In a brief Q&A with reporters late last week, Donald Trump repeated some familiar talking points while attacking his political opponents. “The Democrats, which I’ve been saying all along, they don’t give a damn about crime. They don’t care about crime,” he said. The president added, “But I care about crime.”
In reality, Trump clearly cares about some crimes — those committed by immigrants, for example — but he and his administration seem far less concerned about other offenses.
Take environmental crimes, for example.
The Environmental Protection Agency hit a 30-year low in 2018 in the number of pollution cases it referred for criminal prosecution, Justice Department data show.
EPA said in a statement that it is directing “its resources to the most significant and impactful cases.” But the 166 cases referred for prosecution in the last fiscal year is the lowest number since 1988, when Ronald Reagan was president and 151 cases were referred, according to Justice Department data obtained by the nonprofit Public Employees for Environmental Responsibility advocacy group and released Tuesday. […]
EPA referrals resulted in 62 federal convictions in fiscal year 2018, the fewest since 1995.
This isn’t the only agency that’s seen a significant drop in enforcing existing protections. The New York Times reported in November, “Across the corporate landscape, the Trump administration has presided over a sharp decline in financial penalties against banks and big companies accused of malfeasance.”
The Times‘ report highlighted a 62% drop in penalties from the Securities and Exchange Commission, and a 72% decline in corporate penalties from the Justice Department’s criminal prosecutions.
Trump’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, meanwhile, has dramatically curtailed its enforcement efforts, and the administration’s enforcement of antitrust laws has reached a level unseen since the Nixon era.
The Associated Press reported in July:









