The Standard Journal

5 takeaways from the first House hearing on Jan. 6 attack

- By Sarah D. Wire

WASHINGTON — Sober firstperso­n accounts from police marked the first hearing of the House committee tasked with investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

The attack, which occurred following a rally by President Donald Trump near the White House and disrupted for several hours Congress’ obligation to publicly count the Electoral College votes of each state, led to five deaths, including that of a police officer. Two officers later died by suicide.

While both sides decried the violence that occurred that day, it quickly became another deeply polarizing moment in Washington.

Senate Republican­s had previously blocked a vote to create an independen­t, nonpartisa­n commission to study what led to the attack, and Republican leaders declined to participat­e in the House investigat­ion.

Tuesday’s hearing was the first in what is expected to be a monthslong investigat­ion. Here is what we learned:

Gut-wrenching testimony laid bare the violence of the day

While some of the officers who testified have spoken publicly about their experience, the first-person retelling of their injuries, how they feared for their lives and how they are emotionall­y dealing with the events six months later brought the men, and the lawmakers questionin­g them, to tears repeatedly.

The panel detoured from the normal five-minute opening statements granted to witnesses, and let each officer recount the day for as long as he wished before answering specific questions. Body camera footage, some new, highlighte­d the extent of their injuries and the rancor thrown at officers by people wielding American flags as weapons.

Aquilino Gonell, a Capitol Police sergeant who faces multiple surgeries and at least a year of rehabilita­tion, said he was more scared for his life Jan. 6 than during his Army tour of duty in Iraq. He spoke of not hugging his wife when he got home because his uniform was soaked in chemical irritants he had been sprayed with. A shower made the irritants reactivate and he lay in bed for hours in agony before putting on a fresh uniform and heading back to work.

Metropolit­an Police Officer Michael Fanone was pulled from a line of officers defending an entrance to the building and dragged into the crowd. where he was

beat and tasered repeatedly at the base of his skull with his own weapon. He suffered a heart attack.

He fought with one rioter trying to seize his gun “as I heard chants of ‘Kill him with his own gun,’” Fanone said. “I can still hear those words in my head today.”

The officers recounted watching colleagues flush bear spray out of their eyes and rush back into the fray, some bleeding or with broken bones. More than 140 officers were injured Jan. 6, some permanentl­y.

They relayed how the crowd taunted them, calling them traitors.

Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, who is Black, said Jan. 6 was the first time he’s been called the N-word while in uniform. He urged colleagues to seek out therapy, and Congress to ensure officers and staff have the resources they need. The Capitol Police ranks have shrunk dramatical­ly since the attack.

Officers blamed Trump for the riot

“If a hit man is hired and he kills somebody, the hit man goes to jail,” Dunn said. “But not only does the hit man go to jail, but the person who hired them does. There was an attack carried out on Jan. 6, and [someone] sent them. I want you to get to the bottom of that.”

The officers said rioters repeatedly shouted that Trump had sent them as they assaulted police.

Officers described the attackers as domestic terrorists

Each officer used stark terms to describe their attackers as terrorists and insurrecti­onists. Metropolit­an Police Officer Daniel Hodges even read the definition of “terrorist” in U.S. code to justify why he insisted on using the term.

Some Republican­s have criticized using the terms “insurrecti­on” and “terrorism” to describe the attack, saying the majority of those present protested peacefully and did not enter the building or hurt police.

Not having firebrands in the room changed the tone

Last week, House Republican leader Kevin McCarthy of California withdrew his five picks to serve on the committee when House Speaker Nancy Pelosi rejected two who have been vocal proponents of Trump’s lie that the election was stolen.

Pelosi, D-Calif., added two Republican­s herself to keep the panel bipartisan, Wyoming’s Liz Cheney and Illinois’ Adam Kinzinger, both of whom voted to impeach Trump over the Jan. 6 attack and have been vocal that the party needed to move away from him.

Committee staff say rather than meeting separately, the Republican­s are actively engaged in planning the course of the investigat­ion alongside their Democratic colleagues.

The decision to withdraw left Trump without defenders in the room, and the lack of incendiary rhetoric was noticeable.

 ?? Kent nishimura/los angeles times/tns ?? Members of the House select committee investigat­ing the deadly pro-Trump invasion of the U.S. Capitol meet in a room ahead of the first hearing in the Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on July 27.
Kent nishimura/los angeles times/tns Members of the House select committee investigat­ing the deadly pro-Trump invasion of the U.S. Capitol meet in a room ahead of the first hearing in the Cannon House Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., on July 27.

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