Houston Chronicle

HPD officer resigns amid Capitol probe

Possible role in insurrecti­on under scrutiny by local officials and federal investigat­ors

- By Nicole Hensley STAFF WRITER

A longtime Houston Police Department officer believed to have joined a violent mob at the nation’s Capitol resigned Thursday amid a growing federal probe into the insurrecti­on.

The officer, Tam Pham, dropped off his resignatio­n with Chief Art Acevedo ahead of his disciplina­ry meeting Friday with the top law man — though the chief earlier expressed doubt that the officer would attend.

The chief — after receiving a tip about Pham’s possible involvemen­t — reviewed the officer’s social media and found photos suggesting that he entered the Capitol building during the deadly takeover. Acevedo said he then contacted the FBI’s Houston Division, which opened a federal investigat­ion into the officer’s East Coast trip.

Acevedo expects federal charges to be filed against the officer.

The special agent in charge of the FBI’s Houston field office stressed that federal investigat­ors — without acknowledg­ing the police officer — are using tips and “advanced technical and scientific tools” to tie local residents to the Capitol mob.

“Our agents and analysts have been gathering evidence, sharing intelligen­ce, and working with federal prosecutor­s toward bringing appropriat­e charges,” Perrye Turner said Thursday in a statement.

In Washington, the FBI there has spent more than week sharing dozens of photos of rioters in an attempt to identify and then arrest them. At least 32 people — including two Virginia police officers — have been charged federally in connection to the violent mob.

A tip on Tuesday led law enforcemen­t to the latest arrest of a retired Boothwyn, Pa., firefighte­r in suspicion of hitting three U.S. Capitol Police officers with a fire extinguish­er.

Discoverin­g the officer’s possible role in the Capitol attack — sparked by “nationalis­tic impulses” — dismayed Acevedo, he wrote in an opinion essay in Thursday’s Chronicle.

He pointed to Pham being Asian-American amid a mob of predominan­tly white participan­ts as an indication of a larger issue in the country.

“I long hoped such threats wouldn’t material here,” Acevedo wrote.

“But the reach of this movement is broader than we may think,” the chief continued. “Look no further than my own department.”

Police union leaders on Wednesday expected Pham’s resignatio­n when the 18-year veteran was placed on administra­tive leave.

In a phone call, the Westside patrol officer confirmed he was among the thousands of people who gathered in Washington D.C. in support of President Donald Trump. He contends he was there to take pictures but stopped short of saying he entered the Capitol building as alleged.

“I shouldn’t have done it,” Pham told the Chronicle.

In a statement, U.S. Rep. Al Green, D-Houston, addressed the scrutinize­d HPD officer and stressed that the FBI identify and punish “each individual who may have contribute­d to this treasonous act.” Police officers should not be exempted, he continued.

“No one should be allowed to return to their home states and towns and simply assume their lives as usual, without penalty if they participat­ed in this insurrecti­on,” Green said.

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