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Tag: Jeanine Pirro

  • Jeanine Pirro’s comments on Washington gun laws, explained

    U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro caused a stir among Second Amendment supporters when she talked about a gun crackdown during a Fox News appearance. 

    Referring to the city’s recent decline in homicides, Pirro said: 

    “You bring a gun into the district, you mark my words, you’re going to jail. I don’t care if you have a license in another district and I don’t care if you’re a law-abiding gun owner somewhere else. You bring a gun into this district, count on going to jail and hope you get the gun back.”

    U.S. Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., said Feb. 2 that he has a license to carry a firearm in Florida and Washington, D.C., and brings “a gun into the district every week.” The National Association for Gun Rights criticized Pirro for “threatening to arrest people for carrying in DC, even if they are law-abiding and licensed.”  

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wrote Feb. 3, “Second Amendment rights are not extinguished just because an American visits DC.” 

    Pirro sought to clarify her position in follow-up social media posts Feb. 3, describing herself as a “proud supporter of the Second Amendment.” Washington, D.C., law requires handguns carried into the city be licensed with district police, she said.

    “We are focused on individuals who are unlawfully carrying guns and will continue building on that momentum to keep our communities safe,” Pirro said

    Pirro’s Feb. 2 comments oversimplified the district’s gun laws. People can legally possess firearms by registering their weapons in the district, and obtaining a Washington, D.C., concealed carry permit would allow them to legally carry it outside their homes and places of business. The district does not recognize other states’ firearm registrations, but people can lawfully transport firearms through the district if they follow certain rules.

    What are Washington, D.C.’s firearm registration requirements? 

    Washington, D.C., has historically had strict gun regulations. The district had essentially banned handguns for about 30 years until 2008, when a Supreme Court decision overturned the rule. 

    Registering firearms with the Metropolitan Police Department is required to legally possess a gun in the district, which allows most people to register rifles, shotguns, revolvers and handguns.

    Firearm registration is required for most gun owners, including district residents, business owners and both residents and nonresidents with concealed carry licenses. 

    The Metropolitan Police Department says people are eligible to register firearms if they meet certain requirements, including: 

    • Being 21 or older (or 18 or older with a notarized statement from a guardian);

    • Completing the department’s free firearms training and safety class; 

    • Having no convictions for certain weapons offenses;

    • Having no felony convictions;

    • And having no indictments for weapons offenses or violent crimes.

    Government-issued service weapons do not have to be registered. Some people, including qualified current and retired law enforcement officers and on-duty active military members, are not required to register their firearms.

    Firearm registration allows a person “to possess, but not carry, the gun,” said Andrew Willinger, a Georgia State University law professor and gun regulation expert. 

    Some weapons are ineligible to be registered, including: sawed-off shotguns, machine guns, short-barreled rifles, .50 caliber BMG rifles and assault weapons. 

    What are the district’s open carry and concealed carry laws? 

    Openly carrying firearms is generally prohibited; people with valid firearm registrations can carry their firearms in their homes or places of business. They also can use their firearms for lawful recreational purposes — such as at firearms training, safety classes or at a gun range — and transport them within legal limits

    People age 21 and older who are eligible to register firearms and meet additional requirements can get a Washington D.C. concealed carry license if they complete required training

    Neither residents nor nonresidents are allowed to carry concealed guns in the district without this license. 

    There are some exceptions, including for  qualified current and retired law enforcement officers.

    Licensees cannot carry firearms in schools, hospitals, polling places, public transportation, government buildings and other specific locations.

    In August 2025, Pirro’s office announced it would stop pursuing felony charges for carrying rifles or shotguns.

    Can nonresidents get a concealed carry license in Washington, D.C.?

    Yes, nonresidents can obtain concealed carry licenses — and they need licenses to legally carry their firearms. 

    “If a nonresident brings a gun into D.C. and does not have a D.C. permit, that is unlawful regardless of whether the gunowner is licensed in his or her state of residence or law-abiding,” Willinger said in an email. 

    Can nonresidents bring their firearms in or through the district?

    Yes, under certain conditions.

    Under federal law, it is generally legal for people to transport guns from one state where they can be lawfully possessed to another state where they can be lawfully possessed. People do not have to comply with gun laws in each state they pass through, as long as the firearm is not loaded or readily accessible, Willinger said. 

    In the district, nonresidents without a Washington, D.C., concealed carry license can bring firearms in vehicles as long as they are unloaded and as long as the firearms and ammunition are not readily accessible. If transporting firearms in ways other than in vehicles, they must be unloaded and stored in locked containers. 

    If a nonresident travels through the district with a firearm that isn’t registered in Washington, D.C., they should go straight to and from their destination.

    Nonresidents traveling to or from a lawful recreational firearm-related activity don’t need to register their firearm, so long as they can present proof that they legally possess their firearm in their home state and that they are on the way to or from that activity.

    RELATED: Trump said Washington, DC, ‘always’ has ‘a murder a week.’ That’s wrong

    RELATED: How does Washington, D.C.’s homicide rate compare with other countries? 

    RELATED: Crime is underreported, but not just in Washington, D.C., where Trump claims data is inaccurate ​

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  • Former congressional staffer from Maryland charged with stealing 240 government cellphones – WTOP News

    A former congressional staffer from Glen Burnie, Maryland, is accused of stealing 240 government cellphones from the U.S. House of Representatives.

    A former congressional staffer from Glen Burnie, Maryland, is accused of stealing 240 government cellphones from the U.S. House of Representatives.

    Christopher Southerland, 43, was arrested earlier this month and charged with stealing cellphones worth more than $150,000, according to a news release from U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s office.

    Southerland was a system administrator for the House Committee on Transportation and Infrastructure from April 2020 until July 2023 and had the power to order the devices for staff members of the committee.

    According to prosecutors, Southerland used his government position to order the devices and have them shipped to his Maryland home. He allegedly sold more than 200 of those phones to a local pawn shop.

    At the time of the alleged thefts, there were only 80 members who worked on the committee.

    Southerland told a worker at the pawn shop to sell the phones in parts to get around the government software that remotely detects its phones, prosecutors said.

    Authorities were made aware of his scheme after one of the stolen phones was purchased off eBay. When the person who bought the phone turned it on, prosecutors said it showed the phone number of the House of Representatives Technology Service Desk.

    The person who bought the device called the number, and other House employees then learned that phones bought by Southerland were unaccounted for, prosecutors said.

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    © 2026 WTOP. All Rights Reserved. This website is not intended for users located within the European Economic Area.

    Tadiwos Abedje

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  • Alleged National Guard shooter now faces murder charge, U.S. Attorney says

    Investigators are still searching for a motive after two National Guard members were shot near the White House on Wednesday. One died Thursday, while the other remains in critical condition. The alleged gunman now faces a first-degree murder charge, according to U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro.

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  • National Guard ambush shooting suspect facing murder charge after victim dies

    Rahmanullah Lakanwal, the Afghan national suspected of shooting two National Guard members in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, will face a murder charge after Army Spc. Sarah Beckstrom died, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said. CBS News’ Nicole Sganga and Weijia Jiang report.

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  • Jury selection begins for DC man charged with throwing sandwich at federal agent – WTOP News

    Jury selection begins Monday in the federal trial of a D.C. man charged with throwing a Subway sandwich at a federal agent in August, during the early days of the law enforcement surge.

    Jury selection is scheduled to begin Monday in the federal trial of a D.C. man charged with throwing a Subway sandwich at a federal agent in August during the early days of the law enforcement surge in the District.

    Sean Dunn, a former paralegal for the Department of Justice, was initially charged with felony assault, but a federal grand jury declined to indict on the felony count, prompting U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro to file a misdemeanor assault charge.

    In the days leading up to trial, prosecutors and the defense continue to disagree on proposed jury instructions — specifically, over what is required to prove misdemeanor assault, as well as the legal definition of assault under the statute.

    Generally speaking, in a federal misdemeanor assault case, physical contact isn’t required.

    “The defendant forcefully threw a sandwich at a Customs and Border Patrol (CBP) agent while he was engaged in his official duties,” wrote prosecutors from Pirro’s office, in a request to briefly delay trial to hammer out jury instructions. The judge rejected the motion, saying the disputed issues of law will be ironed out before jury selection begins.

    However, two issues before U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols, an appointee of President Donald Trump in 2019, could be ruled upon once trial is underway.

    Dunn’s attorney filed a motion last month seeking to have the case dismissed, claiming he’s being “vindictively” and “selectively” prosecuted.

    In the days after his arrest, Dunn was fired from his job at the Justice Department. U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi called him part of the “Deep State” in a post on X. Not long after, Pirro posted a video with what Dunn’s legal team calls “crude taunts” — including the line, “Stick your Subway sandwich somewhere else.”

    Dunn’s lawyers said he offered to turn himself in after prosecutors issued a warrant — but instead, a heavily armed SWAT team stormed his apartment. The White House later posted a dramatic, edited video of the arrest, which was complete with blaring sirens and a suspenseful soundtrack.

    Prosecutors cite risk of jury nullification

    Another still-to-be-ruled-upon motion was filed by prosecutors, seeking to lower the risk of jury nullification, in which a jury acquits a defendant, in disregard of the judge’s instructions and contrary to the jury’s finding of fact.

    “The foreseeable evidentiary issues involve inflammatory evidence or argument that could invite jury nullification,” D.C. prosecutors wrote, in a pretrial argument.

    The motion asks the judge to preclude defense counsel from asking questions or making arguments regarding several topics, about potential penalties for a conviction.

    Prosecutors don’t want the defense to mention to jurors that a federal grand jury determined there was not probable cause to indict Dunn on the original felony count.

    “The decision to charge the Defendants, the existence of the prior criminal complaint, the Defendant’s subsequent arrest, and any reason for proceeding in this matter by way of a criminal information (rather than indictment) is not relevant in the charged offense. This includes whether the case was presented to a grand jury,” according to prosecutors.

    Unlike an indictment, prosecutors can file a “criminal information” without approval from a grand jury.

    In addition, prosecutors want to preclude the defense from admitting evidence or making arguments about policy or political concerning the Trump administration’s “effort to prevent crime and preserve order through the Make the District of Columbia Safe and Beautiful Initiative,” or Dunn’s policy or political viewpoints.

    “It is simply not relevant to the jury’s determination,” according to prosecutors.

    WTOP’s Alan Etter contributed to this report. 

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

    Neal Augenstein

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  • DC police release photos of third suspect in deadly June shooting of congressional intern – WTOP News

    Authorities have released images of the third and final suspect in the deadly June shooting of a congressional intern in Northwest D.C.

    Authorities have released images of the third and final suspect in the deadly June shooting of a congressional intern in Northwest D.C.

    A suspect in the deadly shooting of a congressional intern in Northwest D.C. in June. (Courtesy D.C. police)

    D.C. police are searching for 18-year-old Naqwan Antonio Lucas. He is wanted on a charge of premeditated first-degree murder while armed, a news release said.

    On June 30, Eric Tarpinian-Jachym, 21, was shot near the Mount Vernon Square Metro station, when a group got out of a vehicle and fired upon another group of people at 7th and M streets. Tarpinian-Jachym was not among the intended targets of the shooting.

    Tarpinian-Jachym, a college student from Granby, Massachusetts, was a congressional intern for Kansas Rep. Ron Estes. He died of his injuries in the hospital on July 1.

    A woman and a 16-year-old boy were also shot.

    Earlier this month, U.S. Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro announced the arrests of two teens in the shooting. The other suspects, Jalen Lucas and Kelvin Thomas Jr., both 17, have been charged as adults with first-degree murder.

    A $50,000 reward from D.C. police, the FBI and the U.S. Marshals is being offered for any information that leads to an arrest and conviction those involved in the deadly shooting. Anyone with information should call D.C. police at 202-727-9099.

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

    Jeffery Leon

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  • ‘It’s Zeke. I’ve been shot’: DC firefighter recounts harrowing struggle with armed robber – WTOP News

    An off-duty D.C. firefighter, who was shot and seriously wounded Saturday night during an armed robbery on Capitol Hill, tells WTOP that his instinct was to “fight back.”

    DC firefighter Gary ‘Zeek’ Dziekan spoke to WTOP’s Nick Iannelli about his experience of being shot in an attempted robbery.

    The exterior of D.C.’s Engine 18 located on Capitol Hill.(DC Fire and EMS Department)

    An off-duty D.C. firefighter, who was shot and seriously wounded Saturday night during an armed robbery on Capitol Hill, tells WTOP that his instinct was to “fight back.”

    Gary “Zeek” Dziekan was walking home from a party at around 10:30 p.m. Saturday near the 200 block of 8th Street in Northeast, when a teen wearing a surgical mask approached him with a gun.

    “I kind of got that sixth sense that something bad was about to happen,” Dziekan said in an interview with WTOP anchor Nick Iannelli. The teen demanded Dziekan’s cellphone and told the firefighter to give him a password to an app.

    When Dziekan said he didn’t know the password, the teen put the gun to Dziekan’s chest, and, in a split-second decision, the firefighter fought back. He grabbed “the barrel of the gun” and swung the teen away, who pulled the trigger.

    A bullet landed in Dziekan’s shoulder after striking the teen’s fingers and the teen dropped everything, including the gun, and ran.

    “I noticed how much I was bleeding,” the blood was pouring out “pretty good,” Dziekan said. He managed to call 911, but couldn’t get through to an operator for three minutes.

    At that point, the robber ran back to the scene and Dziekan thought, “He’s coming back to finish me off and kill me.”

    While lying on the ground, Dziekan grabbed the gun and fired off shots in the teen’s direction, scaring him off, not knowing if he hit him or not.

    “It’s either fight or get shot, and I chose to fight,” he said. “I still got shot, but it wasn’t a fatal shot in the chest, for sure.”

    Dziekan said during the struggle, he had forced the teen to shoot away from his heart.

    Then, “my medical training kicks in,” and Dziekan took off his shirt and used it to put pressure on the wound.

    A neighbor came over and offered help and Dziekan had him call his firehouse. “It’s Zeek. I’ve been shot. I need help,” he told his fellow firefighters.

    “I kind of was in a shock at that point,” he said.

    His colleagues from Engine 18, just a few blocks away, rushed to him and saved his life.

    Meanwhile, D.C. police arrested the 17-year-old suspected shooter nearby and charged him with assault with intent to rob. The teen also was injured, police said.

    U.S. Attorney for D.C. Jeanine Pirro announced upgraded charges against Marcellus Dyson Jr., 17, of Suitland, Maryland, on Monday.

    Dyson is facing charges of armed robbery, possession of a firearm during a crime of violence and aggravated assault while armed. He’s being charged as an adult under Title 16.

    Dziekan, a father of two, credits his clear-headed thinking to his training as a firefighter, “because we have to think on the fly in high-pressure situations regularly.”

    Even though experts say if someone approaches with a gun, a potential victim should give them whatever they want, Dziekan said, “the best decision I made in that whole thing was to grab the gun. Because if not, we wouldn’t be having this conversation.”

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

    Nick Iannelli

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  • Man charged with shining laser pointer at Marine One with Trump aboard

    A man accused of shining a laser pointer at presidential helicopter Marine One with President Trump aboard was arrested on federal charges Monday.

    Jacob Samuel Winkler, 33, of Washington, D.C., is charged with aiming the beam of a laser pointer at an aircraft, a felony punishable by a maximum prison sentence of five years. Online court records don’t list an attorney representing him.

    Marine One was airborne on Saturday after departing the White House when a U.S. Secret Service patrol officer spotted Winkler walking on a sidewalk, shirtless and loudly talking to himself, the officer wrote in an affidavit. The officer said he shone a flashlight at Winkler, who allegedly retaliated by flashing a red laser beam at the officer’s face.

    As Marine One flew over their heads, Winkler looked up and shined the laser pointer at the helicopter, according to the officer. 

    “This placed Marine One at risk of an airborne collision,” the Secret Service officer wrote.

    After the officer handcuffed him, Winkler repeatedly said phrases like “I should apologize to Donald Trump,” the affidavit alleges.

    Winkler allegedly told investigators that he points the laser “at all kinds of things, such as stop signs,” and didn’t know he couldn’t point it at Marine One, the affidavit says. Investigators also found a small knife in his possession, according to the officer.

    “This behavior endangers Marine One and everyone on board,” U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, the top prosecutor in D.C., said in a statement to The Associated Press. “If you engage in this act, you will be identified and prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law.”

    The court filing doesn’t say if anybody aboard the helicopter noticed the laser. But the officer said Winkler’s conduct could have temporarily blinded or disoriented a pilot, placing Marine One at risk of an airborne collision with other helicopters in the area.

    The Federal Aviation Administration says lasers pose a “serious safety threat” to aircraft because they can incapacitate pilots. The agency has recorded 5,913 laser incidents so far this year — or about 28 per day — and 12,840 last year.

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  • House to debate, vote on whether to charge juveniles as adults in DC – WTOP News

    Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., said she will speak Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday against four House bills that aim to change how crime is prosecuted in the nation’s capital.

    Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton, D-D.C., said she will speak Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday against four House bills that aim to change how crime is prosecuted in the nation’s capital.

    The House of Representatives will debate and vote Tuesday on a bill that would allow 14 year-olds to be charged as adults in D.C. Another bill would repeal that discretion that judges have in imposing sentences for people under the age of 24.

    “These anti-D.C. home rule bills were introduced by members of Congress from Florida, Texas, and Louisiana,” said Norton in a news release. “These members do not represent D.C., are not accountable to its residents, and do not understand how the District operates. They have no business writing our laws.”

    Currently, defendants between the ages of 14 and 17 are prosecuted by D.C.’s elected attorney general.

    The Trump administration and the District’s U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro have said defendants under the age of 18 should be prosecuted in criminal court.

    “The D.C. Council has coddled young criminals for years,” Pirro said on Sept. 6. “They reject mandatory minimums that the law requires, they don’t force judges to follow the law. They have something called youth rehabilitation and incarceration reduction, as well as record sealing.”

    The bill to lower the age at which juveniles can be prosecuted as adults was introduced by Rep. Brandon Gill, R-Texas.

    The other bill to be debated and voted upon Tuesday was brought by Florida Republican Rep. Byron Donald. It would amend D.C.’s Youth Rehabilitation Amendment Act, changing the age at which a court is allowed discretion to impose alternative sentences, other than for certain offenses, and to seal a defendant’s records, from 24 to 18.

    On Wednesday afternoon, the House will debate and vote upon a bill from Texas Republican Rep. Pete Sessions, which would limit the role D.C. has in the selection of its local judges. And, a bill introduced by Rep. Clay Higgins, R-La., would weaken the District’s limitations on police pursuits.

    “The more than 700,000 people who call D.C. home are fully capable of governing themselves, just as residents of Florida, Texas, and Louisiana do. I will continue to defend that right — tomorrow, Wednesday, and always,” said Norton, in Monday’s release.

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

    Neal Augenstein

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  • Pirro: ‘Full court press’ as understaffed DC attorney’s office braces to prosecute more cases – WTOP News

    Listen as U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro talks about President Donald Trump’s law enforcement surge and crime in D.C. with WTOP’s Michelle Basch and Mark Lewis.

    As President Donald Trump’s federal law enforcement surge in D.C. continues, new numbers show more than 1,000 arrests have been made in the first two weeks.

    More than 300 people have been arrested on immigration-related charges.

    U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, who is D.C.’s top prosecutor, is the person responsible for prosecuting most criminal cases in the District. She joined WTOP’s Michelle Basch and Mark Lewis on Tuesday morning.

    You can listen below.

    U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro talks about President Donald Trump’s law enforcement surge and crime in D.C. with WTOP’s Michelle Basch and Mark Lewis. (8/26/25)

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

    Matt Small

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  • Vance, Hegseth greet troops in Washington, face jeers from protesters

    White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller called DC protesters who heckled the pair “stupid white hippies.”

    Top Trump administration officials on Wednesday thanked troops deployed in the nation’s capital and blasted demonstrators opposed to the aggressive anti-crime efforts as “stupid white hippies.”

    At Union Station, Washington’s central train hub, Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, accompanied by White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller, shook hands with National Guard soldiers at a Shake Shack restaurant.

    “You’re doing a hell of a job,” Vance said, as demonstrators drowned him out with jeers and shouts of “Free DC!” He urged troops to ignore the “bunch of crazy protesters,” while Miller dismissed them as “stupid white hippies.”

    The unfamiliar scene – the country’s vice president and top defense official visiting troops deployed not to a war zone but to an American city’s tourist-filled transit hub – underscored the extraordinary nature of the Trump administration’s crackdown in the Democratic-led District of Columbia.

    Thousands of Guard soldiers and federal agents have been deployed to the city over the objections of its elected leaders to combat what Trump says is a violent crime wave.

    City officials have rejected that assertion, pointing to federal and city statistics that show violent crime has declined significantly since a spike in 2023.

    The president has said, without providing evidence, that the crime data is fraudulent. The Justice Department has opened an investigation into whether the numbers were manipulated, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday, citing unnamed sources.

    Rifle, shotgun possession

    Amid the crackdown, federal prosecutors in the District have been told to stop seeking felony charges against people who violate a local law prohibiting individuals from carrying rifles or shotguns in the nation’s capital.

    The decision by District of Columbia US Attorney Jeanine Pirro, which was first reported by the Washington Post, represents a break from the office’s prior policy.

    In a statement, Pirro said prosecutors will still be able to charge people with other illegal firearms crimes, such as a convicted felon found in possession of a gun.

    “We will continue to seize all illegal and unlicensed firearms,” she said.

    The White House has touted the number of firearms seized by law enforcement since Trump began surging federal agents and troops into the city. In a social media post on Wednesday, US Attorney General Pam Bondi said the operation had taken 76 illegal guns off the streets and resulted in more than 550 arrests, an average of 42 per day.

    The city’s Metropolitan Police Department arrested an average of 61 adults and juveniles per day in 2024, according to city statistics. The Trump administration has not specified whether the arrest totals it has cited include those made by MPD officers or only consist of those made by federal agents.

    A DC code bars anyone from carrying a rifle or shotgun, with narrow exceptions. In her statement, Pirro, a close Trump ally, argued that the law violates two US Supreme Court decisions expanding gun rights.

    In 2008, the court struck down a separate DC law banning handguns and ruled that individuals have the right to keep firearms in their homes for self-defense. In 2022, the court ruled that any gun-control law must be rooted in the country’s historical traditions to be valid.

    Unlike US attorneys in all 50 states, who only prosecute federal offenses, the US attorney in Washington prosecutes local crimes as well.

    DC crime rates have stayed mostly the same as they were a year ago, according to the police department’s weekly statistics.

    As of Tuesday, the city’s overall crime rate is down 7% year over year, the same percentage as before the crackdown. DC has also experienced the same declines in violent crime and property crime as it did beforehand, according to the data.

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  • Say What?!? Jeanine Pirro Blurts Out Most Bizarre Impeachment Analysis Yet

    Say What?!? Jeanine Pirro Blurts Out Most Bizarre Impeachment Analysis Yet

    “You know what’s amazing about this? Look, this is an impeachment inquiry, alright?” she said on “The Five” on Thursday. “You don’t blow the wad or the witness at the inquiry, OK?”

    She suggested Republicans are saving up the good stuff.

    “What you do is you wait ’til the trial,” she said. “You don’t allow anybody to be impeached or cross examined. You just present the minimal amount of evidence you need to.”

    Two witnesses called by GOP lawmakers straight-out admitted that there wasn’t enough evidence for an impeachment, and Democratic lawmakers on the committee openly mocked the hearings as a farce.

    “As a former director of emergency management, I know a disaster when I see one,” said Rep. Jared Moskowitz (D-Fla.).

    Moskowitz also had something to say about Pirro’s comment:

    Other critics on X, formerly Twitter, also chimed in:

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  • Cecily Strong leaves Saturday Night Live after 11 seasons

    Cecily Strong leaves Saturday Night Live after 11 seasons

    After 11 seasons, Cecily Strong has said farewell to “Saturday Night Live.”

    A few hours before the last episode of the season Saturday, the TV show’s Instagram account posted a cue card saying, “we’ll miss you, Cecily.” The caption read “Tonight we send off one of the best to ever do it.”

    A two-time Emmy nominee for her work on the show, Strong was known for characters like the Girl You Wish You Hadn’t Started a Conversation With At a Party and impressions of people like Fox News host Judge Jeanine Pirro and U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Green.

    During Saturday’s show, she broke character as Michael Che’s drug-addicted neighbor Cathy Anne on Weekend Update to give a personal statement.

    “I had a lot of fun here,” she said. “And I feel really lucky that I have had so many of the best moments of my life in this place, and with these people that I love so much.”

    It’s latest in a string of high-profile departures for “Saturday Night Live” this year, including Pete Davidson, Chris Redd, Kate McKinnon, Kyle Mooney and Aidy Bryant. Strong joined the show in 2012, during the 38th season, and has since gone on to appear in movies, including the 2016 “Ghostbusters,” and television shows, like Apple TV+’s “Schmigadoon!”

    She and host Austin Butler closed out the episode with a performance of “Blue Christmas.”

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