Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

OFFICER HONORED

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Logan Evans and Abigail Evans, along with their mother, Shannon Terranova, watch as the casket of their father, U.S. Capitol Police Officer William “Billy” Evans, arrives Tuesday on Capitol Hill in Washington. Officer Evans, 41, who served 18 years on the Capitol force, was killed April 2 when a vehicle rammed into him and another officer during an attack at a security barricade. He will lie in honor in the Rotunda.

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden said Tuesday that “never has there been more strain” on the U.S. Capitol Police as he honored Officer William “Billy” Evans, the second officer on the force to die in the line of duty this year.

Officer Evans, who laid in honor in the Capitol Rotunda, was killed earlier this month when a driver struck him and another officer at a barricade outside the Senate. His death compounded the anguish of a police force already mourning the loss of Officer Brian Sicknick, who died after his encounter with rioters during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on. Another officer, Howard Liebengood, died by suicide in the days after the Capitol attack.

The deaths have taken a toll on the force, which has been overworked and understaff­ed as leaders try to figure out how to move forward from the mistakes of Jan. 6. The Capitol Police were massively unprepared as supporters of former President Donald Trump violently pushed past them and broke into the building that day. In the weeks and months since, top leaders have resigned, and many have considered leaving the department. Officials have brought in trauma therapists, and lawmakers are considerin­g what more they can do.

Officers Sicknick and Evans are two of only six Capitol Police officers who have been killed in the line of duty in the force’s nearly 200-year history, according to the department. Officer Evans had been on the force for 18 years.

Mr. Biden, speaking at the service in the Rotunda attended by congressio­nal leaders and Evans’ fellow officers, said he had never seen as much “strain and responsibi­lity” put on the department in the nearly 50 years since he first came to Capitol Hill as a senator. And yet, he said, “you watch them do their duty with pure courage and not complain.”

Officer Evans, 41, was remembered for his dedication to country, love for his job and his mischievou­s sense of humor. His children, 7-year-old Abigail and 9-year-old Logan, sat with their mother and grandmothe­r at the service and clutched small replicas of the Capitol. At one point, Abigail dropped hers, and Mr. Biden stood to retrieve it. Near the end of the ceremony, the girl tried to wipe away her mother’s tears as a U.S. Army chorus sang “Bridge Over Troubled Water.”

Logan wore a police cap and hugged a stuffed animal as Mr. Biden and congressio­nal leaders eulogized his father and said prayers for his family. He continued to clutch it as the family paid respects in front of the casket and walked out of the ceremony.

Mr. Biden, who also met with the family privately, said Officer Evans was “defined by his dignity, his decency, his loyalty and his courage,” and he spoke of his own experience losing two children.

“Losing a son, daughter, brother, sister, mom, dad — it’s like losing a piece of your soul,” Mr. Biden said.

Investigat­ors believe that the driver who killed Officer Evans had been delusional and increasing­ly having suicidal thoughts. Noah Green, 25, emerged from the car with a knife and was shot to death by another police officer.

 ?? Susan Walsh/Associated Press ??
Susan Walsh/Associated Press
 ??  ?? Slain Capitol Police Officer William "Billy" Evans
Slain Capitol Police Officer William "Billy" Evans

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