Aug. 14 (UPI) -- Dressed in camouflage fatigues, National Guard troops patrolled areas of Washington, D.C., on Thursday, dispatched by President Donald Trump to police what he has called "out of control crime" in the city.
In actuality, crime in the district has fallen in recent years or remained flat. Despite this, Guard soldiers patrolled outside Washington's main train station and swept homeless encampments ahead of a larger, federal law enforcement operation Thursday night in the city.
The federal effort was underway shortly after 6 p.m. EDT Thursday near a popular homeless encampment outside the Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial Library, where most people who often sleep there already had left, The New York Times reported. Most were encouraged to go to homeless shelters.
"The district has worked proactively with homeless residents ahead of these actions to provide services and offers of shelter," a statement from the Office of the Deputy Mayor for Health and Human Services said. "DC will support the engagements with wraparound services and trash pickup but the planned engagements are otherwise the purview of the federal agencies."
The planned federal operation was scheduled to target 25 sites in and around the district's northwest quadrant, city council member Charles Allen said.













