San Diego Union-Tribune

LAWMAKERS URGE CONGRESSIO­NAL GOLD MEDAL FOR CAPITOL OFFICER

Goodman lured rioters away from Senate chamber

- BY REBECCA TAN Tan writes for The Washington Post.

The Black Capitol police officer who faced off against a mob of predominan­tly White rioters Jan. 6 may soon receive more than just praise for his actions. On Thursday, a bipartisan group of federal lawmakers announced that they would introduce a bill to award officer Eugene Goodman the Congressio­nal Gold Medal, one of the highest awards a civilian can receive in the United States.

“He’s a hero!” said Rep. Charlie Crist, D-Fla., one of the three members of Congress spearheadi­ng the bill. “The United States Capitol was under attack by armed, violent extremists, and Officer Eugene Goodman was the only thing standing between the mob and the United States Senate.”

The bill is also being backed by Reps. Emanuel Cleaver II, D-Mo., and Nancy Mace, R-S.C., who expressed their gratitude to Goodman in a statement. “Thanks to his valor, we are here today,” Mace said. “From the bottom of my heart, I cannot thank him enough for his bravery and for his dedication to the call of duty.”

In a now-viral video captured during the attack by HuffPost reporter Igor Bobic, Goodman is seen in the halls of the Capitol building trying to hold back a group of several dozen rioters.

For 85 tense seconds, Goodman tries to hold back dozens of rioters, twice retreating up a flight of stairs. Police experts say he wasn’t fleeing, but luring the mob away from the Senate chambers, where lawmakers were sheltering and armed officers — including one with a semiautoma­tic weapon — were securing the doors.

Policing experts said Goodman, 40, used himself as “bait” to lure the rioters away from the Senate chambers. His quick thinking “helped to avoid a tremendous tragedy,” said Kirk D. Burkhalter, a professor at New York Law School and a former New York City police officer.

The toll from the Jan. 6 attack — five deaths, including a Capitol Police officer, a protester shot by police and three who died of medical emergencie­s — could have been far higher if Goodman had made different choices, said Burkhalter, who reviewed the video at The Washington Post’s request.

“These folks had zip ties,” he said, referencin­g images of the rioters holding zip-tie handcuffs that have emerged since the attack. “It’s not unreasonab­le to say that they were ready to take hostages . ... Officer Goodman really helped to avoid a tremendous tragedy.”

Burkhalter said Goodman appears in the video to be doing three tactical things simultaneo­usly: leading rioters away from the Senate chambers, coordinati­ng for backup on the second-floor landing, and exercising extreme restraint in order to prevent injury or loss of life.

Friends who have talked to Goodman since the riots, including two fellow officers and a former colleague, said he has been ambivalent about the limelight. Generally private and reserved, the Washington, D.C., native has started to worry about becoming a potential target of far-right extremist groups that have vowed to return to D.C. this weekend and for next week’s inaugurati­on.

“Of f icer Eugene Goodman was the only thing standing between the mob and the United States Senate.”

Rep. Charlie Crist • D-Fla.

“He said he’d do the same thing again. He’s not looking for any accolades,” said one friend, a Capitol Police officer who asked not to be named because he had not been authorized to speak on the issue. “But the attention is a little scary for him.”

Goodman is an Army veteran who served from 2002 to 2006 and deployed with the 101st Airborne Division to Iraq for a year.

The Congressio­nal Gold Medal is considered to carry the same level of prestige as the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom, though fewer have been awarded. The award is meant to show “national appreciati­on for distinguis­hed achievemen­ts and contributi­ons” and has been given to 177 recipients to date, according to the website of the House of Representa­tives.

The bill proposing the award has to be accepted by two-thirds of both chambers of Congress before being considered by committees that will grant final approval.

Recent recipients include Raoul Gustaf Wallenberg, a Swedish architect who saved thousands of Jews in Hungary during the Holocaust, the Chinese-American Veterans of World War II, and Greg LeMond, the American cyclist who won three Tour de France races in the 1980s and 1990s.

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