A brand new watchdog report has uncovered the eye-watering prices to U.S. taxpayers which have piled up on account of President Donald Trump’s federal takeover of Washington D.C.
Final summer time, Trump introduced by way of govt order that the federal authorities could be taking on management of the D.C. police division, whereas additionally deploying forces from the district’s Nationwide Guard regiment and from the regiments in different states. This, he and his MAGA allies claimed, was being achieved to handle rampant crime in Washington, even if main crimes had been on the decline within the metropolis for years, as they’ve been in lots of main metro areas. It was additionally speculated that the transfer got here as a response to one in every of Trump’s former DOGE staff, Edward Coristine, getting assaulted by two youngsters.
On Monday, the watchdog group Residents for Duty and Ethics in Washington launched a brand new report detailing the huge bills that this takeover has racked up on the dime of taxpayers, totaling over $18 million in lower than a 12 months, based mostly on supplies that the group obtained from the U.S. Marshals by way of a lawsuit.
“From August 2025 to March 2026, the U.S. Marshals Service recognized over $18 million in taxpayer funded prices associated to its deployment for the Trump administration’s federal takeover of D.C., in accordance with information obtained by CREW by means of a lawsuit introduced beneath the Freedom of Data Act,” the watchdog report defined. “The marshals play a number of essential roles, together with offering safety for judges, monitoring down fugitives throughout the nation and operating the witness safety program. The company apparently pulled sources from district courts throughout the nation, together with in Guam and the Virgin Islands, to take part within the ‘D.C. Secure and Lovely Process Drive.’”
These extra prices from the Marshals are on prime of the $332 million value associated to the deployment of Nationwide Guard forces to D.C. as of February.
The CREW report added later: “Probably the most important value was almost $6 million pulled from USMS’ tactical operations division, the unit liable for responding to high-threat and emergency conditions. The company additionally pulled over $3 million from its investigative operations division and over $2 million from the D.C. Superior Courtroom, decreasing the variety of marshals offering safety in a excessive profile courthouse in D.C. throughout a surge of threats towards judges.”
Primarily based on emails that the group obtained from the lawsuit, in addition they decided that the “marshals’ involvement in it was introduced abruptly and had important staffing implications,” with one August e-mail from a chief within the Tactical Operations Division claiming that brokers could be deployed the next day.












