Unidentified Speaker 1 said "violent crime is down across the board in Columbus," thanking residents for their partnership and praising the city's public-safety efforts.
The speaker, identified in the transcript only as Unidentified Speaker 1, credited "the leadership of Chief Bryant" and "our city's Office of Violence Prevention, community partners, and dedicated residents" for the progress. The statement did not include numeric crime statistics or specific timeframes for the changes cited.
Unidentified Speaker 2 listed the types of offenses described as reduced this year: "homicides, felonious assaults, nonfatal shootings, burglaries, and car thefts." The transcript records that the speakers attributed improved case resolution, prevention of subsequent crimes, removal of violent offenders from the streets, and outcomes for victims and families to increased collaboration between residents, officers, and violence-intervention specialists.
Speakers framed the approach as community-driven. Unidentified Speaker 1 said, "1 person, 1 interaction at a time," and called the approach "the Columbus way," urging residents to continue partnering with law enforcement into 2026. The remarks were delivered as a year-end statement; the transcript includes no formal motions, votes, or policy directives arising from the remarks.
Because the speakers did not provide specific counts, percentages, or the time range for the reported declines, the scale and timing of the changes could not be verified from the transcript alone. No additional data sources were cited in the remarks.
The statement closed with a call to maintain community commitment as the city moves into 2026.