Pair of Capitol Police officers sue Trump over deadly riot
Two Capitol Police officers who were on duty during the deadly Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol have sued former President Donald Trump, saying he was responsible for the physical and emotional injuries they had suffered as a result of the day’s events.
Supporters of Trump overran the Capitol as Congress was certifying Joe Biden’s victory over Trump in the November presidential election. Before the incursion, Trump spoke at a nearby rally, where he urged his supporters to “show strength” and “fight like hell.”
Five people, including a Capitol Police officer, died in the mayhem. Trump was later impeached by the House of Representatives on a single charge of “incitement of insurrection,” but he was acquitted in February after a brief Senate trial in which few Republicans broke ranks to vote guilty.
James Blassingame and Sidney Hemby, the Capitol Police officers who sued Trump, filed their complaint Tuesday in U.S. District Court in the District of Columbia, and are each seeking compensatory damages in excess of $75,000, plus punitive damages.
The lawsuit is the first to be brought against the former president by Capitol Police officers. The force has more than 2,000 officers.
Lawyers for the officers and for Trump could not be reached for comment Wednesday. Trump has previously denied responsibility for the attack.
The complaint said the “insurrectionist mob” that stormed the Capitol was “spurred on by Trump’s conduct over many months in getting his followers to believe” his false assertions
of widespread electoral fraud in November. The complaint also said that Trump’s supporters believed swarming the Capitol was their last chance to stop Trump from being unfairly forced out of the White House.
Trump “inflamed, encouraged, incited, directed, and aided and abetted” the mob that overran the building and attacked police personnel inside, the complaint said. It cited Trump’s Jan. 6 speech outside the White House and other conduct, including what it said was his failure that day to “take timely action to stop his followers from continued violence.”
During the attack, Hemby, an 11-year veteran of the Capitol Police, was outside the building, crushed against the side and sprayed with chemicals that burned his eyes, skin and throat, the complaint said. One member of the mob screamed that he was “disrespecting the badge.”
Hemby remains in physical therapy for neck and back injuries that he sustained Jan. 6 and “has struggled to manage the emotional fallout from being relentlessly attacked,” according to the complaint.
Blassingame, a 17-year veteran of the force,
suffered head and back injuries during the riot, the complaint said, and experienced back pain, depression and insomnia afterward.
“He is haunted by the memory of being attacked, and of the sensory impacts — the sights, sounds, smells and even tastes of the attack remain close to the surface,” the complaint said. “He experiences guilt of being unable to help his colleagues who were simultaneously being attacked; and of surviving where other colleagues did not.”
Meanwhile, a defense attorney says FBI agents recruited a leader of the far-right Proud Boys group to provide information about far-left antifa networks months before he was charged with taking part in storming the Capitol.
Proud Boys “thought leader” and organizer Joseph Biggs agreed to provide the FBI with information about anti-fascist activists in Florida and elsewhere after an agent contacted him in late July 2020, Biggs’ lawyer, J. Daniel Hull, wrote in a court filing.
“They spoke often,” added Hull, who is petitioning to keep Biggs out of jail pending trial.