NEW ORLEANS — Violent crime in New Orleans declined for a third consecutive year in 2025, police officials announced Monday as National Guard troops begin patrolling the city on President Donald Trump's orders.
The crime figures were released less than a week after armed troops arrived in New Orleans, becoming the latest city where Trump has deployed National Guard members on crime-fighting missions. A separate immigration crackdown that began in December has also deployed hundreds of federal agents in and around the city.
Local officials pushed back for months against the possibility of a Guard mission in New Orleans, pointing out that crime was already decreasing and that troops aren't trained to arrest and jail people, much less investigate crimes and prosecute anyone. But Police Chief Anne Kirkpatrick said she supported the troops' presence as a deterrent.
''The National Guard's presence will certainly have impact,'' Kirkpatrick said. ''We're just grateful that crime is down, and I don't care who gets the credit.''
Trump approved sending 350 National Guard members to Louisiana months after Louisiana Gov. Jeff Landry requested a deployment to fight crime. Other cities where Trump has launched National Guard missions include Washington and Memphis, Tennessee.
During a Saturday news conference, Trump credited the Guard deployment with New Orleans' drop in crime.
''We have crime down to almost nothing already,'' Trump said. He added: ''I cannot imagine why governors would not want us to help.''
Landry, a Republican, has said troops were needed in New Orleans due to ''elevated violent crime rates'' even though local officials said crime has been dropping for years in the city.