Marin Independent Journal

Probe: Did Republican­s give tours of Capitol to insurrecti­onists?

- By Luke Broadwater

WASHINGTON » Democratic members of Congress on Wednesday accused unnamed Republican­s of giving tours of the Capitol to insurrecti­onists ahead of last week’s deadly siege of the Capitol, as federal agencies opened two new investigat­ions into the extent to which Capitol Police and some lawmakers were complicit in the mob attack.

The inspector general of the Capitol Police is opening a potentiall­y widerangin­g investigat­ion into security breaches connected to the siege that could determine the extent to which some Capitol Police officers were involved, according to a senior congressio­nal aide with direct knowledge of the investigat­ion. The inspector general will suspend all other projects until the investigat­ion is complete, the aide said.

Three officers have been suspended, and 17 others are under investigat­ion by the force’s Office of Profession­al Responsibi­lity.

The Government Accountabi­lity Office, a nonpartisa­n federal watchdog agency, has also signaled it will open an investigat­ion that will include the roles that members of Congress may have played in inciting the mob seeking to overturn the results of the election, according to the congressma­n who requested the inquiry, Rep. Jason Crow, D-Colo.

Crow, a former Army captain, asked the comptrolle­r general of the United States, who is part of the agency, last week to initiate a broad investigat­ion into many aspects of the security breach, including the roles members of Congress played.

Crow, whose request letter was signed by 107 of his colleagues, said Wednesday that he has been informed the investigat­ion is underway.

“To the extent there were members of the House that were complicit, and I believe there were, we will pursue appropriat­e remedies including expulsion and a prohibitio­n from holding elective office for the rest of their lives,” Crow said in an interview. “They will of course be subject to criminal investigat­ion and prosecutio­n if that’s what the facts of the investigat­ion show.”

The tours on the eve of the riot came to light after Rep. Mikie Sherrill, D-N.J., a former Navy pilot, said Tuesday night on Facebook without offering evidence that she knew of members of Congress who gave “reconnaiss­ance” tours to rioters ahead of the attack.

“Those members of Congress who had groups coming through the Capitol that I saw on Jan. 5, a reconnaiss­ance for the next day, those members of Congress that incited this violent crowd,” Sherrill said, “those members who attempted to help our president undermine our democracy, I’m going to see that they’re held accountabl­e.”

On Wednesday, about 30 lawmakers joined Sherrill in requesting an investigat­ion from the acting House and Senate sergeants-atarms and the Capitol Police into what Sherrill called “suspicious behavior” and access given to visitors to the Capitol complex the day before the riot.

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