Wapakoneta Daily News

Two more arrested

- By MICHAEL BALSAMO

WASHINGTON

(AP) — U.S. officials have arrested and charged two men with assaulting U.S. Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick with bear spray during the Jan. 6 riot, but they do not know yet whether it caused the officer’s death.

George Tanios, 39, of Morgantown, West Virginia, and Julian Khater, 32, of Pennsylvan­ia, were arrested Sunday. They were expected to appear in federal court Monday. The idea that Sicknick died after being sprayed by a chemical irritant has emerged in recent weeks as a new theory in the case.

The arrests are the closest federal prosecutor­s have come to identifyin­g and charging anyone associated with the deaths that happened during and after the riot. Five people died, including a woman who was shot by a police officer inside the Capitol. But many rioters are facing charges of injuring police officers, who were attacked with bats, sprayed with irritants, punched and kicked, and rammed with metal gates meant to keep the insurrecti­onists from the Capitol.

Investigat­ors initially believed that Sicknick was hit in the head with a fire extinguish­er, based on statements collected early in the investigat­ion, according to two people familiar with the case. But as they’ve collected more evidence, the theory of the case has evolved and investigat­ors now believe Sicknick may have ingested a chemical substance — possibly bear spray — that may have contribute­d to his death, officials have said.

Khater is the man in a video obtained by the FBI that showed him spraying Sicknick and others with bear spray, according to court papers.

“Give me that bear (expletive), Khater said to Tanios on the video, according to court papers. Sicknick and other officers were standing guard near metal bike racks

Khater then says, “they just (expletive) sprayed me,” as he’s seen holding a white can with a black top that prosecutor­s said “appears to be a can of chemical spray.”

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