President Trump pushes federal capital punishment in the nation’s capital
In recent months, President Donald J. Trump has taken a bold and controversial stance on criminal justice in Washington, DC. Trump has publicly called for the federal government to seek the death penalty for murder cases in the District of Columbia and directed top federal prosecutors to pursue capital punishment where possible under federal law. This move has drawn intense political debate, legal questions, and strong reactions from advocates and critics alike.
The District of Columbia is unique in the United States because its local government abolished capital punishment more than four decades ago. Local officials repealed the death penalty in 1981, and voters have repeatedly shown opposition to reinstating it. Under local law there is no death penalty for murders committed within the city.
However, federal law still allows for capital punishment in certain circumstances, and Washington, DC sits under federal jurisdiction for some crimes. Because of this, the Trump administration’s efforts aim to use federal statutes to impose the death penalty on defendants in eligible cases where they are found guilty of particularly serious crimes.
The President’s Directive
In late September 2025, Trump signed a Presidential Memorandum directing the Attorney General and the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia to fully enforce federal capital punishment laws in the nation’s capital. The memorandum instructs these officials to seek the death penalty in “all appropriate cases” where the evidence and facts justify such a sentence under federal statutes.
This directive builds on an earlier executive order Trump signed on his first day in office, which aimed to restore and expand the use of the federal death penalty nationwide. According to fact sheets from the White House, enforcing capital punishment in the District of Columbia is part of the administration’s strategy to deter violent crime and protect public safety.
At a White House signing ceremony, Trump summed up his policy with direct language. He said that if someone commits murder in Washington, DC, the federal government will be “seeking the death penalty” for those responsible. The president framed capital punishment as a strong tool to prevent deadly crime and restore law and order.
Why This Matters in DC
Washington, DC’s history with capital punishment is long and complex. Before local government autonomy increased, executions were carried out in the district. Mandatory death sentences for first degree murder were in place until the early 1960s, and capital punishment was formally nullified by the U.S. Supreme Court in the early 1970s before the DC Council repealed it entirely in 1981. Local residents have consistently voted against bringing it back.