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Tag: fairfax county crime

  • ‘2026 difference maker’: How a drone is helping Fairfax Co. police respond to emergencies faster – WTOP News

    As part of the “Drone as First Responder” pilot program, the Fairfax County Police Department is launching drones from the Fair Oaks and Franconia districts.

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    Fairfax County’s newest first responders are drones

    A Fairfax County police drone operator demonstrates the capabilities of the department’s drones.(WTOP/Scott Gelman)

    Fairfax County police responded quickly when a recent 911 caller said they saw a man armed with a bow and arrow standing along a median near the Fair Oaks Mall.

    While a number of officers were dispatched to the scene, Police Chief Kevin Davis said the department’s drone arrived first. It got to the site in 57 seconds.

    Then, it started feeding back live video of a man who didn’t appear to have a bow and arrow, ”but a man in a mental health crisis armed with a stick. And he was pointing a stick, not a bow and arrow, at passing motorists.”

    Once officers realized that was the case, Davis said they were able to downgrade the priority response.

    “They can dial down the emotions and the adrenaline that pump through their veins any time a call like that goes out,” Davis said. “It mitigates a potential use-of-force scenario of a person in a mental health crisis, because the call is described as something different than it actually is. It’s that visibility and awareness that’s huge.”

    As part of the “Drone as First Responder” pilot program, the Northern Virginia department is launching drones from the Fair Oaks and Franconia districts. It started using this version of the technology in the fall.

    Within the first 100 missions, the drones recorded an average response time of 83 seconds. It was the first to arrive on a scene 71 times.

    “The drone is beating the cops and beating the firefighters and beating the medics to these outdoor calls for service,” Davis said.

    The drones respond to crimes in outdoor settings, but they also are used in medical emergencies, car crashes and cases of missing people.

    Davis said they received Federal Aviation Administration waivers that allow them to fly a drone beyond a “line of sight restriction.”

    Once the drone arrives at a location, a drone operator in the Real Time Crime Center takes over. It uses artificial intelligence to avoid buildings, trees or anything else that may be in its path, Davis said.

    It hovers over the scene and sends back live video for as long as needed.

    “Our police officers have greater awareness about what they’re about to arrive at and get into before they even get onto the scene,” Davis said. “That’s going to be the 2026 difference maker.”

    The drone is equipped with a parachute in the event that something goes wrong, Davis said, and it’s “no bigger or smaller than the average drone that your mind’s eye can picture.”

    “The more information we have before we get to any scene, fill in the blank, any scene, the likely for a better outcome between the police and the community members who we are poised to then interact with is going to be safer,” Davis said.

    Montgomery County police in Maryland are using a similar program.

    Scott Gelman

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  • Why crime in Fairfax Co. fell across several categories in 2025 – WTOP News

    Crime fell across several categories in Fairfax County last year, Police Chief Kevin Davis said, touting the agency’s efforts.

    Crime fell across several categories in Fairfax County last year, Police Chief Kevin Davis told WTOP, touting the agency’s use of emerging technology, recruitment, retention efforts and focus on road safety.

    In an interview with WTOP on Friday, Davis said homicides fell 15% in 2025, compared with 2024. There were 12 murders in the Northern Virginia suburb in 2025, and Davis said the department closed all its homicide cases with arrests.

    Similarly, nondeadly contact shootings fell 37% and robberies fell 20%.

    The positive crime trends come in the backdrop of a similar regional and national reduction in violent crime across the country, Davis said.

    But there’s a “bad guy community,” Davis said, of crime suspects who closely monitor the strategies that police departments use. As a result, he said, law enforcement has to evolve to stay ahead.

    “They know that there are cameras out there in public spaces that are more likely now than ever before to capture the comings and goings of the vehicle that they’re using to perpetrate their crimes,” Davis said. “We have to recognize that our crime-fighting strategies are paid attention to by every aspect of the community, to include people who commit crimes.”

    Stolen cars are down 19%, Davis said, crediting the department’s group of full-time, auto crime enforcement detectives who handle burglaries. Burglaries are down 28%, he said.

    “That’s something I hear about whenever I travel throughout Fairfax County. If your car is stolen or if your house is broken into, that invades your sense of privacy in a really, really profound way,” Davis said.

    Meanwhile, after watching shoplifting offenses increase for several years, Davis said shoplifting fell 13% in the county in 2025.

    He described the offenses as retail crime, “because it’s not little Johnny or little Jane taking a candy bar from the 7-Eleven. It’s not someone who is without food who’s stealing to feed himself or herself. These are retail crimes that are committed, increasingly in an organized way, not only in Fairfax County, but regionally and across our country.”

    In Tysons specifically, shoplifting fell 22%, which Davis attributed to a full-time urban team assigned to the community. The group is assigned to not only the mall, “but the entire footprint.”

    Fatal motor vehicle deaths were down 57% last year, Davis said, and while fatal pedestrian deaths rose seasonally in 2025, when it got darker earlier in the day, the category fell 20% overall.

    The department has a group of full-time detectives who respond to and exclusively handle deadly and nondeadly overdoses and opioid deaths fell 30%, Davis said.

    Arrests for driving while intoxicated rose about 7%, and Davis touted an increase in traffic enforcement, particularly a series of campaigns targeting speed, unsafe lane changes, tailgating and distracted driving.

    “We could not care less about any citation revenue that the state or the county generates from our enforcement efforts or from our automated enforcement efforts on school buses and other school zones,” Davis said. “We care about changing bad driving behaviors.”

    Because the agency has a 3% vacancy rate, its lowest in years, Davis said each of the eight district stations has neighborhood policing teams. They respond to hot spots and monitor crime trends in the areas they oversee.

    Hundreds of people and businesses have shared access to their cameras with police, Davis said, emphasizing his belief that a focus on traffic enforcement has a major impact on reducing murders, shootings, robberies and carjackings.

    “If folks drive with impunity and think that they’re never going to encounter a uniformed police officer in a marked car, they’re more likely to carry a firearm,” Davis said. “They’re more likely to get in a dispute with someone.“

    Business checks and regular communication with school resource officers are also helping drive crime down, Davis said.

    “Just because we and others in the region and across the country had a really successful, in terms of data and numbers, 2025, that doesn’t mean that 2026 is going to be an automatic,” Davis said.

    Scott Gelman

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  • DC police arrest Md. man for stealing from dozens of gyms in Fairfax Co. – WTOP News

    A Maryland man was arrested last week for stealing personal belongings from people’s lockers at private gyms around the D.C. area.

    After months of investigative work, a man wanted on nearly 140 warrants for stealing from gyms across the region has been arrested.(Credit Fairfax County Police)

    A Maryland man was arrested last week for stealing personal belongings from people’s lockers at private gyms around the D.C. area.

    Fairfax County police said in a news release Tuesday that after a nearly yearslong investigation, they arrested and charged 50-year-old Robert Brockington, of Maryland, on Oct. 23. He was wanted on 140 charges of theft, with 94 of them stemming from Fairfax County.

    Authorities said, since December of 2024, Brockington targeted gyms and health club facilities, breaking into locker rooms and stealing credit cards and personal belongings of people as they exercised.

    Police said he targeted Planet Fitness locations in Seven Corners, Springfield and West Springfield, as well as a Results Fitness in Hybla Valley and a Gold’s Gym in Annandale.

    Brockington is being held at the DC Central Detention Center without bond and authorities said he will be extradited to Virginia where he is facing 139 pending criminal warrants and related charges for the alleged incidents.

    Even as Brockington remains in custody, police say there are things that people can to do protect their personal belongings in a gym, including using a strong lock, leaving valuables at home or in your vehicle and protect your bank cards.

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    © 2025 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Ciara Wells

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  • Man shot through front door of Fairfax Co. day care, hitting two employees, police say – WTOP News

    Man shot through front door of Fairfax Co. day care, hitting two employees, police say – WTOP News

    Two women were hospitalized Wednesday afternoon after a shooting at a day care center in Springfield, Virginia, according to Fairfax County police.

    An Arlington man fired a pistol through the front door of a day care center in Springfield, Virginia, striking two employees and sending them to the hospital, according to Fairfax County police.

    The suspect, 41-year-old Julio Pascual Sejas, of Arlington County, who police said fled the scene and was on the run for several hours, was arrested later Wednesday evening.

    The shooting happened around 2 p.m. on Bauer Drive near Burling Wood Drive, at the West Springfield KinderCare. More than 70 children were inside when the shots were fired, according to police.

    Fairfax County Police Deputy Chief Brooke Wright said Sejas approached the front door of the day care in an attempt to speak with a woman who works there and with whom he had a romantic relationship. She didn’t let him in, police said, and he pulled out a gun and shot through the front door, striking her and another woman who worked there, Wright said.

    No children were injured and, after the shooting, they were moved to another facility and reunited with their parents.

    “It doesn’t appear that any of the kids have any indication that anything even happened here today. They were jovial,” Wright said.

    “We’re relieved that no children were harmed today, and we want parents to know that we’re going to be protecting children as best we can. We need everybody to do their part,” she added.

    The two women who were shot have “non-life threatening injuries,” according to the Fairfax County Police Department.

    Below is a map of where the shooting happened:

    WTOP’s Thomas Robertson contributed to this report.

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    © 2024 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Veronica Canales

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