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The Justice Department has completed its investigation into whether the District of Columbia’s Metropolitan Police Department manipulated crime data to make crime rates appear lower, according to multiple law enforcement sources. Sources familiar with the matter said DOJ has notified MPD of the conclusion of the probe and is expected to release its findings as early as Monday, NBC Washington reported.
A draft version of the report obtained by News4 describes a pattern of repeated downgrading and misclassification of crimes, allegedly driven by pressure within the department to show declining crime rates.
MPD’s “official crime statistical reporting mechanism is likely unreliable and inaccurate due to misclassifications, errors, and or purposefully downgraded classifications and reclassifications,” the draft report states. “A significant number of MPD reports are misclassified.”
Investigators interviewed more than 50 witnesses and reviewed thousands of police reports as part of the probe, according to the draft.
Witnesses described an increase in pressure under Police Chief Pamela Smith, who announced this week that she will step down at the end of the month.
“While witnesses cite misclassifications and purposely downgraded classifications of criminal offenses at MPD for years prior, there appears to have been a significant increase in pressure to reduce crime during Pamela Smith’s tenure as Chief of Police that some describe as coercive,” the report states.
The draft findings fault a “coercive culture” during twice-weekly in-person crime briefings, where commanders were allegedly blamed and publicly humiliated for crime in their districts.
“The individuals presenting are denigrated and humiliated in front of their peers,” the report says. “They are held responsible for whatever recent crime has occurred in their respective districts.”
Justice Department accuses DC Police of manipulating crime stats to make city appear safer: Reports https://t.co/cBsAjetaA5
— John Solomon (@jsolomonReports) December 13, 2025
The draft report also raises concerns about the reliability of MPD’s Daily Crime Report.
Investigators reviewed 191 reports labeled as aggravated assaults and found roughly 33 percent were misclassified, according to the draft.
Sixty-eight percent of reports labeled “pending investigation” were also misclassified and included robberies and assaults, the report says.
Smith told News4 earlier this week that the allegations did not factor into her decision to step down.
The DOJ review is one of two investigations involving MPD crime statistics, alongside a separate probe by the House Oversight Committee.

