Federal agents spread through the capital amid Trump’s pledge to carry out the crime: NPR

FBI agents and other federal law enforcement agents wander around the neighborhood near the National Stadium in Washington, DC on Sunday.

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WASHINGTON – Dozens of federal agents were exposed to Washington, DC, after President Donald Trump promised to quickly pressure and displacement in the country’s capital.

“The homeless must go out immediately,” Trump said on his social media platform Social truth. “We will give you places to stay, but away from the capital.”

Trump also said that the United States government will target criminals, and spread, “Be prepared! There will be” Mr. Nice a man. “We want to return to capital.”

Federal police in Washington, DC, were seen on Sunday in the Navy Yard and Nationals.

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In a separate publication, the president said He would have held a press conference at 10 am East time on Monday to talk about “ending crime, killing and death in our nation’s capital.”

In fact, Washington, DC, has witnessed a decrease in crime rates in recent years, With violent crimes that reach its lowest level in 30 years in 2024According to the American Ministry of Justice.

Meanwhile, the immediate effect of Trump’s work on Sunday seemed less intense and dramatic than his participation on social media.

Groups of unified factors can be seen from the FBI, the Anti -Narcotics Administration and other agencies are roaming in small streets. At least 120 FBI agents have been reset from other duties to participate in Sunday patrols.

At one intersection, a simple traffic accident brought between a car and two sugar at least twenty factors running, and some wear masks and one carrying a rifle. The local capital police were also on the scene.

The police help a person who is harmful to a nearby traffic accident.

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Local population and tourists who enjoy summer ice cream and other foods are seen in the streets with the gathering of agents, with some residents express confusion about the presence of federal officers wearing the uniform.

But some of the residents of the homeless in a nearby camp said they were concerned about what they described as Trump’s threat to seize them.

Greg Evans sits on his camp site in the homeland camp near the American Peace Institute,

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“I am definitely afraid to do what he wants to do, but I cannot live my life for fear,” said 38 -year -old Greg Evans, who lived in a small home camp near Lincoln Memorial for several months.

Evans said he has struggled for years with addiction and other health problems. He told NPR that he believed that most Americans want to help the federal government the poor and others who struggle.

“I see a lot of sympathy,” he said. “There are many people to know there.”

George Morgan with his blue dog

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George Morgan, 65, who lives in the same tents camp, said he is disappointed by Trump’s speech and believes that the United States should use more of its wealth to help people who need housing and health care.

Morgan said: “As much as God has bestowed on America, and we are constantly pleading with God to bless America, the truth is told that we are in a state of hot water in terms of our own care.”

Meanwhile, Trump said that writing on social media is that the purification of the homeless from Washington, DC, will be part of a wider effort to beautify the capital.

“Before tents, tents, filth, and crime, it was the most beautiful capital in the world. It would be soon again,” Trump wrote.

There was no explanation for the place where the displaced will be sent, but in a post on social media last week, Trump suggested that he was considering the federal seizure of the police in Washington.

The capital police were seen in the streets in Washington, DC on Sunday.

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“If the capital does not get its work together, quickly, we will have no choice but federal control over the city, and to manage this city how it should be operated, and the criminals are placed that they will not escape from that anymore,” Trump said.

On Sunday, MSNBC, the mayor of Washington, DC, Morel Bousseer, said that she realizes that Trump “has a lot of concerns about the homeless” but said that the situation is improving.

“Therefore, we will continue to speak to the president, and work with his people on issues that represent a high priority for him,” Buser said.

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