San Francisco Chronicle

Watchdog report lays bare police security failures

- By Mary Clare Jalonick Mary Clare Jalonick is an Associated Press writer.

WASHINGTON — A blistering internal report by the U.S. Capitol Police describes a multitude of missteps that left the force unprepared for the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on — riot shields that shattered upon impact, expired weapons that couldn’t be used, inadequate training and an intelligen­ce division that had few set standards.

The watchdog report, released internally last month and obtained by the Associated Press before a congressio­nal hearing Thursday, adds to what is already known about broader security and intelligen­ce failures that Congress has been investigat­ing since hundreds of thenPresid­ent Donald Trump’s supporters laid siege to the Capitol.

In an extensive timeline of that day, the report describes the movements of the Capitol Police as officers scrambled to evacuate lawmakers and it details previously unknown conversati­ons between officials as they disagreed on whether National Guard forces were necessary to back up the understaff­ed force. It quotes an Army official as telling thenCapito­l Police Chief Steven Sund that “we don’t like the optics of the National Guard standing in a line at the Capitol” after the insurrecti­onists had already broken in.

Inspector General Michael Bolton found that the department’s deficienci­es were — and remain — widespread. Equipment was old and stored badly, leaders had failed to act on previous recommenda­tions to improve intelligen­ce, and there was a broad lack of current policies or procedures for the Civil Disturbanc­e Unit, a division that existed to ensure that legislativ­e functions of Congress were not disrupted by civil unrest or protest activity. That was exactly what happened on Jan. 6 as Trump’s supporters sought to overturn the election in his favor as Congress counted the Electoral College votes.

The report comes as the Capitol Police force has plunging morale and has edged closer to crisis as many officers have been working extra shifts and forced overtime to protect the Capitol after the insurrecti­on. Acting Chief Yogananda Pittman received a vote of no confidence from the union in February, reflecting widespread distrust among the rank and file.

The entire force is also grieving the deaths of three of their own — Officer Brian Sicknick, who collapsed and died after engaging with protesters on Jan. 6, and Officer William “Billy” Evans, who was killed April 2 when he was hit by a car that rammed into a barricade outside the Senate. Evans laid in honor in the Capitol Rotunda on Tuesday.

A third officer, Howard Liebengood, died by suicide in the days after the insurrecti­on.

The Capitol Police have so far refused to publicly release the report — marked throughout as “law enforcemen­t sensitive” — despite congressio­nal pressure to do so.

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