Ottawa Citizen

Homicide probe in death of D.C. officer

- SARAH N. LYNCH AND TIM REID

WASHINGTON • A homicide investigat­ion was opened on Friday into the death of Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick, who died from head injuries sustained while defending the U.S. Capitol from a mob of President Donald Trump’s loyalists.

Sicknick, an Iraq War veteran, died in a hospital on Thursday night after “physically engaging” with proTrump rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol building on Wednesday to disrupt the certificat­ion of Democrat Joe Biden’s presidenti­al election win, according to the Capitol Police.

Sicknick’s death will be investigat­ed by the Washington Metropolit­an Police Department’s Homicide Branch, the Capitol Police said in a statement. The FBI will help in the investigat­ion of Sicknick’s death, acting attorney general Jeffrey Rosen said on Friday.

Rosen did not say whether the FBI would investigat­e the death as a homicide, but said the Justice Department “will spare no resources in investigat­ing and holding accountabl­e those responsibl­e.”

Sicknick’s death brings to five the number of people who died due to the riot. One woman was shot by a law enforcemen­t officer inside the Capitol building as she tried to break into the House Chamber, and three others died of “medical emergencie­s,” according to police.

T he deaths r aise t he stakes for Trump, who many Democrats — and some of his fellow Republican­s — have blamed for inciting supporters to storm the Capitol in a speech to them on Wednesday morning and after claiming falsely for weeks that the Nov. 3 election had been stolen from him.

Sicknick, who joined the Capitol Police in 2008, was struck in the head by a fire extinguish­er while fighting off rioters, according to the New York Times.

“He returned to his division office and collapsed,” the Capitol Police statement said. “He was taken to a local hospital, where he succumbed to his injuries.”

Craig Sicknick, the fallen officer’s brother, told the Daily Beast that his brother graduated as a Capitol Police officer two days before the 2008 inaugurati­on of Democratic President Barack Obama and he “always tried to do what was right.”

He added: “He worked a lot of overtime, and he was on during this mess.”

Sicknick did not immediatel­y respond to a Reuters request to talk.

Brian Sicknick was a former Air National Guardsman who served in Iraq before joining the police force, his brother said.

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Brian Sicknick

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