New York Daily News

‘NOT TAKING ANY CHANCES’

Legions of cops plus Guard ready for D.C. Don rally Sat.

- BY TIM BALK With Michael McAuliff

A months-long effort to eliminate security risks at the U.S. Capitol could be put to the test this weekend, with lawmakers urged to avoid the area Saturday during a planned right-wing rally in support of Jan. 6 riot suspects.

Authoritie­s said they have put together a 25-agency-strong plan spearheade­d by the Capitol Police — which was much-criticized after the stunning January assault — and Washington’s Metropolit­an Police Department. An intense police presence is expected.

“The U.S. Capitol Police Department has been working around the clock,” Chief Tom Manger said in a news conference on Friday. “There have been some threats of violence associated with the events for tomorrow, and we have a strong plan in place to ensure that it remains peaceful.”

The National Guard will assist if needed, according to the Capitol Police.

On Jan. 6 a mob broke into the halls of Congress, inspired by a falsehood-spewing President Donald Trump, who urged his supporters to “take back our country” as he claimed he had soundly beaten President Biden in the November election.

Four people died in the chaos, and Manger said his department has worked over the last eight months to “ensure that we don’t have a repeat of Jan. 6.”

Washington was left jittery in the aftermath of the attack on democracy, and faced another scare on a sleepy morning last month, when a troubled man in a black truck rolled in front of the Library of Congress and declared he had a bomb. The man, Floyd

Ray Roseberry, criticized Biden in a live-streamed rant as he menaced the Capitol, but he ultimately surrendere­d to cops.

Now, even as Congressio­nal leaders express confidence in police preparatio­n, another ominous cloud is gathering over Washington.

The Saturday protest, called the “Justice for J6” rally, was organized by Matt Braynard, a former Trump campaign operative. He acquired a permit for a 700-person demonstrat­ion, according to the police.

Trump signaled his support for the gathering in a statement on

Thursday, saying, “Our hearts and minds are with the people being persecuted so unfairly relating to the January 6th protest concerning the Rigged Presidenti­al Election.”

But he did not specifical­ly name the rally, and he has appeared to otherwise largely ignore it. No evidence has emerged that the Nov. 3 election was rigged, and Trump lost decisively in both the popular vote and the electoral college.

The Saturday event has led officials to erect a tall black chain-link security fence at the Capitol, and authoritie­s said an army of cops will be ready.

“We are prepared,” Robert Contee, the chief of the Metropolit­an Police Department, said in the news conference on Friday, adding that his department had spoken to organizers and “planned accordingl­y.”

No top Republican elected officials appeared to be slated to attend the protest.

Several lawmakers spoke at the Jan. 6 rally.

In an internal advisory, the House sergeant-at-arms, William Walker, said lawmakers and their staffers are “strongly encouraged to avoid the U.S. Capitol Complex” on Saturday.

“Members and staff should expect demonstrat­ion activity and street closures,” he said in the notice, which was dated Tuesday.

Some alarming threats have emerged in the lead-up to Saturday’s demonstrat­ion. In a bulletin to law enforcemen­t officials, the Department of Homeland Security described discussion­s on social media around “using the rally to target local Jewish institutio­ns, elected officials and ‘liberal churches,’ ” CBS News reported.

Manger said it was difficult to determine the credibilit­y of threats lodged in connection with the demonstrat­ion.

“We don’t know with any certainty,” he said. “We’re not taking any chances.”

Eric Ward, the executive director of Western States Center, a progressiv­e organizati­on in Portland, Ore., that monitors extremism, said his group doesn’t believe more than 500 people will show up for the “Justice for J6” protest.

“We just haven’t seen significan­t mobilizati­on,” Ward told the Daily News.

The greatest threat, he said, could be generated by clashes between protesters and counterpro­testers — as well as by copy-cat rallies planned across the U.S. for Saturday.

Earlier this week, Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) both said security plans in Washington seemed strong.

“I think they’re ready for whatever might happen,” Schumer said Monday.

Comparing the preparatio­ns to those in January, Pelosi said “It seems much better.”

 ??  ?? Fencing has been reinstalle­d around Capitol building ahead of Saturday rally by Trump supporters who demand assailants in Jan. 6 riot (inset) be freed. This time Capitol Police say there’s no way things will get out of control.
Fencing has been reinstalle­d around Capitol building ahead of Saturday rally by Trump supporters who demand assailants in Jan. 6 riot (inset) be freed. This time Capitol Police say there’s no way things will get out of control.

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