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Trump's Washington, D.C., takeover targets a host of groups, many of them vulnerable

A U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent talks with a Metropolitan Police Department officer while patrolling near the Washington Monument on the National Mall on August 11, 2025. President Trump announced a federal takeover of D.C. Metro police and mobilization of the National Guard, saying the moves are necessary to restoring order in the city.
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Getty Images North America
A U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) agent talks with a Metropolitan Police Department officer while patrolling near the Washington Monument on the National Mall on August 11, 2025. President Trump announced a federal takeover of D.C. Metro police and mobilization of the National Guard, saying the moves are necessary to restoring order in the city.

President Trump said Monday he'll use the National Guard and Metro police to target criminals in Washington, D.C., but criminals aren't his only targets. Trump also called for a purge of poor people and people without housing from the nation's capital. Much of his toughest rhetoric was aimed at young people.

Trump has frequently used harsh language to describe immigrants living in the U.S. without legal status. During a press conference at the White House on Monday, he used similar rhetoric to describe Americans he accused of destroying the nation's capital.

"Our capital city has been overtaken by violent gangs and bloodthirsty criminals, roving mobs of wild youth, drugged-out maniacs and homeless people," Trump said.

Violent crime is at a 30-year low, according to Justice Department data, but Trump says he wants those city residents dealt with harshly. Trump said Metro police will operate more aggressively under federal control for at least the next 30 days. Trump said cops will be allowed to do "whatever the hell they want."

Trump's primary targets are those he describes as criminals — in this case often teenagers, many of them Black. Washington has struggled at times with violence caused by young men who sometimes ride motorcycles and four-wheelers. Trump spoke about them at length Monday. The city's Metro police chief, Pamela Smith, was asked about this issue in a separate Monday press conference.

"We want young people to be safe in our city," she said. "We want them to be able to enjoy the activities of our city but we're not going to tolerate the kind of criminal activity that we've seen in the past."

Smith says before this week's federal takeover of Metro police, the city had juvenile curfews in effect in parts of the city that were working.

But some say displacement of vulnerable groups that Trump has lumped in with criminals — homeless people, the mentally ill and people experiencing addiction — isn't effective. Experts say if the president does as he's threatened, forcing unhoused people out of Washington away from their families and support networks and health care, it could be devastating. Many in these groups are severely ill.

Will, a man in his 60s, lives in one of Washington's homeless camps. He asked that NPR use only his first name because he fears authorities will punish him for sleeping on the street in Washington.

"Only thing we ask for is a fair job and fair housing. We can't get that," he says. "We stuck out here, we don't enjoy it. Where we supposed to go?"

That's a big question Trump hasn't yet answered. And he spoke Monday not just of purging the homeless from Washington, but of plans to clear out what he described as the city's slums.

Across Washington, there's a lot of skepticism that Trump's approach, using tough police tactics to solve complex social problems, will work.

Some in Washington, D.C., including this group of Howard University students, voiced concern that Trump's tougher policing tactics could harm the city's most vulnerable people. From Left to Right: Jehu King, Layla Colbert, Zarhianna Hill, Jida Isaac, Laila Zachary, Danil Brown.
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NPR
Some in Washington, D.C., including this group of Howard University students, voiced concern that Trump's tougher policing tactics could harm the city's most vulnerable people. From left: Jehu King, Layla Colbert, Zarhianna Hill, Jida Isaac, Laila Zachary and Danil Brown.

"Yes, every city has their crimes, their gangs, their homelessness, but I don't feel like the displacement of those things is going to cause the solution," says Jehu King, an 18-year-old Howard University student. "I think it's going to cause more damage."

Howard student Laila Zachary, 18, says Trump's effort is intentional.

"I feel like [Trump] is seeking out young people of color because he knows we're the movement, we want change, and we're demanding it. He wants to stop us."

Copyright 2025 NPR

Brian Mann is NPR's first national addiction correspondent. He also covers breaking news in the U.S. and around the world.