Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Possible insurrecti­on not part of reports

- ERIC TUCKER AND MICHAEL BALSAMO

WASHINGTON — Intelligen­ce reports compiled by the U.S. Capitol Police in the days before the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrecti­on envisioned only an improbable or remote risk of violence, even as other assessment­s warned that crowds of pro-Donald Trump demonstrat­ors could converge in Washington and create a dangerous situation.

The documents, obtained by The Associated Press, underscore the uneven intelligen­ce that circulated to Capitol Police officers ahead of the riot, when thousands of Trump loyalists swarmed the Capitol complex and clashed with law enforcemen­t officers in their effort to disrupt the certificat­ion of the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election. The intelligen­ce reports in particular show how the police agency for days underestim­ated the prospect of violence and disruption­s.

The contradict­ory intelligen­ce produced by law enforcemen­t authoritie­s leading up to the riot has been at the forefront of congressio­nal scrutiny about the Jan. 6 preparatio­ns and response, with officials struggling to explain how they failed to anticipate and plan for the deadly riot at the Capitol that day.

The shortcomin­gs led to upheaval at the top ranks of the Capitol Police.

There was, according to a Senate report issued in June, “a lack of consensus about the gravity of the threat posed on January 6, 2021.”

“Months following the attack on the U.S. Capitol, there is still no consensus among USCP officials about the intelligen­ce reports’ threat analysis ahead of January 6, 2021,” the report stated.

The conclusion­s of the documents, known as the “daily intelligen­ce report” and marked “For Official Use Only,” have been described over the past year in congressio­nal testimony and in the Senate report. But the AP on Friday evening obtained full versions of the documents for Jan. 4-6 of last year.

On each of the three days, the documents showed, the Capitol Police ranked as “highly improbable” the chance of acts of civil disobedien­ce and arrests arising from the “Stop the Steal” protest planned for the Capitol. The documents ranked that event and gatherings planned by about 20 other organizers on a scale of “remote” to “nearly certain” in terms of the likelihood of major disruption­s. All were rated as either “remote,” “highly improbable” or “improbable,” the documents show.

“No further informatio­n has been found to the exact actions planned by this group,” the Jan. 6 report says about the “Stop the Steal” rally.

Any disruption stemming from the Million MAGA March planned by Trump supporters was rated in the document as “improbable,” with officials saying it was “possible” that organizers could demonstrat­e at the Capitol complex and that though there had been talk of counter-demonstrat­ors, there were “no clear plans by those groups at this time.”

Those optimistic forecasts don’t square with separate intelligen­ce assessment­s compiled by the Capitol Police in late December and early January. Those documents, also obtained by the AP, warned that crowds could number in the thousands and include members of extremist groups such as the Proud Boys.

A Jan. 3, 2021, memo warned of a “significan­tly dangerous situation for law enforcemen­t and the general public alike” because of the potential attendance of “white supremacis­ts, militia members and others who actively promote violence.”

“Unlike previous post-election protests, the targets of the pro-Trump supporters are not necessaril­y the counter-protestors as they were previously, but rather Congress itself is the target on the 6th,” the report states.

Adding to the mixed intelligen­ce portrait was a Jan. 5, 2021, bulletin prepared by the FBI’s Norfolk, Va., field office that warned of the potential for “war” at the Capitol. Capitol Police leaders have said they were unaware of that document at the time. FBI Director Christophe­r Wray has said the report was disseminat­ed through the FBI’s joint terrorism task force, discussed at a command post in Washington and posted on an internet portal available to other law enforcemen­t agencies.

Capitol Police officials have repeatedly insisted that they had no specific or credible intelligen­ce that any demonstrat­ion at the Capitol would result in a large-scale attack on the building. Despite the scrutiny of intelligen­ce shortcomin­gs, the assistant chief in charge of intelligen­ce at the time of the riot, Yogananda Pittman, remains in that position.

The current police chief, J. Thomas Manger, defended Pittman in September, pointing to her decision when she was acting chief to implement recommenda­tions made by the inspector general and to expand the department’s internal intelligen­ce capabiliti­es so officers wouldn’t need to rely so heavily on intelligen­ce gathered by other law enforcemen­t agencies.

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