WASHINGTON — The police chief in the nation's capital pressured subordinates to manipulate department data to artificially lower the city's crime rates, according to a report by a Republican-led congressional committee.
The report, released Sunday by the House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform, found that Metropolitan Police Department Chief Pamela Smith often threatened, punished and retaliated against police commanders who presented her with ''spikes in crime.''
A separate investigation by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro's office also found that a significant number of MPD reports had been misclassified to make crime rates appear lower than they are.
Pirro's office began its investigation in August at the height of a political showdown between Republican President Donald Trump's administration and the city over control of the police department. Trump claimed violent crime in Washington was getting worse as he ordered a federal takeover of the police department,
Neither investigation found grounds for charging anybody with a crime.
"However, it is up to MPD to take steps to internally address these underlying issues," Pirro said in a statement Monday.
Smith, who is stepping down at the end of the year after two years in charge of the department, has said she doesn't believe any crime numbers were manipulated during her tenure.
''I have never and will never authorize or even support any thought processes or activities with regards to crime numbers being manipulated,'' she told Fox 5 during an interview earlier this month.