Trump says ‘1 rough hour’ of policing would end crime
- Former President Donald Trump suggested at a rally that law enforcement needs "one really violent day" to effectively address crime, especially shoplifting.
- Trump stated, “One rough hour — and I mean real rough — the word will get out and it will end immediately," during his remarks.
- He criticized policies he claims protect criminals and falsely claimed that shoplifting under $950 in California is legal, blaming Vice President Kamala Harris for rising crime.
75 Articles
75 Articles
What is Donald Trump's 'one violent day' plan, the purge-like answer to crime in the US?
At a recent rally in Pennsylvania, Trump proposed a drastic solution to crime: giving law enforcement 'one real rough, nasty' day to crack down on offenders, suggesting it would bring crime to an immediate halt. While Trump's campaign insists he was speaking in jest, critics have compared the idea to the dystopian movie 'the Purge'
Trump's Own 'Kristallnacht' : A 'Really Violent Day' Of Policing
GOP presidential nominee Donald Trump openly advocated police brutality when, during a campaign speech in Erie, Pennsylvania on Sunday, September 29, he called for "one really violent day" of policing.This "extraordinarily rough" approach, Trump promised, would dramatically reduce crime in major U.S...
Trump suggests ‘1 rough hour’ of policing would end retail crime; FBI stats show drop in violent crime
(The Hill) -- Former President Trump suggested Sunday that one “rough hour” of policing would end retail crime as he called for law enforcement to be freed up to "do their job" without restrictions. "See, we have to let the police do their job. And if they have to be extraordinarily rough—" Trump said at a rally in Erie, Pa., trailing off and claiming there are cases of criminals walking out of department stores with large appliances on their ba…
Trump suggests ‘1 rough hour’ of policing would end retail crime
(The Hill) -- Former President Trump suggested Sunday that one “rough hour” of policing would end retail crime, as he called for law enforcement to be freed up to "do their job" without restrictions. "See, we have to let the police do their job. And if they have to be extraordinarily rough—" Trump said at a rally in Erie, Pa., trailing off and claiming there are cases of criminals walking out of department stores with large appliances on their b…
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