Los Angeles Times

State Capitol is ‘ on high alert’ as Biden inaugurati­on nears

- By Kevin Rector, Taryn Luna, Anita Chabria and Richard Winton

SACRAMENTO — Law enforcemen­t officials are putting “additional security measures” in place at California’s Capitol in Sacramento amid warnings from the FBI and others that last week’s siege on the U. S. Capitol could be echoed across the country.

The efforts, described as precaution­ary, were part of an astonishin­g, nationwide rush by law enforcemen­t to gird statehouse­s and other government targets against white supremacis­ts and other radicalize­d supporters of President Trump, who has actively encouraged baseless conspiracy theories challengin­g President- elect

Joe Biden’s victory in November.

Officials declined to detail the new security measures or disclose whether they had any specific intelligen­ce about planned violence in Sacramento, but said they are boosting their preparedne­ss for problems in the days leading up to Biden’s Jan. 20 inaugurati­on.

“Any potential threat to the safety of the Assembly is taken very seriously,” said Alisa Buckley, chief sergeant at arms of the California Assembly. “In light of recent armed protests at the U. S. Capitol, additional security measures are being implemente­d in the Assembly, though we will not be disclosing the nature of those security measures publicly.”

State Senate Sergeant at Arms Katrina Rodriguez

said the Senate “keeps close watch on potential challenges and threats to security” and also would be “implementi­ng additional security measures.”

Two state lawmakers — Sens. Henry Stern ( D- Canoga Park) and Tom Umberg ( D- Santa Ana) — also announced plans to introduce legislatio­n that would require state agencies to create new units focused on the white nationalis­t movement and domestic terrorism.

“We have to respond not just with blustery condemnati­on, but with a concrete answer to this threat to domestic security,” Stern said in a statement.

Outside the statehouse Monday, the presence of law enforcemen­t was already noticeably greater than in previous days.

Around noon, when an anti- vaccine group was scheduled to protest, dozens of California Highway Patrol officers were scattered in clusters around the grounds. Near the main entrance, walkways that would normally be crowded with legislator­s, staffers and visitors were blocked with barricades and closely watched by officers in plaincloth­es, in uniform and mounted on horses.

Only four women turned out for the protest — and were kept on the far side of the barricade.

Gov. Gavin Newsom said Monday that “everybody is on high alert, in terms of making sure that everybody is safe” and that “people’s free speech can be advanced, but there’s no violence.”

The governor said he is prepared to call in the National Guard to support law enforcemen­t “as needed” in coming days. A National Guard source familiar with state intelligen­ce said that they don’t currently expect huge numbers of protesters in Sacramento, but that several guard companies are nonetheles­s ready for deployment.

The California Highway Patrol, which is responsibl­e for protecting the Capitol with backup from local police, said it has “personnel ready to respond to protect state property and ensure public safety as necessary.”

The precaution­s ref lected a nervousnes­s in law enforcemen­t circles about Trump’s supporters, whom many officials had previously viewed as being pro-law enforcemen­t and therefore less likely than other protesters to challenge police authority. That changed for many when insurrecti­onists battered U. S. Capitol police officers on their way to storming the halls of Congress last week — injuring dozens of officers and killing one.

Amid their reassessme­nts, law enforcemen­t agencies this week also received a warning from the FBI about armed protests by supporters of Trump arising across the country in the lead- up to Biden’s inaugurati­on.

“Armed protests are being planned at all 50 state capitols from 16 January through at least 20 January, and at the U. S. Capitol from 17 January through 20 January,” the FBI said, according to a law enforcemen­t official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

Another law enforcemen­t source told The Times that the FBI informed police that pro- Trump organizers were trying to get extremists to bust into state capitols after seeing such a call to action circulatin­g on a fringe website, then getting further disseminat­ed via encrypted messages.

Asked about its communicat­ions with local law enforcemen­t Monday, the FBI said in a statement that it was supporting its state and local partners with maintainin­g public safety.

“Our efforts are focused on identifyin­g, investigat­ing and disrupting individual­s that are inciting violence and engaging in criminal activity,” the FBI said. “As we do in the normal course of business, we are gathering informatio­n to identify any potential threats and are sharing that informatio­n with our partners.”

The FBI said it “respects the rights of individual­s to peacefully exercise their First Amendment rights,” and its focus was “not on peaceful protesters, but on those threatenin­g their safety and the safety of other citizens with violence and destructio­n of property.”

While the security failures that allowed the U. S. Capitol to be breached last week remain under investigat­ion, authoritie­s there — including the chief of the U. S. Capitol Police and the sergeants at arms of the U. S. House and Senate have come under intense scrutiny for not being more prepared. All have resigned.

Questions also have swirled around why National Guard troops were not on standby to assist Capitol Police, and officials in Washington have since given the green light to massive security enhancemen­ts in the nation’s capital leading up to Biden’s inaugurati­on — including a hardened perimeter fence around the Capitol and the deployment of thousands of National Guard troops to the surroundin­g area.

Officials in state capitals including Sacramento are seeking to shore up their own vulnerabil­ities in a similar effort to avoid trouble and not be caught flatfooted. In Lansing, Mich., state officials banned people from openly carrying guns inside the Capitol there. In Madison, Wis., the governor deployed the Wisconsin National Guard to the state Capitol to support police, and windows of the Capitol were boarded up.

Brian Levin, director for the study of hate and extremism at Cal State San Bernardino, said state officials would be wise to set up bigger perimeters around their capitols and warn state workers, because there could be “a cascading” of threats down from the federal level as targets like the U. S. Capitol are hardened.

In Sacramento, concern is heightened in part because of the fact that counties just to the north of Sacramento are considered a hotbed of extremist activity.

The state Capitol has been generally closed to the public since last year to prevent the spread of COVID- 19, although limited in- person participat­ion is allowed for hearings or f loor sessions. CHP has blocked off the immediate area surroundin­g the building and limited access to the Capitol grounds.

Since Biden’s election, the Highway Patrol and local Sacramento police have enhanced their presence around the Capitol as pro-Trump protesters and small groups of anti- fascist counter- protesters have broken into fights on a near-weekly basis. Police have closed surroundin­g streets to through traffic to prevent what has become a regular parade of music- blaring pro-Trump supporters cruising around the Capitol in their vehicles, as well as less frequent but similar events by counter- protesters.

Brian Ferguson, a spokesman for the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services, said the state would call in the National Guard only after all mutual aid from local agencies is exhausted.

The Sacramento Police Department issued a statement saying that its Criminal Intelligen­ce Unit “continuall­y monitors informatio­n regarding potential demonstrat­ions that could occur” within Sacramento city limits, and the department is “coordinati­ng with other local allied law enforcemen­t agencies for any future demonstrat­ions.”

The department assigned more than 200 officers to work a demonstrat­ion outside the state Capitol on the same day Trump supporters stormed the U. S. Capitol as Congress prepared to confirm state electoral college votes in Biden’s favor. The agency reported “physical altercatio­ns between two groups of demonstrat­ors” that day, and said it arrested 11 people “related to illegal possession of pepper spray.”

Los Angeles police also made arrests Wednesday as Trump supporters and counter- protesters gathered outside L. A. City Hall and at times broke into f ights. City Hall and the LAPD headquarte­rs across the street were heavily guarded.

Capt. Stacy Spell, an LAPD spokesman, said the department “has planned for increased activity during inaugurati­on week” and “will have adequate resources to respond to any situation, maintain order and keep the peace while protecting and serving all members of the community.”

Spell asked anyone who planned to protest in the city in coming days to “do so responsibl­y and safely.”

‘ In light of recent armed protests at the U. S. Capitol, additional security measures are being implemente­d in the Assembly.’

— Alisa Buckley, chief sergeant at arms of the California Assembly

 ?? ROBERT GREENE LOS ANGELES TIMES ?? SINCE Joe Biden’s election on Nov. 3, the California Highway Patrol and local Sacramento police have enhanced their presence around the state Capitol and it will grow as the Jan. 20 inaugurati­on nears.
ROBERT GREENE LOS ANGELES TIMES SINCE Joe Biden’s election on Nov. 3, the California Highway Patrol and local Sacramento police have enhanced their presence around the state Capitol and it will grow as the Jan. 20 inaugurati­on nears.

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