Los Angeles Times

Virginia suspect held in attack on lawmaker’s staff

Democratic Rep. Gerald Connolly says two of his employees were injured by a man wielding baseball bat.

-

FAIRFAX, Va. — A man with a metal baseball bat walked into the northern Virginia office of U.S. Rep. Gerald E. Connolly on Monday, asked for him and struck two of his workers with the bat, including an intern on her first workday, police and the congressma­n said.

The attack marked the latest in a sharp uptick in violence aimed at lawmakers or those close to them.

Fairfax city police said that officers arrived within minutes and took the man into custody without incident and that the two staff members were being treated for injuries that were not lifethreat­ening.

The veteran Democratic congressma­n, who wasn’t in the office at the time, said he knew of no motive for the attack, calling it “unconscion­able and devastatin­g” in a post on Twitter.

Connolly said in an interview that the suspect was known to police in Fairfax, adding, “He’s never made threats to us, so it was unprovoked, unexpected and inexplicab­le.”

“I have no reason to believe that his motivation was politicall­y motivated, but it is possible that the sort of toxic political environmen­t we all live in, you know, set him off, and I would just hope all of us would take a little more time to be careful about what we say and how we say it.”

Connolly said the two people attacked were an intern, who was struck in the side, and his outreach director, who was hit on the head.

“Both of them are conscious and talking. They’re both in shock. Their families were with them too,” Connolly said.

The U.S. Capitol Police and Fairfax city police identified the suspect as XuanKha Tran Pham, 49, of Fairfax. He was being held without bond at the Fairfax County Adult Detention Center on charges of malicious wounding and aggravated malicious wounding.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether the man had an attorney who could speak for him.

“At this time, it is not clear what the suspect’s motivation may have been,” Capitol Police said in a news release announcing a joint investigat­ion with the Fairfax City Police Department.

Police said the suspect is facing other charges in connection with a separate attack involving a baseball bat a short time earlier on Monday.

Fairfax police said in a statement Monday evening that a man later identified as Pham approached a woman in her parked car about five miles from Connolly’s office at 10:37 a.m. The man asked the woman whether she was white, then hit her windshield with a bat and ran away, according to police. The woman was not injured, the statement said.

Special agents with the Capitol Police Threat Assessment Section have been sent to Fairfax.

Fairfax police spokespers­on Sgt. Lisa Gardner said police received a call about the attack at Connolly’s district office around 10:50 a.m.

“You could absolutely tell that the people inside were scared. They were hiding. Someone swinging a bat around, I would be scared as well,” Gardner said.

Police arrived in about five minutes and located the suspect in the office, quickly detaining him without further incident, Gardner said.

Police said in a news release that one police officer required treatment for a minor injury.

Connolly, who is serving his eighth term in Congress, represents Virginia’s Fairfax County-based 11th District in the Washington suburbs. He told CNN that his office sustained damage, including broken windows.

Monday was not Pham’s first encounter with law enforcemen­t, according to police and court records.

Last year, officers responded to a Fairfax home after a man called dispatch saying he wished to harm others, police said in a statement.

Officers who responded encountere­d Pham, who assaulted them and attempted to take a firearm, according to the statement, which said the officers sustained minor injuries.

Pham was taken into custody and charged with assaulting a law enforcemen­t officer, resisting arrest and attempting to disarm a law enforcemen­t officer.

Court records show those charges were eventually dropped.

Detectives were at an address Monday evening that Pham listed as his home in Fairfax.

Last month, U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger testified about the heightened threat climate across the country. Since the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol, threats to lawmakers and their families have increased sharply.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States