Houston Chronicle

Woman fatally shot by police

Guns, tear gas fired, forcing evacuation of lawmakers

- By Rebecca Tan, Peter Jamison, Meagan Flynn and John Woodrow Cox

WASHINGTON — As President Donald Trump told a sprawling crowd outside the White House that they should never accept defeat, hundreds of his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday afternoon in what amounted to an attempted coup that they hoped would overturn the election he lost.

In the chaos, a woman was shot and killed by Capitol Police. Three more people died in the chaos after medical emergencie­s.

The violent scenewas like no other in modern American history, bringing to a sudden halt the congressio­nal certificat­ion of Joe Biden’s electoral victory.

With poles bearing blue Trump flags, a mob that eventually would grow into the thousands bashed through Capitol doors and windows, forcing their way

past police officers unprepared for the onslaught.

Lawmakers were evacuated shortly before an armed standoff at the House chamber’s entrance. The woman who was shot was rushed to an ambulance, police said, and later died. Canisters of tear gas were fired across the Rotunda’s white marble floor, and on the steps outside the building, rioters flew Confederat­e flags.

“USA! USA!” chanted the would-be saboteurs of a 244-yearold democracy.

The Senate stopped its proceeding­s, and the House doors were closed. In a notificati­on, U.S. Capitol Police said no one would be allowed to come or go fromthe building as they struggled to regain control.

“Stay away from exterior windows, doors. If outside, seek cover,” police warned.

All 1,100 members of the D.C. National Guard were activated, and Mayor Muriel Bowser imposed a citywide curfew. From 6 p.m. Wednesday to 6 a.m. Thursday, Bowser said, no one other than essential personnel would be allowed outdoors in the city.

The mob had arrived hours earlier, charging past the metal barricades on the property’ s outer edge. Hundreds, then thousands followed them. Some scaled the Capitol’s walls to reach entrances; others climbed over one another.

On the building’s east side, police initially pushed the pro-Trump demonstrat­ors back but soon gave up and fell back to the foot of the main steps. Within a half-hour, fights broke out again, and police retreated to the top of the stairs as screaming Trump supporters surged closer.

After the police perimeters were breached, the elated crowd began to sing the national anthem.

For an hour, they banged on the doors, chanting, “Let us in! Let us in!” Police inside fired pepper balls and smoke bombs into the crowd but failed to turn them away. After each volley, the rioters, who were mostly white men, clustered around the doors again, yelling, arguing, pledging revolution.

Aman then used a clear plastic riot shield to break through the windows on a first floor to the south side of the building, then hopped in with a few others. Once inside, police suspect, rioters opened doors to let in more of their compatriot­s.

A Capitol Police officer shouted from a higher stairway at the intruders, yelling at them to stop, but when they didn’t, the officer fired at a man coming at him, two law enforcemen­t officials said.

‘They shot a girl!’

Amid shouts and people rushing to get away from the sound of gunfire, protesters saw a woman in their group collapse. Police believe she was unarmed, a law enforcemen­t official said, but the officer who shot her didn’t know that.

Capitol Police already had been warned by D.C. police that many protesters were secretly carrying weapons.

“They shot a girl!” someone yelled as a group of Trump supporters ran out of the southeast entrance.

A team of paramedics with a gurney soon arrived and a Capitol Police officer stepped aside to let them pass.

“White female, shot in the shoulder,” the officer said as they hurried past. They emerged minutes later.

On the gurney was a woman in jeans, gazing vacantly to one side, her torso and face covered in blood. As the gurney was loaded into the back of the ambulance, pro-Trump protesters swarmed around it, screaming, “Murderers!”

Capitol Police officers with long guns pushed them back, and the ambulance drove off.

Inside, where the lawmakers had donned gasmasks kept under their chairs, Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., could only think of his family as he and other lawmakers hid from the mob.

Reeling from the loss of his 25year-old son last week, Raskin had taken one of his daughters and his son-in-law to the Capitol to watch the debates unfold over certificat­ion of Biden’s election, he said, “because we wanted to be together.” Raskin was helping lead Democrats’ arguments against Republican objectors.

“I thought I could show them the peaceful transfer of power in the United States of America,” Raskin told C-SPAN earlier. “What was really going through my mind was their safety because they were not with me in the chamber, and I just wanted us all to get back together.”

Rep. Abigail Spanberger, D-Va., said members were told that chemical irritants had been released in Statuary Hall and, for a moment, braced for the possibilit­y that they would be exposed to tear gas. Capitol Police barricaded the doors with tables and bookshelve­s.

Spanberger, a former CIA case officer, said that it was a crisis she would only expect to see unfold in fragile, faraway places.

“This is what we see in failing countries,” she said. “This is what leads to a death of democracy.”

The shooting and the breach triggered an instant call for help across Washington to other law enforcemen­t agencies. At the U.S. Secret Service, headquarte­rs sent out an emergency alert to all guncarryin­g Secret Service personnel to report to headquarte­rs in preparatio­n to help secure the Capitol.

Meanwhile, dozens of other rioters streamed into the building, where they smashed windows and vandalized offices.

“WE WILL NOT BACK DOWN,” read another left in the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., who also refused to back down, later directing her colleagues to return and finish validating Biden’s victory.

‘Borders on sedition’

Biden condemned what he called an “unpreceden­ted assault” on American democracy, “unlike anything we’ve seen in modern times.”

“This is not dissent. It’s disorder. It’s chaos,” he said. “It borders on sedition, and it must end now.”

For hours, Trump made little effort to quell the violence he had helped instigate, finally sharing a video in which he told people to “go home” — while continuing to promote the falsehood that he had won the election.

“We love you,” he told them. “You’re very special.”

More than seven hours after the chaos began, and just more than an hour after hundreds of law enforcemen­t officers had at last finished clearing the mob and removing Trump flags left inside the building, heavily armed FBI agents and police officers in riot gear escorted lawmakers back to work.

D.C. police had arrested 13 people by early evening, they said, including three in possession of firearms. A man was stabbed near Freedom Plaza, though it was unclear whether the attack was related to the demonstrat­ions.

 ?? Marissa J. Lang / Washington Post ?? Supporters of President Trump stand outside the east side of the Capitol, overwhelmi­ng police and security forces.
Marissa J. Lang / Washington Post Supporters of President Trump stand outside the east side of the Capitol, overwhelmi­ng police and security forces.

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