Modest Cuts in DOJ Grants Jeopardize Progress in Reducing Violent Crime…Allegedly

Pam Bondi DOJ grant tweet

The United States is experiencing one of the steepest declines in violent crime in modern history, including a murder rate at its lowest point in more than a century.

Homicides across 35 major American cities fell 21% in 2025, amounting to 922 fewer people killed. Robberies dropped 23%. Gun assaults declined 22%. Carjackings plummeted 43%.

Yet the Trump administration has yanked hundreds of millions of dollars from the programs that helped make those numbers possible.

As a scholar focused on how policy decisions and structural conditions shape crime in marginalized communities, I see a pattern forming that could put these historic gains at serious risk.

‘Wasteful grants’

In April 2025, the Department of Justice terminated 365 previously awarded grants. About US$500 million in promised funds evaporated, affecting more than 550 organizations across 48 states.

The cuts stretched across the public safety landscape: community violence intervention, victim services, law enforcement training, juvenile justice, offender reentry and criminal justice research.

Then-Attorney General Pam Bondi described the cancellations as eliminating “wasteful grants.” The White House argued that the grant programs had been “funding DEI and cultural Marxism” rather than helping to keep Americans safe.

The DOJ’s fiscal year 2026 budget proposal reduces the pool of funds for public safety and justice programs by an additional $850 million – about a 15% decrease from the prior year.

— Andrea Hagan in US violent crime is at its lowest in more than a century – but the funding that helped reduce it is disappearing

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3 thoughts on “Modest Cuts in DOJ Grants Jeopardize Progress in Reducing Violent Crime…Allegedly”

  1. Chris T in KY

    The USAID was a democrat slush fund. Just like most federal spending. I’m getting what I voted for.

    Plus president trump made weed legal in his first administration.

  2. No kidding ? Really ? Gee kind of like that “homeless problem”, as soon as there were big budgets and never-ending programs, solving the problem became impossible. Homeless populations exploded. So, throwing money at the problem wasn’t a solution, but enhanced the problem. Just like crime reduction and prevention. Now, let’s do public schools and colleges. I’m seeing a pattern here.

  3. “Homicides across 35 major American cities fell 21% in 2025, amounting to 922 fewer people killed. Robberies dropped 23%. Gun assaults declined 22%. Carjackings plummeted 43%.

    Yet the Trump administration has yanked hundreds of millions of dollars from the programs that helped make those numbers possible.”

    No “research” helped make those numbers possible. Enforcing the laws made those numbers possible, especially immigration laws. How could you think otherwise??

    “As a scholar focused on how policy decisions and structural conditions shape crime in marginalized communities…” Oh.

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