Dear DOGE, While You’re at it, End the Federal Handcuffing of Local Police

Dear DOGE, While You’re at it, End the Federal Handcuffing of Local Police

Across America, the iron grip of Washington bureaucrats tightens around our police departments, smothering them under layers of federal decrees that serve only to paralyze law enforcement and embolden criminals. These so-called “consent decrees” are not about justice. They are not about accountability. They are about power—federal power overriding local governance, imposing an agenda dictated by distant elites with no stake in the safety of the communities they regulate.

Let’s call these decrees what they are: federal occupations of local police forces. They are court-ordered shackles, forged by the Department of Justice in the wake of “allegations” that may or may not hold water. Once imposed, a court-appointed monitor—a bureaucratic overseer with no accountability to the people—dictates compliance, reporting not to the citizens who actually live in these communities, but to the same federal machine that imposed the decree in the first place. And when does it end? Whenever the court—another unelected body—decides. Which, as history has shown, could mean never.

The Federal Handcuffing of Local Police

From the Los Angeles Police Department to the Cleveland Division of Police, from Ferguson to Seattle, from Chicago to Baltimore, local departments across the nation have found themselves entangled in these decrees, their officers reduced from proactive protectors of the public to passive bureaucrats, burdened by paperwork and cowed by the looming threat of federal punishment.

But what do the people actually want?

  • More visible police patrols, especially in high-crime areas, because they know—unlike the bureaucrats—that a strong police presence deters crime.
  • Faster response times, because waiting minutes instead of seconds can be the difference between life and death.
  • Proactive crime prevention, including traffic stops and neighborhood watch programs, because stopping crime before it happens is common sense.
  • School Resource Officers to safeguard students from the very threats that Washington pretends don’t exist.
  • Public safety education, empowering citizens with knowledge on how to protect themselves and their families.

Yet, not one of these public demands is addressed by federal consent decrees. Instead, these decrees focus on appeasing radical activists, crippling police departments, and ensuring that criminals face as little resistance as possible.

A Bureaucratic Straitjacket on Policing

Once upon a time, consent decrees were meant to correct specific, targeted problems. But like any Washington intervention, they metastasized. Today, they have become a sweeping federal leash, designed to control and neuter local police forces. They drown departments in a sea of regulations, turning officers into hesitant bystanders, terrified that any split-second decision will be second-guessed by bureaucrats who have never faced a violent suspect, never chased down an armed criminal, never put their lives on the line.

The consequences? Crime surges. Violent criminals, emboldened by weak enforcement, seize control of neighborhoods. The police, hamstrung by fear of reprisal, pull back. The people—the very citizens who demand law and order—are left defenseless.

Federal consent decrees do not make cities safer. They make them war zones.

The Financial and Moral Cost

Then there’s the staggering financial cost. These decrees bleed budgets dry, diverting millions away from actual policing and into the pockets of consultants, compliance officers, and government monitors. While communities beg for more officers on the street, their tax dollars are funneled into endless bureaucratic oversight—oversight that serves no one but the bureaucrats themselves.

And who do these federal overseers answer to? Not the voters. Not the local officials. Not the citizens who suffer under their decrees. They answer only to Washington, a city insulated from the very crime and chaos its policies unleash on the rest of the country. This is taxation without representation. This is federal despotism disguised as “reform.”

End the Federal Siege of Local Policing

Enough. The people want law and order. They want their communities protected, their streets made safe. They do not want faceless bureaucrats dictating police policy from the comfort of their secure offices.

It is time to abolish these consent decrees. To return power to local communities. To restore the ability of police to do their jobs without fear, without hesitation, and without the specter of federal punishment looming over every split-second decision.

Washington has had its way for too long. And the result? A nation besieged by lawlessness, its cities crumbling under the weight of unchecked crime. The federal government should not be dictating how local police protect their citizens. That is the right of the communities themselves—the people who live there, who suffer the consequences when crime is ignored, who know best what it takes to secure their streets.

For the sake of public safety, for the preservation of local self-governance, for the survival of law and order in this country—end these decrees now.