Loveland Reporter-Herald

Minneapoli­s Star Tribune on U.S. Capitol needs stronger police force

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Just two months after the invasion of the U.S. Capitol that left one Capitol Police officer dead and dozens injured, another of ficer was killed last week and a second was injured when a man rammed his car into them.

The attack has raised fresh concerns about how best to secure not only the Capitol compound but to protect the lives of officers who may become targets. After hitting a barricade, the assailant, Noah Green, leapt from the car and ran toward officers with a knife. He was shot dead. Only weeks earlier, barbed wire fencing surroundin­g the Capitol had been removed.

A task force formed in the wake of the Jan. 6 invasion urged Congress to increase Capitol Police staffing, improve the force’s intelligen­ce-gathering, create mobile fencing and make other improvemen­ts.

The task force’s report showed that threats against the Capitol and congressio­nal members come increasing­ly from domestic sources, and that Capitol Police were ill-positioned to respond because of “significan­t capacity shor tfalls, inadequate training, immature processes and an operating culture that is not intelligen­ce-driven.”

It is a stunning list of shortcomin­gs given that their charge is to protect this nation’s seat of government. There may have been a time when the main issues were how best to move crowds of tourists through the Capitol or deal with occasional unruly protesters. Those days are clearly gone. Today members of the Capitol Police require top-level training and a sophistica­ted intelligen­ce operation, as well as detailed plans for levels of response up to and including an actual invasion of the grounds by hostile forces, whether foreign or domestic.

Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar, who heads the Rules Committee and who is coleading an investigat­ion into the Capitol riot with Missouri GOP Sen. Roy Blunt, said she has held two major hearings and is committed to a detailed, bipar tisan look at what is needed.

A report due to be released in early May is expected to make recommenda­tions on additional security measures, staf fing, intelligen­ce-gathering and coordinati­on and the structure of the police board, Klobuchar said.

“The brave men and women of the Capitol Police who put their lives on the line ever y day deser ve to know that we have their backs and that they have the resources they need,” she said, adding that the death of officer William Evans last week is “another reminder of that.”

Evans, 41, will lie in honor in the Capitol rotunda on Tuesday, only the sixth Capitol officer in the nation’s history to die in the line of duty.

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