Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

PREPARING FOR WORST

- John Bacon

Employees with Daniels General Contractor­s board up ground-floor windows Monday at the Capitol in Madison as federal investigat­ors learned “armed protests” were being planned at statehouse­s across the

country to oppose the inaugurati­on of Joe Biden as president.

Former Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund said he tried to get the National Guard placed on standby in the days before the deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol but was rebuffed.

Sund, who resigned the day after the riot, told The Washington Post he had been concerned that the protest planned for Jan. 6 would be larger than expected. Sund said he asked House and Senate security officials for permission to request that the Guard be placed on standby.

Sund said House and Senate sergeants at arms told him they were not comfortabl­e with the “optics” of declaring an emergency days before the protest and suggested Sund should informally ask Guard officials to be on alert. Both Senate Sergeant at Arms Michael Stenger and House Sergeant at Arms Paul Irving have since resigned.

Sund said he pleaded for help five more times as the riot unfolded. A crowd quickly overran the Capitol Police contingent of 1,400 officers.

“If we would have had the National Guard, we could have held them at bay longer, until more officers from our partner agencies could arrive,” he said.

Sund said the crowd breached the Capitol just before 2 p.m. A half-hour later, he was on the phone with the Pentagon, he said. Sund said Lt. Gen. Walter Piatt, director of the Army Staff, balked at recommendi­ng that his boss, Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy, approve the request. Again, optics were cited.

National Guard troops arrived around 5:40 p.m., after the riot had been quelled.

Under federal law, the mayor of the District of Columbia does not have authority over the Guard. Neighborin­g Maryland must gain approval from the Pentagon to send its troops across the border into the District of Columbia.

Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said he received a call Wednesday afternoon from House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., who told him that the

Capitol had been overrun.

Hogan said he authorized the mobilizati­on of the Maryland National Guard and was ready to deploy the troops to the Capitol.

“However, we were repeatedly denied approval to do so,” Hogan said.

After “a little back and forth,” Hogan said, McCarthy called about 90 minutes later to approve the request.

The Pentagon disputed that timeline, saying the Maryland National Guard informed Guard officials in Washington at 3:55 p.m. Jan. 6 that Hogan had activated a response force of 100 troops that could arrive in D.C. in eight hours. McCarthy said he first spoke to Hogan at 4:40 p.m. on the day of riot.

Sund, hours before resigning, said the riot was “unlike any I have ever experience­d in my 30 years in law enforcemen­t here in Washington, D.C.” His resignatio­n, effective Saturday, came hours after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., called for him step down.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., called for a congressio­nal inquiry, saying the riot “represente­d a massive failure of institutio­ns, protocols and planning that are supposed to protect the first branch of our federal government.”

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 ?? CQ ROLL CALL VIA AP ?? Steven Sund, ex-chief of the U.S. Capitol Police, says National Guard backup could have helped hold the line against protesters.
CQ ROLL CALL VIA AP Steven Sund, ex-chief of the U.S. Capitol Police, says National Guard backup could have helped hold the line against protesters.

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