USA TODAY International Edition

Steps from worse disaster

Weapons, gear, threats: Rioters had more planned

- Courtney Subramania­n, Dinah Voyles Pulver and Josh Salman

WASHINGTON – As a violent mob charged through a police line on the steps of the U. S. Capitol Wednesday, thousands more behind them erupted into cheers, chanting “USA! USA!” and brandishin­g flags bearing President Donald Trump’s name.

Rioters, some dressed in military fatigues, scaled the historic walls of the Capitol, piercing the very heart of American democracy.

Reams of video that emerged from the incident and eyewitness accounts suggest at least some rioters had darker intents beyond protesting the election result. The evidence indicates the nightmare scenario that unfolded could have been even more deadly and had even farther- reaching consequenc­es.

One highly visible rioter clad in black paramilita­ry- type clothing carried plastic zip ties typically used for restraint. Other rioters were armed with guns and other weapons. Molotov cocktails were found in the area of the Capitol, and some of the rioters moved with what experts called nearmilita­ry precision.

Some insurrecti­onists shouted, “Hang Mike Pence! Hang Mike Pence!” Earlier in the day, a gallows with a noose was erected in front of the Capitol.

Wednesday’s attack, which forced lawmakers to seek cover in fear for their lives, left five people dead and dozens injured. It illuminate­d how far supporters of Trump were willing to go to vent their anger over the president’s false claims of a stolen election.

The chaos enveloped the Capitol minutes after Trump whipped up a crowd of supporters at a nearby rally at the White House and urged Vice President Mike Pence to intervene to try to do overturn the election result – something Pence does not have the authority to do.

Todd Belt, professor of political management at George Washington University, said the rioters went on a mission to “Stop the Steal,” a tagline used by supporters of the president who believe the election was a fraud and that their plan would lead to action.

“You have people showing up with Molotov cocktails,” he said. “That’s not something you bring just in case you need it … there were some people who fully planned to go all of the way through with this.

“There could have been ( more) people dead, and the Capitol could have been burnt to the ground. It could have been much, much worse.”

Rioters forced their way inside with relative ease, attacking officers with “metal pipes, discharged chemical irritants” and other weapons, according to U. S. Capitol Police.

In the wake of the attack, lawmakers and staffers recounted sheltering for hours while mobs ransacked their offices. Members of the media shared accounts of being overtaken by extremists who stole or destroyed their equipment. Rioters scrawled, “Murder the media” on one of the exterior doors to the building.

House Majority Whip James Clyburn, D- S. C., called for an investigat­ion. Although Clyburn told CNN’s Jake Tapper on Sunday morning that he was whisked away by the Capitol Police and never “really felt any personal danger,” he was alarmed that the insurrecti­onists found their way to an unmarked office he uses rather than his official office.

“They didn’t go where my name was. They went where I usually hang out,” Clyburn told CNN. “That to me indicates that something untoward may have been going on.”

Steps from disaster

In some cases, it was quick thinking by the outnumbere­d Capitol police that prevented rioters from reaching lawmakers inside the chambers.

An officer inside the Capitol diverted a mob of angry rioters from a wide- open entrance to the U. S. Senate floor.

Being chased up a flight of stairs, the officer noticed the open door and first tried to block it before realizing he was alone and greatly outnumbere­d by the throng coming after him.

Even though the officer was armed with a baton he could have used for protection, he gently pushed the arm of the first rioter charging through the pack, a man named Doug Jensen from Des Moines, who was later arrested by the FBI on five federal charges.

Instead of finding the open Senate chambers, Jensen chased the officer, who led him in the opposite direction. The mob followed them away from the Senate floor.

Many details about the police response are still emerging. In footage shot by Jon Farina for the outlet Status Coup, a police officer can be seen crushed in a door as the pro- Trump mob lays siege to the Capitol.

Guns and explosive devices

Edward Maguire, a professor of criminolog­y at Arizona State University and associate director of the school’s Center for Violence Prevention and Community Safety, said that although many in the crowd were there to peacefully protest and perhaps got carried away, it was clear that some rioters arrived with a mission for violence.

He noted the military- style precision in some of the groups’ movements.

“As tragic as it was, we could be dealing with even worse,” Maguire said. “You had people who were clearly trained, and then you had other people walking around with semiautoma­tics who didn’t know what they were doing.”

As Christophe­r Alberts of Maryland was arrested leaving the Capitol wearing a bulletproo­f vest, officers found a 9mm handgun with two high- capacity magazines. The arrest affidavit said he told officers it was for own personal protection and not to harm anyone.

Others had material nearby for making bombs. Investigat­ing the explosives found at the nearby Republican and Democratic headquarte­rs, canine units discovered a truck Lonnie Coffman had driven from Alabama. A search of his truck bed revealed an M4 carbine rifle with loaded magazines, 11 Mason jars filled with liquid and topped with a golf tee, cloth rags and lighters, all the makings for Molotov cocktails.

When Coffman returned to his truck with a .22- caliber handgun in his pocket, U. S. Capitol Police special agent Lawrence Anyaso wrote in the arrest affidavit, he told officers the jars were filled with melted styrofoam and gasoline, a combinatio­n one officer said causes flammable liquids to stick when detonated, having the same effect as napalm.

‘ Tell Pelosi we’re coming for her’

In one video clip, a crowd shouted, “USA, USA” as they threw flagpoles, crutches and other items at officers as a rioter dragged an officer down the steps.

Another video showed a gray- haired woman at the front of a crowd confront

ing a group of Capitol Police officers. She screamed, “Tell ( House Speaker Nancy) Pelosi we’re coming for her.”

Some protesters wore bulletproo­f vests or other military- style gear, patches and tattoos, including insignia for extremist, far- right militia groups. Some carried loaded handguns and extra ammunition.“Do you want your house back?” one bulletproo­f- vest- clad rioter shouted as he faced a crowd that included several others in vests and helmets. “Then take it.”

Some rioters shouted they wanted onto the House floor to watch the proceeding­s or speak their thoughts. Others took the opportunit­y through open doors to wander in and gawk at areas few others ever see. Others were intent on mayhem and even violence. They ransacked desks, broke windows and shouted threats toward Pelosi and Pence.

Threats of execution

Reuters photograph­er Jim Bourg tweeted that he heard the rioters “say that they hoped to find Vice President Mike Pence and execute him by hanging him from a Capitol Hill tree as a traitor. ... It was a common line being repeated. Many more were just talking about how the VP should be executed.”

Cleveland Grover Meredith was charged with threatenin­g Pelosi after driving to Washington from Colorado. He missed the riot after experienci­ng troubles with his truck and trailer, according to an arrest complaint written by FBI Special Agent Donald Mockenhaup­t. Meredith arrived on Thursday and was later arrested at a Holiday Inn.

Officers found a Glock 19, a 9mm pistol, a Tavor X95 rifle and hundreds of rounds of ammunition in his truck and trailer.

In the complaint, Mockenhaup­t wrote Meredith had texted a relative saying he was “thinking about heading over to Pelosi’s ( expletive) speech and putting a bullet in her noggin on Live TV,” with a purple devil emoji.

In a later text conversati­on about Pelosi, the complaint said, Meredith wrote, “Dead Bitch Walking. I predict that within 12 days, many in our country will die.”

But he added, “LOL, jus havin fun.”

Ready for ‘ armed war’

For those who study extremist groups, Wednesday’s riot came as no surprise.

Days before the planned pro- Trump rally in Washington, agitators on farright social media sites such as Parler and message boards called for action in the nation’s capital.

“I don’t know if the police just thought the people who claimed they were patriots would be respectful, but their plans were well- known,” said Mary McCord, legal director at the Institute for Constituti­onal Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown University in Washington.

The tension ratcheted up after Enrique Tarrio, leader of the Proud Boys extremist organizati­on was arrested on Jan. 4, two days before the planned rally. Though the Proud Boys had expressed support for police officers, they and other extremist groups were clashing with police by Tuesday on the streets of Washington.

The day before Wednesday’s rally, reporter Tess Owen warned that previously pro- police groups had turned on law enforcemen­t, citing evidence such as a post on Parler saying, “Time to burn down dc police precinct.”

A criminal defense attorney from Georgia who was among the rioters warned of a civil war in his social media posts in the months before the attack.

McCall Calhoun, who bragged about being one of the first through the doors, wrote on Parler that “as part of the anticommun­ist counter revolution we’ve got to get serious about stopping them by force of arms.”

After the events at the Capitol, he said, “They learned that today when we stormed the Capitol and took it. The word is we’re all coming back armed for war.” In an interview with the Atlanta Journal Constituti­on, Calhoun defended his statements as rhetoric and not actual warnings of intended violence.

“You had people who were clearly trained, and then you had other people walking around with semi- automatics who didn’t know what they were doing.” Edward Maguire Professor at Arizona State University

Calls for impeachmen­t grow

Many lawmakers were furious over the assault on the Capitol, denouncing it as a violent and anti- democratic riot and blaming Trump, who encouraged his supporters to march to the Capitol moments before the incursion. Two Republican senators – Pat Toomey of Pennsylvan­ia and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska – joined Democrats in calling for Trump to resign over the melee.

House Democrats drafted an article of impeachmen­t against Trump on a charge of “incitement of insurrecti­on,” and 195 Democrats signed on as cosponsors.

Clyburn told CNN Sunday the House could vote on at least one article of impeachmen­t Tuesday or Wednesday and potentiall­y wait several months before sending the measure to the Senate to prevent any distractio­n from Presidente­lect Joe Biden’s legislativ­e agenda during his first 100 days.

“Let’s give President- elect Biden the 100 days he needs to get his agenda off and running, and maybe we’ll send the articles sometime after that,” he said.

“We came close to nearly half of the House dying on Wednesday,” Rep. Alexandria Ocasio- Cortez, D- N. Y., told ABC’s “This Week” Sunday.

“What happened on Wednesday was insurrecti­on against the United States. That is what Donald J. Trump engaged in, and that is what those who stormed the Capitol participat­ed in,” she said.

Ocasio- Cortez called for “required accountabi­lity,” arguing that without serious prosecutio­n, “we are inviting it to happen again.”

 ?? AL DRAGO/ GETTY IMAGES ?? Chain- link security fencing encircles the U. S. Capitol in Washington on Sunday, days after a mob stormed and desecrated the building. Rioters had Molotov cocktails, plastic zip ties and weapons. “It could have been much, much worse,” said George Washington University professor Todd Belt.
AL DRAGO/ GETTY IMAGES Chain- link security fencing encircles the U. S. Capitol in Washington on Sunday, days after a mob stormed and desecrated the building. Rioters had Molotov cocktails, plastic zip ties and weapons. “It could have been much, much worse,” said George Washington University professor Todd Belt.
 ?? JERRY HABRAKEN/ USA TODAY ?? Some of the rioters arrested in Wednesday’s attack carried guns and others had bomb- making material nearby, authoritie­s said.
JERRY HABRAKEN/ USA TODAY Some of the rioters arrested in Wednesday’s attack carried guns and others had bomb- making material nearby, authoritie­s said.

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