crimeliberal

How crime reports can leave families in the dark

Washington, D.C., USATuesday, May 12, 2026

< A Life Cut Short: The Ripple Effect of Flawed Crime Data and Eric Tarpinian-Jachym’s Legacy >


A Promising Future Erased

Eric Tarpinian-Jachym was weeks away from earning a finance degree from the University of Massachusetts Amherst when a stray bullet ended his life last June. The 21-year-old had just completed a summer internship in Washington, D.C., where he envisioned building a career in finance—perhaps in corporate leadership or investment. Instead, his family now navigates a reality where his diploma arrives posthumously, a hollow symbol of what could have been.

The circumstances of his death are chilling: while walking near 7th and M Streets Northwest, Eric was struck by a bullet fired in what police describe as a targeted shooting. The shot, he was told, was not meant for him—but that distinction offers no solace to a mother burying her son. Three individuals now face first-degree murder charges in connection with the case, yet the Tarpinian-Jachym family is left grappling with a far deeper question: Why did this happen?


The Invisible Crisis: How Crime Data Manipulation Puts Lives at Risk

Eric’s death is not an isolated tragedy. It is a symptom of a systemic failure that stretches from the streets of D.C. to the desks of its police department. A recently released 554-page Internal Affairs report has exposed a disturbing pattern of data manipulation within the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD). Officers—pressured to suppress rising crime rates—routinely misclassified crimes, ensuring they vanished from official violent crime tallies.

The distortions were extensive:

  • Robberies recorded as thefts
  • Assaults with weapons downgraded to simple assaults
  • Shootings labeled in ways that excluded them from violent crime statistics

One officer alone admitted to altering nearly 300 cases. The repercussions have been swift: 13 high-ranking officers are now on administrative leave, while investigations into the department’s practices continue. But the damage is already done—and its consequences are deadly.

Eric’s mother fears that when crimes are erased from the record, offenders grow emboldened, believing they can act without consequence. "If they think they can get away with it, they’ll try again," she told reporters. "And next time, it could be someone else’s child."

The Broader Fight for Truth

The Tarpinian-Jachym family’s fight is part of a larger reckoning. Across the country, communities are demanding honest crime reporting as a cornerstone of public safety. When data is weaponized to serve political or institutional interests, the cost is measured in lives lost.

Eric’s story is a warning. The question is whether D.C.—and the nation—will listen.


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