D.C. Police Chief Robert Contee held a summit with city teenagers to discuss the impact of rising crime on their communities. 
LIVE: Metropolitan Police Department’s Youth Summit- Closing Session
Tune in at https://t.co/bk26yNEXix for a captioned stream. https://t.co/bnE6jq8JZE — Mayor Muriel Bowser (@MayorBowser) December 4, 2021
“There are other ways to deal with conflict,” Que Wallace continued. “You don’t have to pick up a gun and shoot nobody.” WTOP 2017 story: Teen dies days after Brentwood shooting So far in 2021, more than 205 people have been killed in D.C. — the largest number since 2003. Eight of those victims were under the age of 18. “When we’re having these conversations about things that impact you,” Police Chief Contee said earlier today. “I think you would agree with me that if we’re going to be talking about you, you should be part of the conversation.” “In some spaces, young people have been sidelined in silence and your voices are not being heard. That stops today, you have direct access to the chief of police of the Metropolitan Police Department,” he added. Before the teens broke off into individual discussion groups with members of the district’s law enforcement, Contee emphasized the importance of believing things can change. “Don’t be limited by your immediate environment, by where you live. Don’t allow your neighborhood to define who you are,” he said. “Yeah, I’m from Carver Terrace, but that doesn’t stop me from running a half a billion dollar agency in the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C.. My neighborhood that I started from did not dictate where I ended up.” 
