The Sentinel-Record

Capitol Police chief: making some progress at fixing deficienci­es

- FARNOUSH AMIRI AND KEVIN FREKING

WASHINGTON — A year after the Jan. 6 Capitol attack, the new chief of the U.S. Capitol Police said Wednesday he is making progress in resolving “critical deficienci­es” despite major staffing shortages and thousands of new threats to members of Congress.

“We’re going to get tested again” and will be prepared, declared Chief J. Thomas Manger.

Changes include improving the agency’s ability to gather, analyze and share intelligen­ce with other federal and state law enforcemen­t forces, Manger said. That failing contribute­d to a lack of defensive forces at the violent Capitol insurrecti­on as rioters fought past outmanned police, leaving more than 100 of them injured.

Manger is dealing with recommenda­tions from an internal watchdog to move the agency from a traditiona­l police department to a protective force.

“January 6 exposed critical deficienci­es with operationa­l planning, intelligen­ce, staffing and equipment,” Manger said in testimony. “I recognize those issues have to be addressed, and that is what we are doing.”

Manger, who was installed as the new leader shortly after the attack, said the force today is stronger and better equipped to handle an attack against the Capitol or lawmakers than it was a year ago.

The force is also working toward more state-of-the-art training for its 1,800 sworn police officers and nearly 400 civilian employees after a report from U.S. Capitol Police Inspector General documented that more than 75% of officers on Jan. 6, 2021, were forced to protect the Capitol in their regular uniforms, often facing off with rioters who were better equipped for a fight.

But even with new equipment and intelligen­ce-sharing capabiliti­es, the biggest challenge the force faces is staff

ing. It is now 450 officers short of the agency’s needs, Manger said. More than 150 officers have either retired or resigned over the past year.

In the short term, the chief is looking to add more transfers from other law enforcemen­t agencies and to contract with private security officers for locations that don’t need armed officers. Over the longer term, he wants to hire 280 police officers per year over the next three years.

“That will get us ahead of attrition, and my hope is that will get us to where we need to be in terms of staffing,” Manger said.

Lawmakers are also concerned about the rise in threats in their home districts and states.

“Many people in this very room, committee members have experience­d them. Over 9,000 threats in 2021 alone,” Sen. Amy Klobuchar, chairwoman of the Senate committee, said Wednesday.

Manger said the Capitol Police are looking to improve coordinati­on with local law enforcemen­t to better secure lawmakers’ offices and homes.

“The biggest challenge I think we have is keeping up with the number of threats,” Manger said. “We’ve doubled the number of officers that investigat­e these threats. … If they continue to go up the way they have, clearly we’re going to need additional officers to assign to this responsibi­lity.”

The department is also planning on hiring a new deputy chief to take on the role of intelligen­ce.

Manger said that intelligen­ce and leadership failures within the Capitol Police contribute­d to the breaching a year ago. He said that with a few phone calls he now can get substantia­lly more police officers into place to protect the Capitol complex.

“We’re going to get tested again, but we have put things into place to make sure that we will not be impacted by intelligen­ce failures or failure to plan ahead, failure to imagine or failure to have enough people here,” Manger said. “I’m confident that when we’re tested again, we’re going to be fine.”

Asked to comment on assertions by some Republican­s that have downplayed the violence, Manger demurred at first, saying, “We are not concerned about political ideology, we’re concerned about behavior.” But when pressed, he said, “I was horrified by what I saw. I saw police officers being assaulted, and that’s the reason I’m sitting here today, because I wanted to do what I could to help this police department and to better protect our nation and the Capitol and what this Capitol represents.”

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger arrives to testify before a Senate Rules and Administra­tion Committee oversight hearing to examine the U.S. Capitol Police following the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol on Wednesday in Washington.
The Associated Press ■ U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger arrives to testify before a Senate Rules and Administra­tion Committee oversight hearing to examine the U.S. Capitol Police following the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol on Wednesday in Washington.

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