LOCAL CRIME & PUBLIC SAFETY
Teen charged in fatal D.C. carjacking was freed after earlier arrest
By Keith L. Alexander, Omari Daniels and Emily Davies
October 27, 2023 at 7:28 p.m. EDT

The D.C. Superior Court building. (Keith L. Alexander/The Washington Post)
A 15-year-old girl, who D.C. police say was involved in a carjacking and crash that killed another girl Thursday, had been placed in the custody of the citys Department of Youth Rehabilitation Services a week earlier because she faced robbery and theft charges. But a judge said she ordered the girl released after the agency said it had no available housing for her.
The teenage girl, now charged as a juvenile with several additional crimes, was allegedly involved in an incident in which a carjacked Honda Pilot, traveling at a high speed, struck a utility pole at Brentwood Road and Bryant Street NE shortly before 2 a.m. Thursday, according to police. They said the driver, Kendra Outlaw, 16, of Northeast, was killed.
Police said the girls were part of a group of young people who carjacked two vehicles the Honda and a Toyota Camry that were traveling together at the time of the crash. After the Honda hit the pole, police said, it flipped over and struck the Toyota, which came to a stop. The 15-year-old girl was a passenger in the Toyota, police said. They said three people got out of the Toyota and two of them ran away. The teen was arrested at the scene.
At a hearing Friday in D.C. Superior Court, the teen wearing an oversize sweatshirt with singer Selena on the front sat with her lawyer while her parents and other family members watched from the courtroom gallery. The D.C. attorney generals office, which prosecutes juveniles in the city, charged her with armed carjacking, unlawful entry of a stolen vehicle and conspiracy. Through her attorney, Julie Swaney, she pleaded not guilty.
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By Keith L. Alexander
Keith L. Alexander covers crime and courts, specifically D.C. Superior Court cases, for The Washington Post. Alexander was part of the Pulitzer Prize-winning team that investigated fatal police shootings across the nation in 2015. Follow for updates @keithlalexander Twitter
https://twitter.com/keithlalexander
By Omari Daniels
Omari Daniels is a News Aide working with the Metro department at The Washington Post. He has previously contributed to The Posts Metro and Capital Business sections. Twitter
https://twitter.com/theotherbigo
By Emily Davies
Emily Davies is a reporter covering crime and criminal justice in Washington, D.C. She started at The Washington Post as an intern in June 2019. Twitter
https://twitter.com/ELaserDavies