Call & Times

The Capitol mob came dangerousl­y close to Pence

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WASHINGTON — The violent mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 came perilously close to Vice President Mike Pence, who was not evacuated from the Senate chamber for about 14 minutes after the Capitol Police reported an initial attempted breach of the complex – enough time for the marauders to rush inside the building and approach his location, according to law enforcemen­t officials and video footage from that day.

Secret Service officers eventually spirited Pence to a room off the Senate floor with his wife and daughter after rioters began to pour into the Capitol, many loudly denouncing the vice president as a traitor as they marched through the first floor below the Senate chamber.

About one minute after Pence was hustled out of the chamber, a group charged up the stairs to a second-floor landing in the Senate, chasing a Capitol Police officer who drew them away from the Senate.

Pence and his family had just ducked into a hideaway less than 100 feet from that landing, according to three people familiar with his whereabout­s, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of the situation. If the pro-Trump mob had arrived seconds earlier, the attackers would have been in eyesight of the vice president as he was rushed across a reception hall into the office.

The proximity of the Jan. 6 mob to the vice president and the delay in evacuating him from the chamber – which have not been previously reported – raise questions about why the Secret Service did not move him earlier and underscore the jeopardy that top government leaders faced during the siege.

As an increasing­ly hostile and violent crowd surrounded the Capitol, Pence remained center stage, presiding over a joint session of Congress for more than an hour after the Capitol Police chief said he alerted his superiors that his force was being overrun and needed emergency reinforcem­ents.

The potential exposure of the vice president underscore­s how law enforcemen­t agencies struggled to manage the rapidly expanding crisis in real time.

The Secret Service declined to comment on any element of Pence’s movements in the Capitol or his evacuation, other than to say that he was “secure” during the siege.

“While the Secret Service does not speak specifical­ly about the means and methods of our protective operations, Vice President Pence was secure at all times on Jan. 6,” Secret Service spokeswoma­n Catherine Milhoan said in a statement.

A spokesman for Pence declined to comment.

Pence was ultimately evacuated from his office off the Senate floor to a more secure location elsewhere in the Capitol complex. It is unclear exactly how long that took. But as the vice president made his way through the building, a growing number of rioters were joining their cohorts and coursing through the Capitol’s labyrinthi­ne halls.

Once inside, they used pipes, flagpoles and other weapons to shatter windows and break furniture. One police officer later died of injuries sustained during the onslaught. Dozens of officers were wounded, including some who were struck with a fire extinguish­er and another who was dragged down a set of steps and attacked by the crowd.

Many of those in the mob had their sights on Pence – enraged that he had refused President Donald Trump’s demand that he head off the electoral college count that formalized President-elect Joe Biden’s victory.

According to the FBI, one man who was charged this week with trespassin­g and disorderly conduct after making his way into the Senate chamber said in a YouTube video: “Once we found out Pence turned on us and that they had stolen the election, like, officially, the crowd went crazy. I mean, it became a mob.”

At one point, a group of rioters began chanting, “Hang Mike Pence!” as they streamed into the main door on the east side of the Capitol.

One man who made his way into the Senate chamber reached Pence’s chair on the Senate dais. Shirtless, wearing face paint and a furry coyote-tail hat and carrying a six-foot-long spear, Jacob A. Chansley of Arizona left a note on the vice president’s desk that read in part, “it’s only a matter of time, justice is coming,” according to court filings.

Chansley – who has been charged with two felonies, including threatenin­g congressio­nal officials – told investigat­ors he was glad to reach Pence’s desk because he believes the vice president is a child-traffickin­g traitor, but said he did not mean the note as a threat.

Pence had just begun presiding over the joint session of Congress that afternoon when law enforcemen­t officials realized that the crowd massing around the Capitol had grown dangerous. Rioters had pressed up against the barriers surroundin­g the building – with some using them as weapons against the police.

“I realized at 1 p.m., things aren’t going well,” outgoing Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund told The Washington Post in an interview Sunday. “I’m watching my people getting slammed.”

Sund said he immediatel­y called acting D.C. police chief Robert J. Contee III, who rushed 100 officers to the scene.

Meanwhile, the joint session of Congress convened at 1 p.m. in the House chamber for an alphabetic­al roll call of each state’s electoral college results, quickly pausing when Trump’s allies protested Biden’s victory in Arizona, which sent Pence and senators across the Capitol to their chamber to debate challenges to that state’s electoral vote.

 ?? Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Voisard ?? Vice President Mike Pence heads through the Capitol Rotunda into the House chamber for the electoral college count on Jan. 6, 2021.
Photo for The Washington Post by Amanda Voisard Vice President Mike Pence heads through the Capitol Rotunda into the House chamber for the electoral college count on Jan. 6, 2021.
 ?? Washington Post photo by Ricky Carioti ?? A man climbs down after being photograph­ed with a noose at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Washington Post photo by Ricky Carioti A man climbs down after being photograph­ed with a noose at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

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