Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Capitol Police chief apologizes for insurrecti­on security failures

- By Luke Broadwater, Emily Cochrane and Adam Goldman

WASHINGTON — The acting chief of the Capitol Police apologized to Congress on Tuesday for the agency’s massive security failures Jan. 6, acknowledg­ing during a closed-door briefing that the department knew there was a “strong potential for violence” but failed to take adequate steps to prevent what she described as a “terrorist attack.”

Yogananda Pittman, the acting chief of police, also confirmed that the Capitol Police Board, an obscure panel made up of three voting members, had initially declined a request two days earlier for National Guard troops and then delayed for more than an hour as the violence unfolded Jan. 6 before finally agreeing to a plea from the Capitol Police for National Guard troops, according to prepared testimony obtained by The New York Times.

In an extraordin­ary admission, Pittman, who was not the acting chief at the time of the siege, told members of the House Appropriat­ions Committee, which oversees funding for the agency, that the Capitol Police “failed to meet its own high standards as well as yours.”

She added, “I am here to offer my sincerest apologies on behalf of the department.”

Pittman’s predecesso­r, Steven Sund, resigned after the riot.

Her comments offered the fullest detailed account to date about police preparatio­ns Jan. 6 in which thousands of angry protesters, believing false claims that the election had been stolen, marched on the Capitol at the behest of President Donald Trump.

Speaking by video conference in a virtual briefing, Pittman told the committee that the department “should have been more prepared for this attack,” according to the remarks.

Pittman said her department knew that Jan. 6 would be unlike previous protests. She said her department knew that militia groups and white supremacis­ts organizati­ons would descend on Washington.

“We also knew that some of these participan­ts were intending to bring firearms and other weapons to the event,” she said. “We knew that there was a strong potential for violence and that Congress was the target. The department prepared in order to meet these challenges, but we did not do enough.”

She said the Capitol Police had 1,200 people working on site when the attack occurred, which was “no match” for “the tens of thousands of insurrecti­onists.”

Two days before the attack, Sund requested that the Capitol Police Board declare a state of emergency and authorize a request to secure National Guard support. The board denied the request, according to Pittman, but encouraged Sund to contact the National Guard to determine how many guardsmen could be sent to the Capitol on short notice, which he did.

As the protesters became an increasing threat to the Capitol on Jan. 6, Sund asked for more help from federal agencies and law enforcemen­t agencies in the area.

“He also lobbied the board for authorizat­ion to bring in the National Guard, but he was not granted authorizat­ion for over an hour,” Pittman said.

During the hearing, the commander of the District of Columbia National Guard told committee members that his authority to quickly deploy the guard was removed before the riot. Maj. Gen. William Walker said he had such authority for July 4, but the Pentagon required additional approval for a request for the Guard during the Capitol attack, according to a person familiar with the testimony.

Walker testified that Sund called him as the threat to the Capitol increased Jan. 6 and that he immediatel­y notified the Army.

“On my own, I started preparing people to be ready, but I had to wait for specific approval to go out to launch,” Walker said. “I was in constant communicat­ion with the U.S. Army leadership who was acting on behalf of the secretary of the Army.”

Two of the board members at the time of the attack have already resigned: Paul Irving, the House sergeant-at arms, and Michael Stenger, the Senate sergeant-at-arms. The third member, J. Brett Blanton, the architect of the Capitol, is still on the board. Blanton was nominated by Trump in December 2019 and confirmed by the Senate that same month. The chief of the Capitol Police serves in an ex officio, nonvoting capacity.

“In my experience, I do not believe there was any preparatio­ns that would have allowed for an open campus in which lawful protesters could exercise their First Amendment right to free speech and at the same time prevented the attack on Capitol grounds that day,” Pittman said.

In the aftermath of the attack, many officers are suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder, she said, “particular­ly after the loss of two of our officers directly and indirectly as a result of the events of Jan. 6.”

Officers also have been experienci­ng an increase in coronaviru­s infections.

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