Los Angeles Times

Fallout from attacks at Capitol

Police union head warns of mass exodus of officers, while lawmakers question security fencing.

- BY ERIN B. LOGAN

WASHINGTON — Last week’s deadly attack has renewed focus on both security surroundin­g the U.S. Capitol and the beleaguere­d police force whose union is demanding that Congress act to ensure it can improve the recruitmen­t and retention of its officers.

Union Chairman Gus Papathanas­iou warned that without action, the U.S. Capitol Police force could face a mass exodus, adding in a statement that Friday’s attack and the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on have decimated morale.

Within five years, 500 officers will reach retirement age, Papathanas­iou said. And while some can retire now, “I’ve had many younger officers confide in me that they’re actively looking at other agencies and department­s right now,” he added.

Even ahead of what he sees as a looming crisis, the force is more than 200 officers below its authorized level of more than 2,000, Papathanas­iou maintained. This gap has caused the force to struggle in meeting “existing mission requiremen­ts, even with the officers working massive amounts of forced overtime,” he said.

The United States Capitol Police echoed the union’s sentiments in an unsigned statement to the Los Angeles Times on Monday, writing: “We appreciate and join in the union’s support for increased hiring, retaining our current officers and implementi­ng many of the recommende­d security enhancemen­ts as quickly as possible.”

One officer died as a result of Friday’s attack, and a second was injured, after the suspect rammed his car against a police barricade, according to authoritie­s. The suspect, Noah Green, 25, was fatally shot by officers when he exited his car and lunged at them with a knife, police said.

The death of William “Billy” Evans, 41, was the second in the line of duty for the U.S. Capitol Police in less than four months. Officer Brian Sicknick died from injuries sustained during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on; two other officers died by suicide in the weeks following that attack.

Prior to this year, four officers had died in the line of duty in the history of the force, according to the Capitol Police.

Green posted on Facebook in March about his struggles with mental health and his attempts to find direction through spirituali­ty and the Nation of Islam, the Black empowermen­t and religious organizati­on also known for antiSemiti­c and homophobic rhetoric.

The Metropolit­an Police Department, which is leading the investigat­ion, along with the United States Capitol Police and the FBI, on Monday called for help from anyone with informatio­n related to the case but declined to provide more informatio­n on a possible motive. Authoritie­s previously said they do not suspect domestic terrorism.

Congress was forced to rethink Capitol security following the deadly Jan. 6 siege.

Retired Lt. Gen. Russel L. Honoré, tapped by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to lead a task force to review Capitol security, recommende­d improving intelligen­ce-gathering operations, hiring more than 800 new officers and installing removable fencing around the Capitol.

Although some lawmakers and the public have been calling on officials to remove some of the security around the Capitol in recent weeks, Friday’s assault could extend the process, said U.S. Rep. Jennifer Wexton, a Democrat who represents neighborin­g Northern Virginia, in an interview with The Times.

“I would like the fencing to come down at the earliest possible moment,” Wexton said. “It wasn’t a fence that failed us on Friday or on Jan. 6,” she added. “The openness of the Capitol is something that we really value and want to get back to as quickly as possible.”

“The fencing may have actually put officers and [Guard members] in more harm’s way,” Rep. Rodney Davis (R-Ill.), the ranking member of the House Administra­tion Committee, which oversees Capitol security, told The Times.

Davis said fencing would not stop all threats, and if it were to remain for the long term, it should be removable and more aesthetica­lly pleasing.

Meanwhile, Daniel Schuman, policy director for the Washington-based Demand Progress Education Fund, which seeks openness in government, maintains that neither resources nor fencing is at the root of the problems facing the Capitol Police force.

Fencing and other security surroundin­g the Capitol will not “necessaril­y address the next problem the force faces, but it will create a false sense of security and will keep the American people from being able to easily speak with their representa­tives,” Schuman said. “The more we separate members of Congress from the people we need to talk to them, the frailer we make our democracy.

“If we don’t address the ongoing management problems, nothing else you do — including throwing more resources at the problem — will make a difference,” Schuman added.

 ?? J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press ?? MORALE among the U.S. Capitol Police has been decimated, according to the force’s union chief. Above, the car in Friday’s attack that killed one officer.
J. Scott Applewhite Associated Press MORALE among the U.S. Capitol Police has been decimated, according to the force’s union chief. Above, the car in Friday’s attack that killed one officer.

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