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Tag: us park police

  • Body found on the BW Parkway decades ago finally identified with the help of volunteers – WTOP News

    Earlier this month, U.S. Park Police and the DNA Doe Project identified 24-year-old Eddie Devone as the man found along the northbound lanes of the highway near the interchange with the beltway back in 1981.

    A man whose body was found along the Baltimore-Washington Parkway 45 years ago has finally been identified, with help from a group of volunteer genealogists.

    Earlier this month, U.S. Park Police and the DNA Doe Project identified 24-year-old Eddie Devone as the man found along the northbound lanes of the highway near the interchange with the Capitol Beltway back in 1981.

    “They checked local hospitals, any missing persons reports, took fingerprints, did all their investigatory work. And at the time, it just came up with no leads,” said Lt. Daniel Bahamonde, acting commander of U.S. Park Police’s criminal investigations.

    When Devone’s body was found, the cause of death was never determined, though there was no sign of any foul play. After years of dead ends on everything else, U.S. Park Police turned to the DNA Doe Project, which is based in California.

    But it was Matthew Waterfield, who lives in London, England, who became the team lead and took up the cause.

    “We are a nonprofit, so all of the research we provide is completely pro bono,” Waterfield said. “The benefit of that is that even if a case is particularly tricky and may take dozens or hundreds or even thousands of hours to resolve, we can put in that time because all of the people working on that case are volunteers.”

    In this case, it took hundreds of hours to identify Devone, whose DNA was uploaded into databases that took genealogists to North Carolina — far away from the Baltimore-Washington Parkway.

    “It was complicated, because we were looking at this couple from North Carolina, and we knew, based on our research, based on the amount of DNA that our John Doe shared with other members of their family, that this couple probably had a child who was the grandparent of our Doe,” Waterfield said.

    “We looked into their children, their grandchildren, great grandchildren, couldn’t find anything, and we couldn’t find any link to Baltimore or D.C., which we had kind of been expecting, considering where this gentleman had been found,” he added.

    U.S. Park Police went to North Carolina and spoke to relatives who turned up in the family tree that was created. What they learned eventually brought them back to the D.C. region.

    “It was indeed discovered that that couple had had another daughter, a daughter who was given up for adoption 100 years ago,” Waterfield said. “That daughter had stayed in contact with certain members of her biological family, and they could tell investigators that they knew she had moved to Baltimore. So at that point, that was really the breakthrough.”

    From there, detectives were eventually able to track down Devone’s sister. In an era with no social media and no easy way to contact someone who wanted to be left alone, he had become estranged from his family.

    “That’s pretty much why there was no missing person (report),” Bahamonde said. “It was good closure for them, but to be honest, they weren’t even aware that they were missing.”

    This isn’t the first time the DNA Doe Project has helped identify someone in this region. In 2022, the group helped identify a man found dead inside a home on Naylor Road SE as 59-year-old Darryl Williamson.

    Waterfield said the Doe Project is hoping to help solve more cases like this one in the future.

    “It’s something that we are able to do in our spare time, and which people willingly give their spare time to, because it’s such a frankly rewarding thing,” he said. “A disproportionately large number of our volunteers are people who took a DNA test and found a surprise in their family tree, or took a DNA test to address a mystery in their family tree — maybe they were adopted or maybe they had a grandparent they never knew about.”

    Waterfield added that many of the volunteers who dedicated their time to the project aren’t necessarily professional genealogists.

    “They are passionate people who had a career and started getting into genetic genealogy on the side, and then became so good at genetic genealogical analysis, that they decided to apply to join us and lend their skills in a different way,” he said.

    But the time spent volunteering as genealogists is only possible after the costly process of generating a DNA profile inside a laboratory is complete. That’s why the group also solicits donations, and helps those looking to identify someone apply for grants and other ways to pay for the cost of lab work.

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

    John Domen

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  • US Park Police officer hurt after being struck on BW Parkway – WTOP News

    A U.S. Park Police officer sustained critical injuries early Saturday after being hit while “in the performance of his duties” on the Baltimore-Washington Parkway.

    A U.S. Park Police officer sustained critical injuries after being hit by a car early Saturday on the Baltimore-Washington Parkway.

    The incident, which was reported after 3 a.m., took place on the northbound lanes of the Baltimore-Washington Parkway near Route 410, which led to a temporary closure of the roadway.

    Officials said the U.S. Park Police officer was outside a patrol cruiser, doing a traffic-related investigation on a disabled vehicle when it was hit by another vehicle.

    The officer was taken to a local hospital via helicopter with non-life-threatening injuries, and was discharged Saturday evening.

    The driver of the striking vehicle stayed on the scene and was arrested, along with the driver of the disabled vehicle, as they “were related to suspected impaired driving,” U.S. Park Police said.

    The patrol vehicle in the incident had damages and was towed from the scene. Due to the investigation of the incident, the roadway had been closed but has since reopened.

    Officials are still investigating this incident.

    This is a developing story. Stay with WTOP for the latest details.

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

    Alan Etter

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  • Man dies on National Mall after being trapped underneath race car painted by Andy Warhol – WTOP News

    A man trying to load an “art car” painted by Andy Warhol onto a truck at the National Mall in D.C. has died after he became trapped underneath the vehicle.

    A man trying to load an “art car” painted by Andy Warhol onto a truck at the National Mall in D.C. has died after he became trapped underneath the vehicle.

    It happened just before 3 p.m. Wednesday at 14th Street and Jefferson Drive in Southwest. U.S. Park Police found the man with critical injuries along the area where several Smithsonian museums are located.

    After attempting life-saving measures, the man was pronounced dead, a Park Police spokesperson said. The incident appears accidental in nature, police said.

    Medics treated the injured person, who was pronounced dead. Their name was not immediately released. D.C. police are taking over the investigation and had detectives headed to the scene, according to NBC4 Washington.

    The Hagerty Drivers Foundation, a nonprofit dedicated to car culture and history, is hosting its annual “Cars at the Capital” exhibition on the National Mall. The 1979 BMW M1 painted by Warhol was set to be on display in a glass enclosure through Sept. 23, authorities told NBC 4 Washington.

     

    A person loading a vehicle onto a truck has died. (Courtesy Google Maps)

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

    Abigail Constantino

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  • A decades-long peace vigil outside the White House is dismantled after Trump’s order – WTOP News

    Law enforcement officials on Sunday removed a peace vigil that had stood outside the White House for more than four decades after President Donald Trump ordered it to be taken down as part of the clearing of homeless encampments in the nation’s capital.

    White House Peace Vigil tent is seen in Lafayatte Park across the street from the White House in Washington, Friday, Sept. 5, 2025. (AP Photo/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)(AP/Pablo Martinez Monsivais)

    WASHINGTON (AP) — Law enforcement officials on Sunday removed a peace vigil that had stood outside the White House for more than four decades after President Donald Trump ordered it to be taken down as part of the clearing of homeless encampments in the nation’s capital.

    Philipos Melaku-Bello, a volunteer who has manned the vigil for years, told The Associated Press that the Park Police removed it early Sunday morning. He said officials justified the removal by mislabeling the memorial as a shelter.

    “The difference between an encampment and a vigil is that an encampment is where homeless people live,” Melaku-Bello said. “As you can see, I don’t have a bed. I have signs and it is covered by the First Amendment right to freedom of speech and freedom of expression.”

    The White House confirmed the removal, telling AP in a statement that the vigil was a “hazard to those visiting the White House and the surrounding areas.”

    Taking down the vigil is the latest in a series of actions the Trump administration has ordered as part of its federal takeover of policing in the city, which began last month. The White House has defended the intervention as needed to fulfill Trump’s executive order on the “beautification” of D.C.

    Melaku-Bello said he’s in touch with attorneys about what he sees as a civil rights violation. “They’re choosing to call a place that is not an encampment an encampment just to fit what is in Trump’s agenda of removing the encampments,” he said.

    The vigil was started in 1981 by activist William Thomas to promote nuclear disarmament and an end to global conflicts. It is believed to be the longest continuous anti-war protest in U.S. history. When Thomas died in 2009, other protesters like Melaku-Bello manned the tiny tent and the banner, which read “Live by the bomb, die by the bomb,” around the clock to avoid it being dismantled by authorities.

    The small but persistent act of protest was brought to Trump’s attention during an event at the White House on Friday.

    Brian Glenn, a correspondent for the conservative network Real America’s Voice, told Trump the blue tent was an “eyesore” for those who come to the White House.

    “Just out front of the White House is a blue tent that originally was put there to be an anti-nuclear tent for nuclear arms,” Glenn said. “It’s kind of morphed into more of an anti-American, sometimes anti-Trump at many times.”

    Trump, who said he was not aware of it, told his staff: “Take it down. Take it down today, right now.”

    Melaku-Bello said that Glenn spread misinformation when he told the president that the tent had rats and “could be a national security risk” because people could hide weapons in there.

    “No weapons were found,” he told AP. He said that it was rat-infested. Not a single rat came out as they took down the cinder blocks.”

    ___

    Amiri reported from New York. Will Weissert in New York contributed to this report.

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    © 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

    WTOP Staff

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  • Chief Jessica Taylor to leave US Park Police after force required to directly report to Interior secretary – WTOP News

    The Interior Department said U.S. Park Police Chief Jessica Taylor will be retiring from the force to take on a new role with the Social Security Administration.

    U.S. Park Police Chief Jessica Taylor (Courtesy National Park Service, file)

    U.S. Park Police Chief Jessica Taylor will be retiring from the force to take on a new role with the Social Security Administration, according to the Department of the Interior.

    Taylor will serve as the chief security and resiliency officer, which will make up part of the SSA’s newly announced executive leadership team.

    The announcement of her retirement comes after WTOP previously reported on an order placing the Park Police under the direct supervision of the Secretary of the Interior.

    In announcing the decision, Interior Secretary Doug Burgum praised Taylor for her “unwavering commitment to public service and her dedication to keeping our cities, landmarks, and public spaces safe.”

    “Chief Taylor’s leadership, integrity, and service to this country will leave a lasting legacy that will be felt for generations to come,” Burgum added.

    Taylor took over the department in 2023, several months after the abrupt retirement of her predecessor, Pamela Smith, who now leads the D.C. police.

    In the announcement, Taylor said leading the U.S. Park Police has been the greatest honor of her career.

    “I leave with immense gratitude and deep respect for this Force and everyone who works with grit and integrity serving in the United States Park Police,” Taylor said.

    The Interior Department said Taylor will continue to assist with the “crucial” law enforcement surge in the District until her last day on Sept. 20. Her successor is expected to be named in the coming weeks.

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

    Mike Murillo

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  • US Park Police chief to report directly to Interior secretary under new order – WTOP News

    According to a new order, Chief Jessica Taylor will now report directly to Interior Secretary Doug Burgum or a designated official, bypassing the traditional chain of command within the National Park Service.

    The Department of the Interior is restructuring the U.S. Park Police, moving its leadership one step closer to the White House by placing the chief under direct supervision of Interior Secretary Doug Burgum.

    In an order signed by Burgum, Chief Jessica Taylor will now report directly to Burgum or a designated official, bypassing the traditional chain of command within the National Park Service. Burgum or his designee, according to the order, “will provide strategic management and operational control of the USPP.”

    Signed Aug. 25, the order removes the National Park Service director and the assistant secretary for Fish and Wildlife and Parks from any supervisory role over the police force, though they will continue to provide administrative support.

    The move comes as the force continues to grapple with chronic understaffing and, in recent weeks, an increased workload tied to President Donald Trump’s law enforcement surge in D.C.

    It also follows a recent executive order from Trump calling for a rapid expansion of the force, with the U.S. Park Police Fraternal Order of Police saying new hires will be drawn from those with prior law enforcement experience.

    Past controversies still cast a shadow

    Burgum also recently announced a change to relax pursuit policies for the agency.

    The Interior Department said the change reflects the evolving role of the U.S. Park Police, whose jurisdiction now extends well beyond national parks.

    “It recognizes that the USPP jurisdiction and responsibility, particularly in the National Capital Region, extends beyond National Park System assets and implicates equities of other Federal agencies and virtually all local jurisdictions, which makes it essential for the USPP to be managed at the highest levels of Department of the Interior,” the order reads.

    The Interior Department shared a statement from a U.S. Park Police spokesperson with WTOP, saying the force recognizes the increasingly important role its officers play in protecting “our nation’s federal lands, national treasures, symbols of democracy, as well as our public safety component in Washington, D.C.”

    “As visibility increases, so too does our resolve — to serve with honor, integrity, and service,” the statement read.

    It’s unclear what impact the change will have on the department, which has seen controversies in the past, among them the clearing of Lafayette Park during protests of the death of George Floyd in June 2020.

    The clearing sparked claims that it was timed to coincide with Trump’s visit to St. John’s Church, which had been damaged during the protests.

    The Interior Department’s inspector general ultimately found the clearing was not ordered due to the presidential visit, but rather to allow fencing installation, though the incident raised serious concerns about communication failures.

    There were also concerns of delays in the release of information and a lack of transparency from the force and the Interior Department after two officers shot and killed Bijan Ghaisar after a car chase on the George Washington Memorial Parkway in 2017.

    The officers in that shooting were later cleared of wrongdoing after a lengthy investigation and legal process.

    Police union supports direct line to the top

    Ken Spencer, chairman of the Fraternal Order of Police, praised Burgum’s decision to change the reporting structure for USPP.

    “I think it’s a great change, and I think it’s something that needed to happen,” Spencer said.

    He explained that the previous reporting structure created layers of red tape for the USPP, and believes the change will result in more resources, better funding and stronger public advocacy for the force.

    While acknowledging past struggles with transparency, Spencer said the new structure will help Park Police continue making strides in that area.

    “It always depends on who’s in charge of the administration, but I believe this will definitely improve transparency with the United States Park Police being able to go directly to the Department of Interior,” Spencer said.

    Asked whether the move could politicize the department, Spencer noted that both the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Land Management already report directly to the Interior Department. He said given the complexity of Park Police’s mission, reporting directly to the top benefits everyone.

    “If it gets politicized, then that’s on whatever administration is in charge,” Spencer said.

    Several area lawmakers were contacted for comment about the change and several offices indicated to WTOP that they had not yet seen the order.

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

    Mike Murillo

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  • New Trump executive order relaxes chase policies for US Park Police – WTOP News

    The U.S. Park Police now has a less restrictive policy when it comes to police pursuits. The Trump administration is framing it as part of its stepped-up efforts in D.C.

    The U.S. Park Police now has a less restrictive policy when it comes to police pursuits. Officials in President Donald Trump’s administration are framing the change as part of its stepped-up crime effort in D.C.

    The new police pursuit rules are part of an Aug. 25 White House executive order, which said park police can use all applicable laws to maintain public safety and public order.

    “The Director of the National Park Service shall, subject to the availability of appropriations and applicable law, hire additional members of the United States Park Police in the District of Columbia to support the policy goals described in Executive Order 14333,” the order said. “The United States Park Police shall ensure enforcement of all applicable laws within their jurisdiction, including the Code of the District of Columbia, to help maintain public safety and proper order.”

    Interior Secretary Doug Burgum, who oversees the U.S. Park Police, explained the new rules during a recent Cabinet meeting, which he said are a significant change.

    “I was shocked to find out when we were talking to them that, ‘you pull somebody over and they just drive away and you can’t pursue them?’ and they said, ‘No we can’t,’” Burgum said. “We got that rule changed in 24 hours because of President Trump’s leadership.”

    He said previously, suspects would mock police when they fled, saying you can’t pursue us.

    “The next night they had so much fun, they pulled people over, they chased them, they stopped them,” he said. “The bad guys in the cars said, ‘You’re not supposed to chase us. You’re breaking the rules.’”

    But, in a statement, the Fraternal Order of Police said, “Senior Leadership from the Fraternal Order of Police, the United States Park Police, and the Department of the Interior — on behalf of directives from the White House — negotiated an interim vehicle pursuit modification to our current General Order.”

    The statement said Park Police recognizes the need for “levelheaded judgment and safety for the public and our officers,” and said the interim pursuit policy will be in effect until a permanent policy is negotiated with the agency.

    “We support a policy that responsibly balances enforcement with safety and look forward to its permanent implementation,” the police union said.

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

    Dan Ronan

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  • Dept. of Interior aims to hire 100 officers to bolster US Park Police ranks – WTOP News

    With plans to onboard at least 100 new officers through lateral transfers, the U.S. Park Police aims to quickly bolster its force amid rising demands on federal law enforcement.

    The union that represents U.S. Park Police officers said it is seeing a new urgency from the Department of the Interior to address what it calls a “critical shortage” of officers in the D.C. region.

    The new momentum to bring on new officers comes after an executive order from President Donald Trump on Monday as the federal law enforcement surge in the nation’s capital continues.

    Chair of the U.S. Park Police Fraternal Order of Police Ken Spencer called it the most movement he’s seen from the Interior in his over six years of sounding the alarm about the staffing shortage.

    “They are taking proactive steps to try and hire more police officers for our agency very quickly,” Spencer told WTOP.

    Spencer said since the increase in presence of law enforcement began, there have been visits by Secretary of the Interior Doug Burgum at roll calls for officers, including one during which he was joined by President Trump. But he said talks to staff up truly got underway following the executive order.

    Last week, Spencer told WTOP the department, which patrols the National Mall and several area parkways, has been working in the D.C. region with 294 officers, when it should have 436.

    Spencer said he has been told the goal is to bring on at least 100 new officers quickly, which he believes will happen through lateral transfers. He said those hires involve bringing in police officers who work at other area police departments to reduce training time.

    “Put them through some sort of agency-specific training … approximately five or six weeks of training with U.S. Park Police — specific general orders and training,” Spencer said. “Then go through our field training process, where they could just get on the street and start working quickly.”

    With new recruits without police experience, he said it takes roughly a year to turn them into street-ready officers.

    While not confirming how many new officers will be quickly hired this year, in a statement to WTOP, Department of the Interior Deputy Press Secretary Aubrie Spady said the administration is “bolstering staffing and resources” and is “fast-tracking” recruitment efforts to “quickly grow the force.”

    “Morale is high among the U.S. Park Police as the Trump administration backs law enforcement with real action,” Spady wrote. “Our dedicated Park Police are excited to welcome these new additions who are joining the mission to protect our nation’s capital.”

    While getting new officers in place will take some of the stress off the current force, Spencer said there are challenges with quickly onboarding officers, even if they have law enforcement experience.

    “Of course, we’re trying to work out the logistics, because we’re not only just understaffed with sworn law enforcement, but we’re also understaffed with support personnel and training officers that can come in and help train new recruits at a quicker pace than what we’ve been doing,” he said.

    Spencer said he believes this will be the most officers the department has brought on in a year. Before this, he only recalls one year when 72 officers were brought onto the force over the course of a year.

    To bring in officers, especially those who work at other departments, Spencer said the move would need to be incentivized.

    Signing bonuses are likely, Spencer said, but he said those alone will not bring officers over or retain currently with the department.

    Spencer said proposals should include retention bonuses, competitive pay for officers, allow officers to take patrol cars home and reduce the years an officer needs to work to receive a pension from 30 to 22 years.

    “We have looked at other law enforcement agencies, at what they’re doing, like the D.C. police. We’ve looked at what Capitol Police has done over the years, the Secret Service Uniform Division — we’re looking to get somewhere in that ballpark,” Spencer said.

    Spencer said the call for the “U.S. Park Police Modernization Act,” a House bill that he said aims to modernize the pay and retirement structure for officers, to be passed by Congress remains.

    “If they just throw a big lump sum of money at us and try and say, ‘Hey, just hire some officers,’ that’s not going to fix the core problem,” he said. “The problem is officers are walking out the door and going somewhere else for greener pastures.”

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

    Mike Murillo

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  • How US Park Police transform traffic flow during morning, evening rush hours – WTOP News

    How US Park Police transform traffic flow during morning, evening rush hours – WTOP News

    U.S. Park Police is considering doing away with reversible, one-way traffic on the Rock Creek Parkway because of how long it takes to set up.

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    How Park Police change traffic patterns along Rock Creek Parkway every day

    Around 3:45 p.m. Thursday, a U.S. Park Police officer with the motorcycle unit arrived at the intersection near Virginia Avenue and the Thompson Boat Center.

    He briefly rode away to close off a nearby on-ramp to the southbound lanes of Rock Creek Parkway. Then, he placed a large “Do Not Enter” barricade in the road and put down a series of cones.

    Just minutes after 4 p.m., a different officer drove by, leading the first group of northbound traffic to drive north on what are considered the southbound lanes outside rush hour.

    Since the 1930s, the Rock Creek and Potomac Parkway has used reversible, one-way traffic operations during the morning and afternoon commutes to help drivers get in and out of the city faster.

    But the National Park Service is exploring eliminating one-way traffic operations, and an 81-page report said one reason is the time it takes U.S. Park Police to implement the changes to traffic flow twice a day.

    From 6:45 a.m. to 9:30 a.m., traffic along the parkway is only open to southbound traffic. From 3:45 p.m. to 6:30 p.m., it’s only open to northbound drivers.

    “In the morning, during a.m. rush hour, we are eliminating northbound traffic on Rock Creek Parkway, so that all of the traffic flows southbound into the District of Columbia, downtown D.C. area and things like that,” Sgt. Thomas Twiname said. “For the p.m. rush hour, it’s the opposite, and we eliminate all southbound traffic.”

    In the morning, transforming traffic patterns is a 30-minute job that’s assigned to four officers along four zones throughout the parkway.

    In the afternoon, the switch takes 15 minutes, and involves five officers across five zones. They start working at 3:45 p.m. to put the one-way traffic flow into effect, and it’s in place by 4 p.m.

    The officers making the changes do so using what Twiname described as traffic-control measures.

    “Whether it be signage, which lists the times when it’s one way, which direction they use, do not enter signs,” Twiname said, “They use cones to close off areas to prevent people from going into the wrong places.”

    Drivers are largely familiar with the rules of the reversible operations, but Twiname said sometimes, there are stragglers.

    “We see people just disregard either a sign or traffic control device, and so we’re able to quickly respond, get it fixed, and make sure the person understands what’s going on and how to follow the traffic flow.”

    When the morning and evening commute rush times end, the same officers who helped implement one-way operations are responsible for undoing it and helping to restore two-way traffic.

    “They first eliminate the traffic on the opposite side of the road, then they put traffic back in it and they lead the traffic back up, so that it’s then a two-way traffic flow,” Twiname said.

    Though reversible operations have been in effect for decades, Twiname said the way the traffic change is made now “seems to be the way we’ve done it for several decades.”

    “When the traffic change is in effect, the focus is traffic flow, and so traffic is moving and flowing during the times that it’s in effect for a.m. and p.m.,” Twiname said.

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

    Scott Gelman

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  • Family of teen killed by US Park Police presses for answers on the anniversary of his death – WTOP News

    Family of teen killed by US Park Police presses for answers on the anniversary of his death – WTOP News

    One year after Dalaneo Martin was killed by U.S. Park Police, his family called on the Justice Department for answers in the investigation into his death.

    Attorney Ben Crump speaks at a news conference outside the Department of Justice on the one-year anniversary of Dalaneo Martin’s death. (WTOP/Kate Ryan)

    One year after 17-year-old Dalaneo Martin was shot and killed by U.S. Park Police, his family and their attorneys called on the Department of Justice for answers in the investigation into the D.C. teen’s death.

    On the morning of March 18, 2023, Martin was found sleeping in a stolen car in a Northeast D.C. neighborhood when D.C. police and members of the U.S. Park Police arrived on the scene. Body camera video from D.C. police showed the officers formulating a plan to get Martin out of the stolen car.

    The video showed a D.C. police officer directing the group not to get into the vehicle. The same video showed a U.S. Park Police officer getting into the back seat of the car, and Martin driving off. At that point, the officer fired his service weapon, hitting Martin multiple times.

    Outside the Department of Justice building on the anniversary of Martin’s death, family members and attorneys chanted “Justice for Debo,” using the teenager’s nickname.

    His mother Terra Martin took a deep breath before telling reporters that by the time she arrived to the scene of the shooting, a white sheet was draped over her son’s body.

    “Six shots to the back. How can you justify that?” she asked.

    Attorneys Andrew Clarke, Ben Crump and Billy Murphy were joined by Judge Greg Mathis, who complained about the lack of information on the ongoing civil rights investigation opened by the Department of Justice in April 2023.

    “What are you hiding?” Mathis asked.

    “This is a tragedy of the police’s own making,” Murphy said, expressing frustration as he referenced the high-profile cases of Freddie Gray, George Floyd and Breonna Taylor.

    “Day after day, week after week, month after month, year after year, we see the same kinds of unnecessary deaths at the hands of the police,” Murphy said.

    The attorneys said that until today, they had not heard from the Department of Justice since April, when its investigation into Martin’s death began. But Crump said they have been told that they will get a briefing sometime this week.

    Nee Nee Taylor, with the organization Harriet’s Wildest Dreams, also spoke at the news conference.

    Taylor told the group, which included Martin’s nine brothers and sisters and one of his two sons, “We are calling for transformation and accountability of policing in our society so that it no longer serves as an agent of anti-Blackness.”

    Taylor added, “We’re going to show you better than we can tell you that we’re going to get justice for Debo,”

    Crump was asked what justice would look like for Martin’s family.

    “Criminal charges, certainly,” he said, adding that civil action, including seeking compensation, is something the legal team is working on. Crump said the goal of a civil case would be to produce changes that prevent deaths like Martin’s.

    “That could be the legacy of Debo. Not just justice for Debo, but justice for us all,” he said.

    Attorney Clarke echoed that sentiment, saying policy changes and approaches in policing to avoid escalation are critically needed.

    “That’s what justice looks like, because had that officer taken that same care with Debo that same day, none of us would be here,” Clarke said.

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

    Kate Ryan

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