Washington, D.C., parents are now on notice: if your child is part of a violent “teen takeover,” prosecutors may come after you too.
U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro announced Friday that adults who knowingly allow minors to violate curfew laws or participate in the increasingly chaotic gatherings could face criminal penalties, including up to six months behind bars.
The warning marks a major escalation as city officials struggle to contain large groups of juveniles swarming neighborhoods, disrupting businesses and overwhelming police resources.
“Teen takeovers have disrupted neighborhoods, forced businesses to close temporarily, and diverted valuable law enforcement resources from the residents of the District,” Pirro said in a statement.
“Adults who facilitate, enable, or knowingly permit a minor to engage in delinquent acts may face criminal penalties of up to six months of incarceration,” she added. “Charges may be pursued regardless of whether the juvenile is separately prosecuted.”
U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro issued a stark warning to parents allowing their children to participate in disruptive teen takeovers in Washington, D.C.: “Parents, do your job, or we will do ours.” pic.twitter.com/13xdMcOgOX
— Breaking911 (@Breaking911) May 18, 2026
The incidents — commonly referred to as “teen takeovers” — have become a growing headache across parts of the nation’s capital.
Authorities say the gatherings often spiral into assaults, robberies, fights, vandalism and widespread disorderly conduct, with large crowds of juveniles flooding entertainment districts and commercial corridors late at night.
Businesses in affected neighborhoods have repeatedly complained about property damage, frightened customers and forced temporary closures during the disturbances.
Pirro’s announcement signals a tougher law-and-order approach from federal prosecutors as frustration mounts over repeat juvenile crime and concerns that existing curfew enforcement has lacked teeth.
The move also places responsibility squarely on parents and guardians, with prosecutors arguing that adults cannot simply ignore what their children are doing on city streets after curfew.
The crackdown comes as public safety continues to dominate political debate in Washington, where leaders have faced pressure to respond to rising concerns over youth violence and organized flash-mob style gatherings.
For now, Pirro is making one thing clear: authorities are no longer treating these incidents as harmless teenage mischief.
And parents may soon find themselves answering for the chaos, too.
More over at Just The News:
Pirro to increase criminal pentalties of adults who allow 'teen takeovers' https://t.co/unQIleDFmG
— Just the News (@JustTheNews) May 18, 2026