Stamford Advocate

Report details mishandlin­g of police emergency system on 1/6

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U.S. Capitol Police didn’t adequately respond to frantic calls for help from officers when they pressed panic buttons on their radios seeking immediate backup as scores of pro-Trump rioters beat officers with bats, poles and other weapons, an inspector general’s report found.

The report obtained by The Associated Press offered new details about the shortcomin­gs by law enforcemen­t during the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol.

The report found that most of the emergency activation­s from officers’radios were never simulcast on police radio, a standard protocol designed to spread the word to other officers about emergencie­s and crises. The on-duty watch commander appears not to have been made aware of at least some of the system activation­s, the report said.

“Without the ability to connect with help or request reinforcem­ents during emergencie­s, officers are at risk of facing dangerous or even deadly situations,” the report said. “Without being aware of an officer’s emergency, the Department does not dispatch additional units or resources for an officer in distress. And if the on-duty Watch Commander is not notified of emergency identifier activation­s, they cannot respond to a situation.”

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