The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Chief in charge of intel before Capitol riot returns to post

- By Michael Balsamo and Eric Tucker

WASHINGTON >> Yogananda Pittman, the Capitol Police official who led intelligen­ce operations for the agency when thousands of Donald Trump loyalists descended on the building last January, is back in charge of intelligen­ce as officials prepare for what’s expected to be a massive rally at the Capitol to support those who took part in the insurrecti­on.

Pittman — elevated to acting chief after thenChief Steven Sund was forced to resign in the aftermath of the deadly insurrecti­on — was passed over last month for the role of permanent chief. The Capitol Police Board, which oversees the force, instead picked J. Thomas Manger, the former chief of the police department­s in Fairfax County, Virginia and Montgomery County, Maryland.

Pittman’s tenure as assistant chief was marred by a vote of no-confidence from rank-and-file officers on the force and questions about intelligen­ce and leadership failures — specifical­ly, why the agency wasn’t prepared to fend off a mob of insurrecti­onists, even though officials had compiled intelligen­ce showing white supremacis­ts and other extremists were likely to assemble in Washington on Jan. 6 and that violent disruption­s were possible.

“Supporters of the current president see Jan. 6, 2021, as the last opportunit­y to overturn the results of the presidenti­al election,” said a Jan. 3 Capitol Police intelligen­ce assessment. “This sense of desperatio­n and disappoint­ment may lead to more of an incentive to become violent.”

Unlike past events, when pro-Trump supporters clashed violently with counterdem­onstrators, “Congress itself is the target on the 6th,” the assessment added.

The deadly riot at the Capitol quickly overwhelme­d the police force and has resulted in hundreds of federal criminal prosecutio­ns and internal reviews about why law enforcemen­t agencies weren’t better prepared.

Now, months later, Pittman has been put back in charge as assistant chief of the agency’s intelligen­ce operations and will be supervisin­g officers who protect top congressio­nal leaders.

Police officials in Washington are increasing­ly concerned about a rally planned for Sept. 18 on federal land next to the Capitol that organizers have said is meant to demand “justice” for the hundreds of people already charged in connection with January’s insurrecti­on.

Organizers of the event, known as “Justice for J6,” have said it will be peaceful but law enforcemen­t officials fear such a gathering with thousands of people could devolve quickly into violence.

That Pittman remains in a position overseeing intelligen­ce is notable given the internal leadership upheaval that followed the riot — Sund, the House and Senate sergeants at arms and the only other assistant police chief all resigned after January’s attack. On the other hand, removing her from the job could also represent a concession by the department that there was an intelligen­ce failure on its part.

Capitol Police officials say Pittman was “given the additional responsibi­lity” of being the acting police chief on a temporary basis and never left her old job, though an organizati­on chart obtained by The Associated Press shows that the position of assistant chief overseeing intelligen­ce was held by a different official, Sean Gallagher. He is now temporaril­y in charge of the department’s uniformed officers.

“In that temporary position, Chief Pittman led the Department through numerous reviews. She also directed and led improvemen­ts to pivot the USCP towards an intelligen­ce based protective agency,” the agency said of Pittman’s time as police chief.

As the temporary public face of the department, Pittman conceded to Congress at a February hearing that multiple levels of failures allowed rioters to storm the building. But she disputed the notion that law enforcemen­t had failed to take the threat seriously, noting how Capitol Police several days before the riot had distribute­d an internal document warning that extremists were poised for violence.

The police department had compiled numerous intelligen­ce documents suggesting the crowd could turn violent and even target Congress.

The Associated Press has obtained full versions of four separate Capitol Police intelligen­ce assessment­s in December and January that warned crowds could number in the tens of thousands and include members of extremist groups like the Proud Boys.

A Jan. 3 memo, for instance, warned of a “significan­tly dangerous situation for law enforcemen­t and the general public alike.”

But none of the assessment­s envisioned the deadly violence that actually happened when huge crowds of Trump loyalists overran the building as Congress was gathered to certify the results of the presidenti­al election. Police officials have repeatedly said they had no intelligen­ce to suggest that would happen.

Arguably the most detailed Capitol Police document was a Dec. 21 intelligen­ce assessment that showed how people had been researchin­g and discussing the tunnels under the Capitol — typically used by members of Congress and staff — on public websites. A Jan. 5 FBI memo from its Norfolk field office contained a similarly ominous warning.

 ?? AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON, FILE ?? In this April 2 file photo, acting chief of the U.S. Capitol Police Yogananda Pittman listens during a news conference after a car crashed into a barrier on Capitol Hill near the Senate side of the U.S. Capitol in Washington.
AP PHOTO/ALEX BRANDON, FILE In this April 2 file photo, acting chief of the U.S. Capitol Police Yogananda Pittman listens during a news conference after a car crashed into a barrier on Capitol Hill near the Senate side of the U.S. Capitol in Washington.

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