Las Vegas Review-Journal

Capitol breach draws sharp condemnati­on of police

- By Shaila Dewan

Americans looked on in shock Wednesday as a calm protest turned into an angry mob that swarmed past barriers and stormed the Capitol — spraying officers with chemical agents, breaking windows and doors and looting sizable objects — as the Capitol Police struggled to contain the violence and sometimes simply retreated.

The police force, which numbers about 2,000 officers and has sole jurisdicti­on over the Capitol’s buildings and grounds, was clearly outnumbere­d and unprepared for the onslaught, even as it was openly organized on social media sites like Gab and Parler.

It took more than two hours, and reinforcem­ents from other law enforcemen­t agencies, before order was restored. One woman, identified by law enforcemen­t as Ashli Babbitt, was fatally shot by a Capitol Police officer, according to Robert Contee, chief of the city’s Metropolit­an Police Department, which was called in for backup. Another woman and two men died during the events because of as yet unspecifie­d medical emergencie­s, he said.

At least 52 people were arrested, he said, including five on weapons charges and at least 26 on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol. Most of the arrests were for violating the 6 p.m. curfew, he said, adding that the police would circulate pictures of those sought for breaching the Capitol building. In addition, pipe bombs were found at the headquarte­rs of both the Republican and the Democratic national committees and a cooler containing a long gun and Molotov cocktails was discovered on the Capitol grounds, the chief said.

The criticism of the Capitol Police was swift and, in some quarters, unforgivin­g.

Some law enforcemen­t experts were astonished by the sight of an officer cowering in the crush of pro-trump extremists and rioters using police shields and metal barricades as battering rams.

And protesters on the left saw a stark double standard, saying they had been hit with rubber bullets, manhandled, surrounded and arrested while behaving peacefully during demonstrat­ions against racial injustice over the summer.

Attica Scott, a state representa­tive in Kentucky, was arrested in Louisville on felony charges that were later dropped during the many months of protest over the death of Breonna Taylor in a botched police raid. “You can be arrested for walking while Black,” she said, “but you can be white and riot and basically get away with it.”

After the rally, at around 1 p.m., crowds amassed at the temporary perimeter fence that had been set up around the Capitol and grew increasing­ly animated. “There was a noticeable change in their demeanor,” Contee said.

One policing expert said there should have been a heavily manned perimeter sealing off the entire Capitol grounds and a second around the building itself given that extremist groups with a history of violent confrontat­ions were involved.

“How they were not ready for this today, I have no idea,” said Charles Ramsey, a former D.C. police chief. “They were overwhelme­d, they did not have the resources. You have to be able to protect the Capitol. That is not OK.”

On Thursday morning, Steven A. Sund, chief of the Capitol Police, put out a written statement lauding his officers as having responded “valiantly when faced with thousands of individual­s involved in violent riotous actions.”

“The violent attack on the U.S. Capitol was unlike any I have ever experience­d in my 30 years in law enforcemen­t here in Washington, D.C.,” Sund said.

He noted that his agency had a “robust plan” to address protests. “But make no mistake,” he said, “these mass riots were not First Amendment activities; they were criminal riotous behavior.”

Members of Congress demanded explanatio­ns as well. “We must investigat­e the security breach at the Capitol today,” Rep. Maxine Waters, D-calif., said on Twitter. “I warned our Caucus and had an hour-long conversati­on with the Chief of Police 4 days ago. He assured me the terrorists would not be allowed on the plaza & Capitol secured.”

Rep. Val Demings, D-fla., said in an interview with MSNBC on Wednesday night that the Capitol Police appeared understaff­ed. “It did not seem that they had a clear operationa­l plan to really deal with” thousands of people who descended on the Capitol after Trump’s complaints of a “rigged election,” she said.

Ramsey said police officers in riot gear should have been stationed nearby.

The officers at the perimeter were overwhelme­d, with the crowds — some in body armor — jostling them and spraying them with chemical plumes. On the east side of the Capitol, the rioters who broke through the perimeter then confronted a line of officers on the steps, a video shows. Those officers eventually retreated up the stairs, allowing the crowd to follow.

Another video shows officers appearing to move the barricades aside and let the protesters in. Protesters scaled walls and scaffoldin­g, hoisted themselves up on a maintenanc­e platform, posed for photos and vandalized office signs.

Some experts defended the police, noting that the Capitol Police deals with protests on a regular basis, but they are nothing like this.

“This isn’t what happens at the U.S. Capitol,” said Chuck Wexler, the executive director of the Police Executive Research Forum, a think tank in Washington. “This is completely unpreceden­ted. .”

Wexler said legitimate questions would be raised about why more officers were not on hand and why they did not anticipate the threat.

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