In 2023, D.C.s homicide toll was the worst in 26 years. Heres who we lost

Publish date: 2024-07-17

The nation’s capital recorded more homicides in 2023 than in any year since 1997, giving the District the fifth-highest murder rate among the nation’s biggest cities.

The 274 confirmed victims ranged from infants to octogenarians. They were killed in homes, in Metro stations and in motor vehicles; they were killed in alleys, in school zones and in public parks. They were slain on streets by acquaintances and strangers and in the crossfire of warring neighborhood crews, in double shootings and triple shootings. They died in the dark and the dawn and under the midday sun in all parts of Washington, from its poorest precincts to its busiest commercial and nightlife areas.

To illustrate the human dimension of the violence, The Washington Post compiled a comprehensive list of the casualties — a month-by-month tally of who the victims were, how they died and where — while also examining the broader trends of the city’s 2023 homicide crisis.

The loss of lives in the year just ended, including the killings of 19 children and young teenagers, plunged families and communities into grief and ignited a local political crisis that escalated to the halls of Congress. Federal officials questioned whether D.C. leaders were equipped to prevent the District from regressing to the social dysfunction and near municipal collapse of the late 20th century, when the city, overwhelmed by crack-fueled bloodshed, became known as America’s murder capital.

“It’s been a tough year,” Mayor Muriel E. Bowser (D) said in an interview. “There is no doubt about that.”

[As homicides and carjackings increased, D.C. retreated on policing reforms]

With a rate of 40 homicides per 100,000 residents, the District was deadlier than 55 of the country’s 60 most populous cities, behind only New Orleans, Cleveland, Baltimore and Memphis. While homicides surged in Washington, they decreased in many other metropolises, including New York and Chicago.

As in years past, the burden fell acutely on Black residents in the District’s most underserved neighborhoods, especially east of the Anacostia River. Citywide, every ward experienced killings in 2023, and, as the year ended, most had endured significant overall increases in violent crime.

More than 90 percent of the killings through Dec. 27 were by gunfire, police said. Of the 75 cases in which they had made an arrest by late November, they said, the motive in nearly half was an “argument.” At least 12 of the 75 cases stemmed from domestic disputes, eight were attributed to robberies and five to neighborhood conflicts.

No fewer than 106 children and teenagers were hit by bullets, and 16 of them were killed (while two others were beaten to death and another was fatally stabbed). Sixteen juveniles also were slain by gunfire in 2022, compared with eight the year before. And more youngsters pulled triggers in 2023 than in the past. In the first nine months of the year, for example, police reported making 458 arrests of juveniles for robbery, homicide or assault with a dangerous weapon — a 10 percent increase from the same period in 2022.

The killings in 2023 started about 6 p.m. on Jan. 3 and continued through the last days of the year.

17 homicides

Young lives cut short: 19 children and teens were slain last year

About 4 a.m. on the first Saturday of the year, a 13-year-old boy named Karon Blake was outside with friends on Quincy Street NE, in the Brookland neighborhood.

Inside a home nearby, a man heard noises. Jason Lewis, then 41, who worked for the D.C. Department of Parks and Recreation, walked outside carrying a handgun and saw three people who appeared to be breaking into cars, according to a police affidavit.

Lewis shouted at them, police said, before he fired shots, killing Karon. Lewis has pleaded not guilty to second-degree murder.

Karon was the first of the children and young teenagers slain in 2023, one of the worst years of deadly violence for young people in D.C. in recent history. He also was one of at least three teenagers suspected of committing a crime at the time they were killed, which officials and residents say further shows how much help many young people in the city need.

That morning, surveillance cameras recorded Karon’s last words:

“I’m sorry.”

“Please don’t.”

“I am a kid.”

People who died by homicide in January

22 homicides

Gunfire in public spaces: Bullets flew near students and transit riders, diners and library patrons

The month began with a shooting rampage at a Metro station on Capitol Hill. Police said Isaiah Trotman, 31, wounded two commuters and killed a Metro employee who tried to wrestle away his gun.

Robert Cunningham, a 64-year-old power department worker for the transit agency, was a husband and father of four. At his funeral, on Valentine’s Day, his widow said: “You made us a whole and beautiful family. You taught me what love is, and I thank you for 15 years of happiness.”

Their family dog, Duke, circled his coffin.

Trotman has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder. His attorney has indicated he probably will argue that Trotman should be acquitted by reason of insanity.

The shooting, at Metro’s Potomac Avenue station, was one example of gunfire rupturing the sense of safety in places central to daily life in the city.

In separate instances last year, people were killed in a nightclub, outside of public schools, inside a library and aboard a Metro train pulling into the Waterfront station. Two children, 6 and 9, were wounded as they were getting off a Metro bus. On a spring afternoon, a 17-year-old boy was killed in the parking lot of his high school. A gunfight erupted outside a seafood restaurant in Southwest one autumn evening, sending diners ducking for cover. Two months later, a student survived a shooting that occurred as he walked to school.

“We’re focused on how we get guns out of our city,” Bowser said shortly after Cunningham’s death. “We know we have guns that are creating tragedies in our city and our nation.”

People who died by homicide in February

21 homicides

Domestic violence: Volatile relationships erupted in lethal rage

Police found Andrea Bond, 30, dead in the living room of a home in Northeast, sprawled on the floor in front of a love seat. This was seven days into the month. When officers arrived and examined her body, they noticed a puncture wound in her left upper chest. Nearby, blood was splattered on a pair of black-and-white shoes.

Authorities later charged her boyfriend, 31-year-old Rayvon Slye, with murder. He has not yet entered a plea in the case. Witnesses told investigators that Slye had been accused of assaulting Bond four times in the 13 months before she was killed.

In 2023, at least 19 other people in the city died in domestic violence incidents, according to police. Police Chief Pamela A. Smith said authorities are working closely with victims of domestic violence, trying to ensure that residents have the necessary information about where they can get help.

People who died by homicide in March

14 homicides

Geographic disparity: As ever, most killings were in underserved areas of the city

Dajuan Blakney, 32, was sitting on steps outside an apartment building in the Fairlawn area of Southeast on April 21 when a man approached him with a rifle, according to police. They said the assailant was an acquaintance of Blakney’s and that the two had been involved in a dispute.

Surveillance video showed the gunman shooting Blakney 10 times, police said. They said the same .223-caliber rifle would later be used in two other shootings, based on comparisons of shell casings found at those scenes and at the scene of Blakney’s killing. A suspect has been charged in the Fairlawn homicide.

Nine of the 14 killings reported in April, including Blakney’s, occurred east of the Anacostia River, a marker of the uneven distribution of violence that has historically devastated the District’s poorest neighborhoods.

As of late December, 156 of the year’s homicides had occurred in Ward 7 and Ward 8, both east of the river, where 25 percent and 28.7 percent of the population, respectively, live below the poverty line, according to the latest census data.

People who died by homicide in April

25 homicides

Emblem of a crisis: With the body count rising, a small girl’s killing jolted the city

Arianna Davis, 10, and her siblings were in the back seat of their parents’ Jeep Renegade just before 9:15 p.m. on Sunday, May 14, headed home from a Mother’s Day event, when a car in front of the Jeep came to a stop.

Two or three people got out of the car and began shooting, Arianna’s parents told police. Seconds later, a volley of gunfire came from a different direction, with bullets whizzing across the tree-lined street in the Mayfair neighborhood of Northeast.

The family was caught in a crossfire that lasted several seconds. Based on surveillance video, police said, some of the shots appeared to come from automatic weapons.

Arianna’s parents didn’t know she been wounded until one of her siblings called out from the back seat.

“Ari, don’t die!”

Struck in the head by a stray bullet, Arianna was pronounced dead in a hospital three days later.

Her death came to symbolize the toll of deadly violence in D.C. — a 10-year-old girl, whose favorite color was blue, killed because she was in the wrong place at the wrong time.

Police later arrested Koran Gregory, 19, and charged him with first-degree murder while armed. His attorney, seeking to have his case dismissed, argued that there was no direct evidence tying Gregory to the crime. A prosecutor, and ultimately a judge, disagreed, and he was ordered jailed to await a trial.

People who died by homicide in May

22 homicides

‘The city is not safe’: Year-to-date killings surpassed 100

The month began with a one-a-day homicide pace, and by the end of the first week, the year-to-date body count had reached 102. That marked the earliest point in any year that D.C. surpassed 100 killings in at least two decades.

Residents and public officials began sounding a louder alarm that the District was in the throes of a violent crime crisis. The bloodshed would intensify as summer went on.

On June 8, Lasanta Qumar McGill, 62, was fatally shot outside a row of storefronts in the Shaw neighborhood. Police said he was a bystander hit by a stray bullet from a dispute involving three other men.

A week later, Samya Gill, 22, was killed when two people with rifles walked up to a parked car where she was sitting with a man and started shooting. Gill was pregnant. Her baby, delivered by emergency Caesarean section, survived.

The month ended with four teenagers slain in 10 days.

The founder and chief executive of Digital Pioneers Academy, a charter school that lost four students to gun violence in the 2022-23 academic year, wrote a letter to parents, declaring “the city is not safe.”

People who died by homicide in June

29 homicides

Far-flung grief: The violence touched visitors and new arrivals

A spasm of deadly mayhem early in the month left bereaved families in places as distant as a suburb of Louisville and the Parwan province of Afghanistan.

Maxwell Emerson, a 25-year-old teacher from Kentucky, was visiting D.C. for a educators’ seminar when he was fatally shot on the Catholic University campus. Police said the July 5 killing occurred during a possible robbery.

Emerson, a son of two educators, had been a social studies teacher and assistant coach of the wrestling team at Oldham County High School, in Buckner, Ky. His family said he texted his mother during the attack: “Help I’m being robbed at gunpoint.”

Earlier, on July 3, Nasratullah Ahmad Yar, 31, was slain. He had been an interpreter for the Army’s Special Forces in Afghanistan before he fled the Taliban with his wife and four children. He thought they would all be safe in the United States.

Ahmad Yar was working as a Lyft driver on Capitol Hill the night he was fatally shot. His family has said they do not know whether he was killed during a robbery or a carjacking. Police have not made an arrest. A resident’s Nest camera recorded four young people running down an alley after the shooting.

“You just killed him,” one person says in the footage.

Hundreds attended his funeral. With Ahmad Yar’s coffin in the ground, his youngest son, 15-month-old Ali Ahmad, watched as men took shovels to a pile of fresh dirt beside the grave.

People who died by homicide in July

33 homicides

The deadliest month: The killings forced political leaders to act

The District’s worst month of homicide in 2023 began with 13 people fatally shot in five days. There were two triple shootings. One was blocks from a bustling strip of bars in Adams Morgan; another was at an intersection in Anacostia.

Among the victims was 16-year-old Naima Liggon. She had been with friends at a party on Saturday, Aug. 26, after which, in the wee hours of Sunday, they went to a McDonald’s restaurant near 14th and U streets NW. Outside the McDonald’s, a fight erupted over a packet of sweet-and-sour sauce, police said, and Naima was stabbed to death by one of her companions, a 16-year-old girl who later pleaded as a juvenile to voluntary manslaughter.

The surge of violence came as city leaders were introducing a flurry of legislation aimed at reversing the crime trends. The D.C. Council passed an emergency bill that would make it easier for authorities to detain people accused of violent crimes while they await trials; Bowser selected a new police chief; and the U.S. attorney for the District, Matthew M. Graves, started charging more youths as adults when they were suspected in multiple robberies.

Frustrated by the relentless drumbeat of gunfire, council member Trayon White Sr. (D-Ward 8) declared, “We need the National Guard in D.C.”

People who died by homicide in August

30 homicides

Rapid fire: Officials noted a continuing proliferation of powerful guns

Gunmen fired more than 100 rounds in the Shaw neighborhood on the night of Sept. 1, blocks from the Walter E. Washington Convention Center. The barrage killed two people — 19-year-old Mikeya Ferguson and 18-year-old Cle’shai Perry — and injured a teenage girl who was not publicly identified.

The fusillade illustrated a trend that D.C. officials and criminal justice experts have said explains some of the violence in Washington: The growing number of firearms in the city, including some with machine gun capabilities.

Last year, D.C. police recovered 3,148 firearms through Dec. 27 — about the same pace as the 3,152 seized in 2022. As recently as 2019, police had found or confiscated fewer than 2,300 guns.

There also has been an increase in the number of guns seized in D.C. with a small device installed that turns semiautomatic firearms into weapons capable of firing automatically with one squeeze of the trigger. Graves, the U.S. attorney, said 27 such weapons were recovered in 2021. The number rose to 119 in 2022. As of late fall 2023, authorities had recovered more than 150 firearms equipped with the device.

People who died by homicide in September

16 homicides

Fewer bodies: After a summer of mayhem, the bloodshed eased slightly

The victims slain that month included Anee Roberson, 30, who was assaulted outside a popular nightspot at Ninth and U Streets NW, and 52-year-old Patricia Johnson, shot in her home in an incident that police said was “domestic in nature.”

The number of killings in October, each leaving grief-stricken families and loved ones, was down from the same month in 2022, when 18 people were slain. Some residents and public officials hoped the slower pace indicated that after a notably brutal summer, the city was on the right track.

Meanwhile, Bowser rolled out yet another piece of public safety legislation that she said would “send the strong message that violence is not acceptable in our city.”

That bill, which is still under consideration by the D.C. Council, would establish new felony crimes for engaging in or “directing” organized retail theft. It also would revive a discarded D.C. policy from 1996 that allowed the police chief to declare temporary “drug-free zones” in which people suspected of using or dealing drugs could be arrested for refusing orders to disperse. In 1990, a judge threw out an earlier iteration of the law as unconstitutional.

People who died by homicide in October

21 homicides

Deadly stickups: Armed robberies added to the scourge of violence

On Nov. 2, authorities arrested two teenagers who they said were members of a street crew responsible for at least five robberies, one of which killed 17-year-old Antonio Cunningham.

Police said Antonio, a high school junior, had been accosted by the teens weeks earlier, on the afternoon of Sept. 11, while he was on his way to an after-school job at a Jersey Mike’s sub shop in the Brentwood neighborhood of Northeast. He had been earning the first paychecks of his young life.

The assailants appeared to have wanted his sneakers, police said. One of them shot Antonio in the head.

Marlan Smith Jr., 16, and Anthony Monroe, 17, were charged as adults with first-degree murder, assault with a dangerous weapon and several counts of robbery. Police alleged that they had committed a string of attacks in which teenagers were robbed of footwear at gunpoint. Smith and Monroe, who were ordered held to await trials, have not yet entered pleas, according to court records.

Antonio’s death came as D.C. continued to face spikes in armed robberies. While a vast majority of incidents did not turn fatal, the District reported a 68 percent increase in robberies last year compared with 2022.

Antonio had five younger sisters, including a 6-year-old. He liked to wait with her at a bus stop as she headed to school.

People who died by homicide in November

24 homicides

Ceaseless sorrow: The year ended, but the pain is everlasting

By Christmastime, Arianna Davis’s siblings, who witnessed their sister’s death in a Mother’s Day crossfire, had lived nine months without her. Meanwhile, the mother of Naima Liggon, stabbed in August in a fight over sweet-and-sour sauce, had watched the teenager who killed her daughter plead guilty.

With the holidays approaching, loved ones of the slain in 2023 were preparing for empty seats at their tables, including the family of 36-year-old Julius Mccree, shot to death in Southeast the month before.

He left a daughter, Ja’Mari Mccree, now 13, who is halfway through seventh grade. She last saw her dad the Saturday before a gunman killed him in the wee hours of a Wednesday. He took her to a shoe store to pick out a birthday present. Ja’Mari chose a pair of sneakers, light blue and pink. They talked about her classes and how important it was to stay in school.

“I love you,” she said as she waved goodbye.

“I love you, too,” he replied.

A few days later, she arrived at school particularly excited. It was homecoming, and Ja’Mari was in her middle school’s cheer group. That meant she would star in the day’s pep rally.

She texted her father “good morning,” as she did most days.

She didn’t hear back.

A few hours later, Ja’Mari’s mother arrived at the school. Ja’Mari only remembers hearing that her dad had been killed and feeling her body shake.

She decided to stay in school that day.

“Because that’s what my dad would want me to do.”

People who died by homicide in December

Methodology

The victims listed here were ruled to have died by criminal homicide. The tally does not include people killed in homicides deemed to be noncriminal, such as justified police shootings or cases of self-defense. Not all victim names could be immediately obtained.

*Victims are listed in the months in which they died or in which their deaths were classified as homicides. Asterisks denote people who succumbed to injuries they incurred in earlier months or years, or people whose deaths were not ruled to be homicides until long after they were killed.

About this story

Reporting by Emily Davies, John D. Harden and Peter Hermann. Editing by Paul Duggan and Tara McCarty. Copy editing by Thomas Heleba. Design and development by Stephanie Hays. Design editing by Christian Font. Photo editing by Mark Miller.

Illustrations by Janelle Washington for The Washington Post.

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