Times-Herald

Officers to receive Congressio­nal Gold Medals for Jan. 6

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WASHINGTON (AP) — Top House and Senate leaders will present law enforcemen­t officers who defended the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, with Congressio­nal Gold Medals on Tuesday, awarding them Congress's highest honor nearly two years after they fought with former President Donald Trump's supporters in a brutal and bloody attack.

To recognize the hundreds of officers who were at the Capitol on Jan. 6, the medals will be placed in four locations — at U.S. Capitol Police headquarte­rs, the Metropolit­an Police Department, the Capitol and the Smithsonia­n Institutio­n. President Joe Biden said when he signed the legislatio­n last year that a medal will be placed at the Smithsonia­n museum "so all visitors can understand what happened that day."

The ceremony in the Capitol Rotunda comes as Democrats, just weeks away from losing their House majority, race to finish a nearly 18-month investigat­ion of the insurrecti­on. Democrats and two Republican­s conducting the probe have vowed to uncover the details of the attack, which came as Trump tried to overturn his election defeat and encouraged his supporters to "fight like hell" in a rally just before the congressio­nal certificat­ion.

Awarding the medals will be among House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's last ceremonial acts as she prepares to step down from leadership. When the bill passed the House more than a year ago, she said the law enforcemen­t officers from across the city defended the Capitol because they were "the type of Americans who heard the call to serve and answered it, putting country above self."

"They enabled us to return to the Capitol," and certify Biden's presidency, she said then, "to that podium that night to show the world that our democracy had prevailed and that it had succeeded because of them."

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