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Judge Jeanine Pirro Takes On DC’s Crime Catastrophe

Judge Jeanine Pirro, now serving as the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, has been brutally honest about an “outrageous” system that too often treats young lawbreakers like victims instead of perpetrators, and she isn’t afraid to say what needs to be done. Pirro has publicly argued she needs broader authority to hold juveniles accountable — even saying she would seek to prosecute suspects as young as 12 when the facts demand adult consequences.

Pirro ripped into the permissive laws and policies that have created perverse incentives on the street, calling them pro-defendant and anti-victim and insisting that consequences, not coddling, are the path to public safety. This is not theatrical rhetoric; it’s the practical view of a career prosecutor who has watched repeat offenders slide through family courts only to escalate to far worse crimes later.

Her bluntness about juvenile crime should be a wake-up call for every law-abiding citizen who’s tired of seeing neighborhoods destabilized by disorderly mobs and dangerous kids with long rap sheets. Pirro has emphasized that when there’s no meaningful accountability — no record, no deterrent — the pattern repeats until someone ends up dead, and that moral emptiness is a policy failure we can fix.

The U.S. Attorney also credited the federal enforcement surge launched in August 2025 with driving crime down in parts of D.C., arguing the message that criminals will be pursued and punished works — and it works fast. Conservatives who believe in strong law enforcement and the dignity of victims should cheer this results-oriented approach and demand it be expanded, not dismantled by critics who prefer politics over public safety.

Make no mistake: this fight is about protecting families, small businesses, and the basic right to walk the streets without fear. If local statutes tie prosecutors’ hands and leave communities exposed, then changing those laws to ensure accountability for violent and habitual juvenile offenders isn’t harshness — it’s common-sense defense of the innocent and the future of our cities.

For patriots tired of watching ideological softness produce real victims, Jeanine Pirro is doing the hard, necessary work to restore order and respect for the rule of law. It’s time for citizens, elected officials, and community leaders to stand with prosecutors who prioritize safety over virtue-signaling, and to demand an end to policies that create the next generation of perpetrators.

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