El Dorado News-Times

Shot, killed rioter in U.S. Capitol, officer says

- AMY B WANG AND AARON C. DAVIS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Justin Jouvenal of The Washington Post.

WASHINGTON — The Capitol Police officer who fatally shot Ashli Babbitt, a proTrump rioter who stormed the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, publicly revealed his identity Thursday in an exclusive interview with NBC Nightly News.

Michael Byrd, a 28-year veteran with the Capitol Police, said he fired his gun that day only as a “last resort,” and that he was trying to protect about 60 to 80 House members and staff members who were sheltering beyond the glass doors of Speaker’s Lobby outside the House chamber.

“Once we barricaded the doors, we were essentiall­y trapped where we were,” Byrd told NBC Nightly News host Lester Holt. “There was no way to retreat. No other way to get out.”

Babbitt was among a group of supporters of former President Donald Trump who made their way deep inside the Capitol on Jan. 6 to try to stop the certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s election victory. The mob overran the Capitol complex in a siege that ultimately left five people dead.

The group Babbitt was with was battering the doors to Speaker’s Lobby, the hallway outside the House chamber where some lawmakers and House staff members were sheltering, when Babbitt attempted to crawl through a shattered windowpane in the doors.

Byrd, who was standing on the far side of the doors, fired a single shot at Babbitt, sending her tumbling backward onto the floor. She was hit in the shoulder and later died.

“I tried to wait as long as I could,” Byrd told Holt. “I hoped and prayed no one tried to enter through those doors. But their failure to comply required me to take the appropriat­e action to save the lives of members of Congress and myself and my fellow officers.”

Byrd said it was “impossible” to see what was on the other side of the doors because of furniture stacked on his side of the door, and that he did not know Babbitt’s intentions as she started coming through the broken windowpane.

“I could not fully see her hands or what was in the backpack or what the intentions are,” Byrd told Holt. “But they had shown violence leading up to that point.”

Without naming Byrd, an internal investigat­ion by the Capitol Police found no wrongdoing by the officer who shot Babbitt, the law enforcemen­t agency announced this week. The probe determined that the officer’s use of force was within the department’s guidelines, which allow deadly force when officers believe they are protecting themselves or others from serious harm.

The finding followed a similar assessment by the Department of Justice, which declined to pursue criminal charges against the officer in April. That investigat­ion found there was not enough evidence to conclude the officer had violated Babbitt’s civil rights and it was reasonable for the officer to believe he was firing in self-defense or in defense of members of Congress.

Despite those findings, Babbitt has become something of a martyr to the far right. The identity of the officer who killed her has increasing­ly been the target of online sleuths, and

Byrd’s name had been circulatin­g on far-right blogs since early this summer.

In the interview aired Thursday, Byrd pushed back on accusation­s that his actions were politicall­y motivated, adding that he had escorted Trump through the Capitol when he was president.

Byrd, who is Black, said that after his name leaked, he has faced threats, including racist attacks.

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