime. But unlike in years past, city officials are handling this one differently. In an announcement earlier today, Mayor Adrian Fenty and Police Chief Cathy Lanier announced that all 3,300 of the department's officers would work this weekend, part of a larger plan called the All Hands on Deck Summer Crime Initiative aimed at more effectively deploying resources to prevent...
Go Home Already: Not You, Federal Employees
>> Yeah, you. You need to stay late tonight to make up for the crazy amount of time you're about to have off. That's right, those of us who do not work for the Federal Government are currently glaring up a storm at those of you who do, because the word from on high is now official: President Bush has declared January 2 as the official day of mourning for President Ford, which means Federal...
D.C. Now Only Capital, not Murder Capital
With 2006 fast coming to a close, the District on Friday reported what is surely cause for celebration -- the city's homocide tally, once one of the highest in the nation, is down, and dramatically so. According to current statistics, the District has suffered 156 homicides this year, 18.3 percent less than the same time in 2005 and 35 short of last year's total of 191. Short of a citywide killing spree in the next...
Lanier's History not all Peaches and Cream
When Mayor-elect Adrian Fenty announced last week that he'd chosen Cathy Lanier, a 16-year veteran of the Metropolitan Police Department, to replace Charles Ramsey atop the police force, local media didn't do much more than throw together a few details on her history and her ideas for fighting crime in the District. The City Paper, though, started digging. The paper trail they uncovered on Lanier makes for relatively interesting reading by City Paper standards, though...
Morning Roundup: Babies on Beltways Edition
Morning, fair DCist readers. How was your weekend? Did you do any of the numerous activities in the area, like the homeless walkathon, or celebrating an elephant's fifth birthday? Did you go on a fruitless hunt for the elusive Wii? Or perhaps you got married in a Roman castle? You could have signed with the Cubs for $136 million! Whatever you did, we hope it was excellent. The start of this week seems to...
Morning Roundup: Making Up For Macaca Edition
Good morning, D.C. How're those new Metro express lanes treating you? We know it's only five stations for now, but we're pretty excited by the prospect of a nearly-50% speed-up through the turnstiles during rush hour. There's nothing more infuriating than finding yourself stuck behind a perplexed tourist who's fiddling with his farecard like a newly-tool-using ape at the beginning of 2001 — unless you count the encounter you just had with him on the...
Morning Roundup: Make It Out To "Cash" Edition
You know, we have a lot of fun here at DCist, but we like to think that occasionally we serve to educate as well. It's a daunting task — there's a lot of material relevant to D.C. residents that we could cover, from how to get your car inspected to who's got the best burger to which bars have the heaviest intern infestations. But of all the lessons we could impart, perhaps the most important...
Ramsey Starts Searching Craigslist for Jobs
D.C. Police Chief Charles Ramsey hasn't had to worry about job security for eight years. But as NBC 4 reports today, a new job is something he might soon have to look for.
District Responds to Terror Plot
As more and more details leak out concerning an ambitious terrorist plot to blow up U.S.-bound planes leaving London, District Police Chief Charles Ramsey isn't taking any chances. Yesterday Ramsey announced a series of measures police would enact in response to the threat, among them the following: Activated its Joint Operations Command Center, including the network of 19 Closed Circuit Television (CCTV) cameras in the downtown area. Notified MPDC personnel of the situation and encouraged...
Morning Roundup: Code Red Edition
Travel Might Suck Today: A word to the wise -- Amtrak and Greyhound might seem like mighty good options in the coming days. As you've no doubt heard, British officials report that they have broken up a plot to blow up airplanes flying from London to the U.S., sending both countries into a security frenzy, writes NBC 4. Things are so bad that passengers are now forbidden from carrying any liquids or gels onto airplanes, and security lines are expected to be much longer and scrutiny much more intense.
Georgetown Requests Cameras -- Many of Them
Three weeks ago the D.C. Council passed emergency legislation to deal with a spike in violent crime. Among the provisions endorsed by the council was the installation of 23 surveillance cameras throughout the District, at a cost of $2.3 million. But where would the cameras go? Police Chief Charles Ramsey indicated that he would allow Advisory Neighborhood Commissions (ANCs) -- local neighborhood representatives -- to propose sites which the police would then review.
Opinionist: Safety in Numbers? Nope.
I was surprised to see a man as liberal as Matt Yglesias argue that expanding the size of the Metropolitan Police Department from its current 3,800 officers to the proposed 5,100 would effectively help decrease crime in the District. I suppose I rarely expect liberals to be on the side of such dramatic increases in police power, given that militarizing a city or country doesn't often track well with pacifying it. Last week Matt claimed...
District Police Storm Senate
WASHINGTON, D.C. -- As part of D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams' on-going crackdown on crime in the nation's capital, District police officers burst into various Senate Office Buildings this morning, sources tell DCist. The officers, clad in SWAT uniforms and roughly pushing Senate staffers to the ground, raided a number of sundry stores in the Senate complex and confiscated multiple cartons of cigarettes.
Racism or Reality?
The recent increase in violent crime in the District has once again exposed what may be the District's most obvious Achilles Heel -- the continuing racial insecurities and tensions that exist between affluent newcomers (who tend to be white) and a dwindling yet historic African American community. Two murders in the last week -- Andrew Senitt, white, young, in Georgetown; Chris Crowder, black, older, around Mount Vernon -- have brutally exposed the city's racial anxieties,...
Will Less Money Equal a Safer District?
Pretty much everyone in New York and Washington were in a tizzy last week over the announcement that both cities would be receiving less federal counter-terrorism dollars than last year. Responding to news that the District's allocation would drop from $77 million to $46 million, police chief Charles Ramsey angrily stated, "It doesn't take a brain surgeon to figure out these are two cities still at risk." D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams was similarly unhappy, stating...
Odds & Ends: Murder, Money, and Marion
DCist was slowly cleaning out the closets, emptying the trash, and going through the file cabinets, and out came these odds and ends of District news for the day.
Stemming the Tide of Murders
With 24 days left in 2005, the year's homicide rate is in a dead heat with last year's. As of yesterday, the District's murder tally stood at 185 — the same number for the same day last year, and 13 short of hitting 2004's 198 mark.
Morning Roundup: Questioning Cops Edition
Is there anything that particularly frustrates you about the District's police force? If so, today WTOP is giving you the chance to throw a hardball at D.C. police chief Charles Ramsey, who will be fielding questions and complaints online and over the phone starting at 10 a.m. DCist only wishes the city's police force were wracked with corruption and instances of police brutality, because in all honesty, clean cops don't exactly make for gripping headlines. "Ramsey a Nice, Honest Guy!" wouldn't really have newspapers flying off the racks.
Morning Roundup: The Murder Tally Edition
It wasn't long ago that D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams and police chief Charles Ramsey were celebrating a murder rate that looked to be falling relative to years past. Oh, how they must be pining for those optimistic days now. Yesterday marked the unceremonious day during which the District's murder rate came to match that of the same time last year -- 156 dead. And it came after a spate of killings that left four dead...
Morning Roundup: Return of the Caps Edition
In the Washington Capitals first game in 550 days, the city's hockey team defeated the Columbus Blue Jackets before a near capacity crowd long thirsting for the team's return. DCist can't help but be excited for this turn of events -- a full season gone, we finally have one more thing to carry our attention through the soon-to-come winter months. Mayor Offers Barry Support: Upon learning that former mayor and current Ward 8 Council-member Marion...
Morning Roundup: Oh Henry! Edition
Yesterday DCist broke the news that Rep. Henry Bonilla, a Texas Republican, was looking to rename 16th Street NW after Ronald Reagan -- adding one more dedication for the nation's 40th president to the 67 that already exist in 24 states. Word spread fast -- before the end of the day, Rep. Tom Davis III (R-Va.), whose committee would review the legislative proposal, encouraged Bonilla to "name anything else he has to look at his...
Morning Roundup: The Morning After Edition
Last night DCist and about 200 people gathered at the Black Cat for Unbuckled, which featured local musicians Cartel (at left in a photo from DCJohn) and Bicycle Thieves -- proof positive that as old and stuffy as DCist writers can be, we can still throw a mean party. A full review will be up later today, with pictures to boot. Until then, we can all revel in the fact that this long weekend will...
Morning Roundup: Zoo Under Fire Edition
Good morning Washington. Today will be a hot and sticky one: mostly cloudy, with showers and thunderstorms likely all day, and temps in the 80s. Capital Weather says we should expect to "stay in the soup for the next couple of days." Patrick from DCBlogs posted this photo to DCist photos.

