USA TODAY International Edition

Army stunt flight spurs Capitol evacuation

Capitol Police: ‘ Unusual’ not to get advance notice

- Amanda Pérez Pintado and Wyatte Grantham- Philips

Hundreds of flights enter the restricted airspace around the U. S. Capitol each week. They typically inform the FAA in advance and seamlessly move through an area that’s secured with surface- toair missile sites, among other measures.

But Washington residents found out late Wednesday what happens when those notifications aren’t made after U. S. Capitol Police spotted a plane they considered a “probable threat” circling the area, resulting in an alert and an evacuation of the Capitol.

It took several minutes for authoritie­s to determine the plane was actually carrying the U. S. Army’s Golden Knights for a parachutin­g stunt over Nationals Park baseball stadium, home of the Washington Nationals, for Military Appreciati­on Night.

But by then, the damage was done: The Capitol was evacuated, residents were left rattled and congressio­nal leaders were calling for an investigat­ion.

Capitol Police said Thursday that it “must make split- second decisions that could make the difference between life and death. The decision to evacuate the campus is not one we take lightly.”

The Capitol Police said Thursday that while the agency is informed of hundreds of authorized flights in the restricted airspace each week, “it is extremely unusual not to be made aware of a flight in advance.”

“As soon as it was determined that we were not given advanced notice of an approved flight, our officers followed USCP policies and procedures and immediatel­y led everyone safely out of the Congressio­nal buildings. Seconds matter,” the Capitol Police wrote.

The evacuation alert was sent around 6: 30 p. m. EDT. At 6: 48 p. m., the Capitol Police tweeted that there was no threat, then said more than an hour later that staff could return.

The last time an evacuation was ordered because of a suspected air threat, the agency said, was in June 2014.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi released a statement criticizin­g the FAA’s “apparent failure” to notify Capitol Police of the planned flyover, saying it was “outrageous” and “inexcusabl­e.”

“The unnecessar­y panic caused by this apparent negligence was particular­ly harmful for Members, staff and institutio­nal workers still grappling with the trauma of the attack on their workplace on January 6th,” Pelosi said, referring to the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

Pelosi said Congress would examine the results of an “after- action review” to determine what went wrong.

Washington residents have also shared their experience­s during the evacuation on social media.

Eireann Dolan, wife of Nationals pitcher Sean Doolittle, was among the witnesses. “Possibly the scariest moment of my life. I was walking the dogs past the Dirksen Senate Office Building,” she tweeted. “People started streaming out all at once. They told me to turn around and get away as fast as possible. Some people were calm but many were genuinely panicked. I know I was.”

“As “Veep”- like tonight’s events were, it’s also not funny and very serious,” Capitol Hill resident John Connolly wrote on Twitter. “It’s a neighborho­od with people who are just trying to live our lives. Whatever happened tonight needs to be addressed so it doesn’t happen again.”

The FAA said it would review the communicat­ion breakdown.

“The FAA takes its role in protecting the national airspace seriously and will conduct a thorough and expeditiou­s review of the events yesterday and share updates,” the FAA said in a statement. “We know our actions affect others, especially in our nation’s capital region, and we must communicat­e early and often with our law enforcemen­t partners.”

Kelli LeGaspi, a spokeswoma­n for the U. S. Army Recruiting Command, which was behind the Golden Knights’ pregame demonstrat­ion, said in a statement, “We are reviewing all aspects of the event to ensure all procedures were followed appropriat­ely to coordinate both the flight and the parachute demonstrat­ion.”

The Washington Nationals declined comment to USA TODAY, and Major League Baseball did not immediatel­y respond to a request.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON/ AP ?? The Golden Knights, the U. S. Army parachute team, descend into Nationals Park before a Major League Baseball game Wednesday in Washington.
ALEX BRANDON/ AP The Golden Knights, the U. S. Army parachute team, descend into Nationals Park before a Major League Baseball game Wednesday in Washington.

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