Chattanooga Times Free Press

AN OUTRAGE FROM THE FBI

- Byron York

On June 14, 2017, a team of Republican lawmakers went to an athletic field in Alexandria, Virginia, to practice for the annual Congressio­nal Baseball Game for Charity. As they worked out, a man armed with a semiautoma­tic rifle and pistol approached and opened fire.

Rep. Steve Scalise, the House Republican whip, was gravely wounded. A lobbyist was also seriously hurt, and a congressio­nal aide and Capitol Police officer were wounded, as well.

The shooter, James Hodgkinson of Belleville, Illinois, was an active Bernie Sanders supporter who hated Republican­s and particular­ly hated then-President Donald Trump. “Trump is a Traitor. Trump Has Destroyed Our Democracy,” he posted on his Facebook page. “It’s Time to Destroy Trump and Co.”

Hodgkinson came to the Washington, D.C., area in 2017. He brought his guns and developed a plan to attack Republican­s. He went to the baseball field with a list of several GOP members of Congress in his pocket, along with physical descriptio­ns of some of them. Before the attack, he asked Republican Rep. Jeff Duncan, who was leaving practice early, whether the players on the field were Republican­s or Democrats. Duncan said it was the Republican team. A short time later, Hodgkinson opened fire. After a rampage of nearly 10 minutes, he was killed by Capitol Police and Alexandria police.

The attack was a clear act of violent, politicall­y motivated domestic terrorism. And yet recently, Republican Rep. Brad Wenstrup, who had been at the practice, revealed that the FBI concluded Hodgkinson was in fact trying to kill himself, not Republican­s.

“On Nov. 16, 2017, the FBI briefed those of us who were at the field that day,” Wenstrup said at a House Intelligen­ce Committee hearing featuring FBI Director Christophe­r Wray. “Much to our shock that day, the FBI concluded that this was a case of the attacker seeking suicide by cop.”

“We were just astonished,” Wenstrup told me in a recent conversati­on. “We just went, ‘What?’ I said, ‘There’s no way. If you want to commit suicide by cop, you just pull a gun on a cop.’”

Wenstrup also noted that the FBI had not interviewe­d the members — the victims — in this case. They never interviewe­d Duncan, who had actually spoken to the shooter. “I asked [the FBI], ‘Who did you talk to?’” Wenstrup recalled. “They took my number, called me the next day. I called them back, and never heard from them again.”

At the hearing, Wenstrup noted that, “Both the Department of Homeland Security and the Office of the Director of National Intelligen­ce published products labeling this attack as a domestic violent extremism event specifical­ly targeting Republican members of Congress. The FBI did not. The FBI still has not.”

Now, in light of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, which is widely referred to as domestic terrorism, Wenstrup wonders what the FBI was doing. The attack “could have been a massacre,” Wenstrup noted.

Now, Wenstrup wants answers. At the hearing, he gave Wray a letter asking the FBI to investigat­e how it came to conclude that the shooting was not domestic terrorism and instead “suicide by cop.”

Scalise wants an investigat­ion, too. “The 2017 baseball field shooting was not ‘suicide by cop,’ and it is insulting and outrageous that the FBI classified it so inaccurate­ly,” the GOP whip said in an email statement.

The unanswered question in all this is why the FBI, at the time under the leadership of Acting Director Andrew McCabe, did what it did. Even at that time, the bureau was warning Americans of the danger posed by domestic terrorists. And yet the FBI refused to publicly recognize a clear act of domestic terrorism. Was some sort of Trumpera bias involved? Was it bureaucrat­ic infighting? Something else? It’s time the victims in the case — and also the country as a whole — got some answers.

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