Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Light duty

Turnout low amid tight security surroundin­g U.S. Capitol

- COLLEEN LONG, MICHAEL BALSAMO, NATHAN ELLGREN AND ALANNA DURKIN RICHER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Michael Kunzelman, Mary Clare Jalonick, Jacques Billeaud, Lisa Mascaro, Amanda Seitz, Ashraf Khalil and Robert Burns of The Associated P

Police keep watch Saturday during a rally near the U.S. Capitol aimed at what participan­ts called supporting the “political prisoners” of the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol. Law enforcemen­t officers turned out in large numbers, but the crowd was sparse and incidents were few. More photos at arkansason­line.com/919j6rally/.

WASHINGTON — In a city still on edge after the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on, law enforcemen­t bore down in large numbers on the Capitol on Saturday over concerns that a rally in support of the jailed rioters would turn violent. It didn’t.

The crowd was sparse and incidents were few. The only clear parallels to the riots more than eight months ago by supporters of former President Donald Trump were the false claims put forth by the rally organizers about the violence that January day when Congress met to certify the election of Joe Biden.

The low turnout also called into question whether such rallies will have any staying power as the organizers attempt to tap into the rage of Jan. 6 without the presence of the former president.

Law enforcemen­t had prepared for a confrontat­ion by erecting temporary fencing around the Capitol and deploying heavy dump trucks to ring the rally site. Local police department­s and the U.S. National Guard were on standby.

The security might have been unnecessar­y in the end, but the volatility around the unsubstant­iated claim that the 2020 election was stolen and the presence of extremists and white-nationalis­t groups on Jan. 6 have made it impossible to predict how such events will go.

U.S. Capitol Police said they received intelligen­ce informatio­n leading up to the rally that was similar to what was missed in January, when law enforcemen­t was only expecting a free-speech protest and Trump supporters violently stormed the Capitol.

Republican lawmakers, including those who had voted that day to challenge Biden’s election, avoided Saturday’s rally. Rally organizer Matt Braynard took elected officials to task for not backing up those now in jail and introduced candidates who are running for elected office.

Counterpro­testers stood by and jeered. Some held anti-Trump signs, and one man who had confronted some of the pro-Trump protesters was quickly removed by police, who used bicycles to shield him from the crowd as they escorted him down the street.

One person was arrested in the crowd for carrying a knife, and a second man was arrested after someone reported to officers that they saw him carrying what appeared to be a handgun, police said. Two other people who police say were wanted in Texas — for a firearms charge and probation violation — were also arrested after being pulled over near the Capitol on Saturday morning.

Braynard, a former Trump campaign staffer, said the event was for the defendants held behind bars.

On Jan.6, dozens of law enforcemen­t officers were left bloodied and beaten as the crowd of pro-Trump rioters, some armed with pipes, bats and bear spray, charged into the Capitol, quickly overrunnin­g the overwhelme­d police force.

The Associated Press reviewed hundreds of court and jail records for the Capitol riot defendants to uncover how many were being detained and found roughly 63 held in federal custody awaiting trial or sentencing hearings.

At least 30 are jailed in Washington. The rest are locked up in facilities across the country. They have said they are being treated unfairly, and one defendant said he was beaten.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit has set standards for judges to apply in deciding whether to jail a Capitol riot defendant. A three-judge panel of the appeals court ruled in March that rioters accused of assaulting officers, breaking through windows, doors and barricades, or playing leadership roles in the attack were in “a different category of dangerousn­ess” than those who merely cheered on the violence or entered the building after it was breached.

But judges have released the vast majority of the defendants, including more than a dozen members and associates of the Oath Keepers, a far-right group, who are charged in perhaps the most serious case brought so far in the attack. Only three people charged in the Oath Keepers conspiracy case remain locked up after judges said they appeared to play a leadership role in the reported conspiracy.

On Jan. 6, dozens of law enforcemen­t officers were left bloodied and beaten as the crowd of pro-Trump rioters, some armed with pipes, bats and bear spray, charged into the Capitol, quickly overrunnin­g the overwhelme­d police force.

 ?? (AP/Nathan Howard) ??
(AP/Nathan Howard)
 ?? (AP/Nathan Howard) ?? Police set up at a security fence before a rally Saturday near the U.S. Capitol in Washington. More photos at arkansason­line.com/919j6rally/.
(AP/Nathan Howard) Police set up at a security fence before a rally Saturday near the U.S. Capitol in Washington. More photos at arkansason­line.com/919j6rally/.
 ?? (AP/Brynn Anderson) ?? People stand as the national anthem plays during a rally Saturday near the U.S. Capitol in Washington. More photos at arkansason­line.com/919j6rally/.
(AP/Brynn Anderson) People stand as the national anthem plays during a rally Saturday near the U.S. Capitol in Washington. More photos at arkansason­line.com/919j6rally/.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States