04/20/2026
On April 19, 2926, the Law Enforcement Commendation Medal was presented to Retired MPDC Homicide Detective Mitch Credle. Retired Detective Credle lives in the D.C. metropolitan area, where he has been intensely involved in community service, coaching, and mentoring Washington, D.C. youth since 1982. He joined the Metropolitan Police Department in 1986 and began investigating homicides in 1991. He was recruited to the Homicide Branch early in his career due to his strong rapport with the community. He has coached and mentored youth in Washington, D.C. for over 40 years, and his passion as a youth coach has been instrumental in the development of hundreds of young people who are now productive adults. Mitch earned his B.A. in Criminal Justice from the University of the District of Columbia.
During his career as a homicide detective, he was responsible for investigating many high‑profile cases until 2013, when he transferred to the Sexual Assault Unit. He has also lectured at local universities and taught forensic science during the summer at Georgetown University.
Mitch is the author of two books, Stranger in the Streets and Damaged Roots, which are available on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and Lulu. Since retirement, he has ventured into filmmaking and produced films that are streaming on Tubi and Prime Video. His documentary 12 Years in Hell: Blood of a City opened doors for him, leading to participation in major documentaries and true‑crime television shows.
Mitch has appeared as himself in the Netflix documentary Crack: Co***ne, Corruption & Conspiracy by Emmy Award–winning filmmaker Stanley Nelson; NBC Dateline with four‑time Emmy Award–winning journalist Dennis Murphy; A&E’s City Confidential; ID Discovery Channel’s American Detective with Joe Kenda; Oxygen’s Snapped: Killer Couples; TV One’s Fatal Attraction and Payback; and Tubi’s original film Left For Dead. He also appeared in the documentary Finding Kendrick Johnson, produced by actress Jennifer Lewis and filmmaker Jason Po***ck, which is available on Starz and Prime Video.
During his career as a homicide detective, he has appeared on CNN, the CBS Connie Chung Show, Fox 5’s America’s Most Wanted, and all D.C. local news outlets. In 1996, The Washington Post Magazine featured him in a ten‑page article titled Order on the Court. In 2017, Mitch co‑founded a nonprofit youth organization, Safe House DC, where youth are taught film production, digital media, financial literacy, entrepreneurship, job readiness, community‑police relationships, and life skills.