Not directly on that, but in June the Post did a large investigation into the failures of the DC juvenile justice program.
These failures harm the kids and also indirectly everyone else in DC.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/investigations/interactive/2025/dc-dyrs-youth-crime-rehabilitation/
"Progress at the agency — charged with setting serious and repeat teen offenders on a better path — unraveled as youth crime spiked, a Washington Post investigation found:
The agency has taken months to provide many teens with comprehensive treatment plans, violating a law that requires it to do so within 17 days of a judge sentencing a youth to its custody. In fiscal year 2022, the first after the city regained control of the agency, it completed planning for 93 percent of teenagers within three months, according to agency metrics. The next year, less than half had plans in the same time frame.
The District’s detention center, where children are held while they wait for their plans, is overcrowded. Fistfights break out often. Police come to quell the violence, while ambulances whisk away the injured. Last year, at least two teenagers tested positive for fentanyl. Since 2021, the number of dangerous incidents at the center has nearly quadrupled, meaning chaos has become a near-daily reality for the high-risk young people held there.
Children committed to DYRS while awaiting treatment should be transferred to a rehabilitation program within 30 days, the agency director has testified. But the average wait time saw a nearly fivefold increase, to 62 days in 2024 from 13 in 2018, The Post found. Some teens waited more than six months for treatment.
Many delays are caused by a shortage of beds for teens at residential programs that contract with DYRS. Bowser didn’t pursue a 2022 proposal to create a psychiatric residential treatment facility in the District, The Post found. That left DYRS relying on a dwindling number of facilities with long wait lists. They often reject D.C. youth or have been accused of serious misconduct. Last year, the agency sent 14 children to a Pennsylvania nonprofit where two staffers had been charged with sexually assaulting children — including a teen from D.C. — at one of its centers.
Because time spent waiting for placement doesn’t count toward their stay in a rehabilitative program, children have routinely been kept away from home for much longer than intended. Attorneys and teens commonly refer to this wait period as “dead time,” which advocates say can be logistically and psychologically harmful to a young person."