New York Daily News

Don’t use your big riot weapons, cops at Capitol were told

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

A senior U.S. Capitol Police official told officers to not use common riot weapons against the Donald Trump supporters who stormed the historic building in January, likely hampering their ability to push back the belligeren­t mob, the department’s internal watchdog testified before Congress on Thursday.

Michael Bolton, the Capitol Police inspector general who has been investigat­ing the security failures that paved the way for the deadly Jan. 6 attack, told members of the House Administra­tion Committee that an unnamed assistant deputy chief made the call to not deploy nonlethal riot weapons like 40-mm. munition grenade launchers.

“It was decided that these heavier munitions — specifical­ly sting balls, 40-mm. — were not to be utilized, based on that they could potentiall­y cause life-altering injury and/or death,” Bolton told lawmakers in his first testimony since he began investigat­ing the assault.

Bolton said he took issue with the assistant deputy chief’s decision.

“Our feeling is that, well, anything that you give a police officer can be misused and, if misused, can cause life-altering injuries and/or death.

“The takeaway from that is let’s provide the training to our officers so that they are used appropriat­ely,” he said.

Weapons like 40-mm. munition grenade launchers are regularly used by police to break up riots and civil unrest. Riot cops deployed such weapons against Black Lives Matter protesters in cities across the country last summer.

Asked if he believes the assistant deputy chief made the wrong call, Bolton said it’s undeniable that officers would have been in “a better posture” to repel the insurrecti­onists if they had access to riot weapons.

“It would be very difficult to say it would’ve turned the tide, but it certainly would’ve given them a better chance,” Bolton said, adding that 40-mm munitions are “very painful” and likely would’ve forced some of the attackers to retreat before they were able to smash their way into the Capitol.

Bolton’s testimony is part of a wide-ranging effort by various congressio­nal committees to get to the bottom of how Trump supporters were able to storm the Capitol, kill a police officer and desecrate the halls of Congress in a violent bid to stop the certificat­ion of President Biden’s election.

The attack unfolded shortly after Trump urged supporters at a rally near the Capitol to march on the building and “fight like hell” to stop the certificat­ion.

A classified 104-page report compiled by Bolton’s office and leaked to several media outlets this week faults Capitol Police leadership for failing to act on alarming intelligen­ce in the days leading up to Jan. 6, including an FBI memo concluding that farright extremists were gearing up for “war.”

Bolton, who has been tasked with making recommenda­tions for improving congressio­nal safety, testified that the top priority should be for the Capitol Police department to beef up its intelligen­ce capacities.

“We need an intelligen­ce bureau,” he said. “It needs to be a full service, comprehens­ive bureau.”

Beyond slacking on intelligen­ce operations, Bolton wrote in his report that the Capitol Police department was woefully unprepared for a breach like Jan. 6 from a logistical standpoint.

Equipment like tear gas launchers, riot shields and other protective gear was substandar­d, expired and stored poorly, the IG found.

Many officers who responded to the attack had not completed training on crowd control, and there was a lack of direction from the civil disturbanc­e unit, a part of the department responsibl­e for preventing the exact type of chaos that happened, Bolton said.

Some of the issues referenced by Bolton remain to this day, he said in the report.

In a statement Thursday, Capitol Police said that’s because “nearly all” of Bolton’s “recommenda­tions require significan­t resources the department does not have.”

Members on both sides of the aisle committed during Thursday’s hearing to work toward providing Capitol Police with better resources.

“I’m incredibly concerned with the [Capitol Police’s] lack of ability to manage and interpret the intelligen­ce they are getting from other agencies,” said Illinois Rep. Rodney Davis, the administra­tion committee’s top Republican.

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