Overview:
The U.S. Department of Justice has terminated about $500 million in grants to organizations that work to prevent gun violence, including hospital-based programs that offer social services and job skills to young people in violent neighborhoods. The cuts have already prompted layoffs and reductions at organizations around the country. The terminated grants included those for protecting children, victims' assistance, hate-crime prevention, and law enforcement and prosecution. The cuts have sparked concern among experts that the efforts to prevent violence are being undermined by the government.
Byย Bram Sable-Smith
ST. LOUIS โ Violent crime wasย already trending downย from a covid-era spike when President Donald Trump presentedย a picture of unbridled crimeย in America on the campaign trail in 2024. Now his administration has eliminated about $500 million in grants to organizations that buttress public safety, including many working to prevent gun violence.
In Oakland, California, a hospital-based program to prevent retaliatory gun violence lost a $2 million grant just as the traditionallyย turbulent summer monthsย approach. Another $2 million award was pulled from a Detroit program that offersย social services and job skillsย to young people in violent neighborhoods. And in St. Louis, a clinic treating the physical and emotional injuries of gunshot victims also lost a $2 million award.
They are among 373 grants that the U.S. Department of Justice abruptly terminated in April. The largest share of the nixed awards were designated forย community-based violence interventionย โ programs that range from conflict mediation and de-escalation to hospital-based initiatives that seek to prevent retaliation from people who experience violent injuries.
Gun violence is among Americaโsย most deadly public health crises, medical experts say.
Among programs whose grants were terminated were those for protecting children, victimsโ assistance, hate-crime prevention, and law enforcement and prosecution, according toย an analysisย by the Council on Criminal Justice, a nonpartisan think tank. The grants totaled $820 million when awarded, but some of that money has been spent.

โNot only are these funds being pulled away from worthy investments that will save lives,โ saidย Thomas Abt, founding director of the Violence Reduction Center at the University of Maryland, โbut the way that this was done โ by pulling authorized funding without warning โ is going to create a lasting legacy of mistrust.โ
The Justice Department โis focused on prosecuting criminals, getting illegal drugs off the streets, and protecting all Americans from violent crime,โ according to a statement provided by agency spokesperson Natalie Baldassarre. โDiscretionary funds that are not aligned with the administrationโs priorities are subject to review and reallocation, including funding for clinics that engage in race-based selectivity.โ
The Council on Criminal Justiceย analysis of the terminated grantsย found that descriptions of 31% of them included references to โdiversity,โ โequity,โ โrace,โ โracial,โ โracism,โ or โgender.โ
Baldassarreโs statement said the department is committed to working with organizations โto hear any appeal, and to restore funding as appropriate.โ Indeed, it restored seven of the terminated grants for victimsโ services afterย Reuters reported on the cutsย in April.
But the cuts have already promptedย layoffs and reductionsย at other organizations around the country. Five groupsย filed a lawsuitย on May 21 to restore the grants in their entirety.
Joseph Griffin, executive director of the Oakland nonprofit Youth Alive, which pioneered hospital-based violence intervention in the 1990s, said his organization had spent only about $60,000 of its $2 million grant before it was axed. The grant was primarily to support the intervention program and was awarded for a three-year period but lasted just seven months. The money would have helped pay to intervene with about 30 survivors of gun violence toย prevent retaliatory violence. Heโs trying to find a way to continue the work, without overtaxing his team.

โWe will not abandon a survivor of violence at the hospital bedside in the same way that the federal government is abandoning our field,โ he said.
The cuts are also hitting St. Louis, often dogged by being labeled one of the most dangerous citiesย in America. The city created anย Office of Violence Preventionย with money availableย under former President Joe Biden, and various groups received Justice Department grants, too.
Locals say the efforts have helped: The 33% drop in the cityโs homicide rate from 2019 to 2024 was theย second-largest decreaseย among 29 major cities examined by the Council on Criminal Justice.
โI donโt think thereโs any doubt that thereโs some positive impact from the work thatโs happening,โ said University of Missouri-St. Louis criminologistย Chris Sullivan, who received a grant from the Justice Department to assess the work of the cityโs new Office of Violence Prevention. That research grant remains in place.
But the Justice Departmentย slashed two other grantsย in St. Louis, including $2 million for Power4STL. The nonprofit operates the Bullet Related Injury Clinic, dubbed the BRIC, which provides free treatment for physical and mental injuries caused by bullets.
The BRIC had about $1.3 million left on its grant when the award was terminated in April. LJ Punch, a former trauma surgeon who founded the clinic in 2020, said it was intended to fund a mobile clinic, expand mental health services, evaluate the clinicโs programs, and pay for a patient advisory board. The BRIC wonโt abandon those initiatives, Punch said, but will likely need to move slower.
Keisha Blanchard joined the BRICโs advisory board after her experience as a patient at the clinic following a January 2024 gun injury. Someone fired a bullet into her back from the rear window of a Chevy Impala while Blanchard was out for a lunchtime stroll with a friend from her neighborhood walking group. The shooting was random, Blanchard said, but people always assume she did something to provoke it. โItโs so much shame that comes behind that,โ she said.

The 42-year-old said the shooting and her initial medical treatment left her feeling angry and unseen. Her family wasnโt allowed to be with her at the hospital since the police didnโt know who shot her or why. When she asked about taking the bullet out, she was told that theย common medical practiceย is to leave it in. โWeโre not in the business of removing bullets,โ she recalled being told. At a follow-up appointment, she said, she watched her primary care doctor google what to do for a gunshot wound.
โNobody cares whatโs going to happen to me after this,โ Blanchard recalled thinking.
Before she was referred to the BRIC, she said, she was treated as though she should be happy just to be alive. But a part of her died in the shooting, she said. Her joyful, carefree attitude gave way to hypervigilance. She stopped taking walks. She uprooted herself, moving to a neighborhood 20 miles away.

The bullet stayed lodged inside her, forcing her to carry a constant reminder of the violence that shattered her sense of safety, until Punch removed it from her back in November. Blanchard said the removal made her feel โreborn.โ
Itโs a familiar experience among shooting survivors, according to Punch.
โPeople talk about the distress about having bullets still inside their bodies, and how every waking conscious moment brings them back to the fact that thatโs still inside,โ Punch said. โBut theyโre told repeatedly inside conventional care settings that thereโs nothing that needs to be done.โ
The Justice Department grant to the BRIC had been an acknowledgment, Punch said, that healing has a role in public safety by quelling retaliatory violence.
โThe unhealed trauma in the body of someone whoโs gotten the message that they are not safe can rapidly turn into an act of violence when that person is threatened again,โ Punch said.
Community gun violence, even in large cities, is concentrated amongย relatively small groups of peopleย who are often both victims and perpetrators, according to researchers. Violence reduction initiatives are frequently tailored to those networks.

Jennifer Lorentz heads the Diversion Unit in the office of the St. Louis Circuit Attorney, the cityโs chief prosecutor. The unit offers mostly young, nonviolent offenders an opportunity to avoid prosecution by completing a program to address the issues that initially led to their arrest. About 80% of the participants have experienced gun violence and are referred to the BRIC, Lorentz said, calling the clinic critical to her programโs success.
โWeโre getting them these resources, and weโre changing the trajectory of their lives,โ Lorentz said. โHelping people is part of public safety.โ
Punch said the BRIC staffers were encouraged during the Justice Department application process to emphasize their reach into St. Louisโ Black community, which is disproportionately affected by gun violence. He suspects that emphasis is why its grant was terminated.
Punch likened the grant terminations to only partially treating tuberculosis, which allows the highly infectious disease to become resistant to medicine.
โIf you partially extend a helping hand to somebody, and then you rip it away right when they start to trust you, you assure they will never trust you again,โ he said. โIf your intention is to prevent violence, you donโt do that.โ
KFF Health News is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues and is one of the core operating programs at KFFโan independent source of health policy research, polling, and journalism. Learn more about KFF. Subscribe to KFF Health Newsโ free Morning Briefing. This article first appeared on KFF Health News and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.
