Yuma Sun

Prosecutor­s: No charges for officer in Capitol riot shooting

- BY ERIC TUCKER and MICHAEL BALSAMO aSSOCiaTEd prESS

WASHINGTON – Federal prosecutor­s will not charge a police officer who shot and killed a woman as she climbed through the broken part of a door during the insurrecti­on at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6.

Authoritie­s had considered for months whether criminal charges were appropriat­e for the Capitol Police officer who fatally shot Ashli Babbitt, a 35-year-old Air Force veteran from San Diego. The Justice Department’s decision, though expected, officially closes out the investigat­ion.

Prosecutor­s said they had reviewed video of the shooting, along with statements from the officer involved and other officers and witnesses, examined physical evidence from the scene and reviewed the autopsy results.

“Based on that investigat­ion, officials determined that there is insufficie­nt evidence to support a criminal prosecutio­n,” the department said in a statement.

Video clips posted online depict Babbitt, wearing a stars and stripes backpack, stepping up and beginning to go through the waisthigh opening of an area of the Capitol known as the Speaker’s Lobby when a gunshot is heard. She falls backward. Another video shows other unidentifi­ed people attempting to lift Babbitt up. She can be seen slumping back to the ground.

Mark Schamel, a lawyer for the officer, a lieutenant whose name was not released by the Justice Department, said that the decision to not bring charges was “the only correct conclusion” and that his client had “saved the lives of countless members of Congress and the rioters.”

Prosecutor­s said Babbitt was part of the mob that was trying to get into the House as Capitol Police officers were evacuating members of Congress from the chamber. The officers used furniture to try to barricade the glass doors separating the hallway from the Speaker’s Lobby to try to stave off the rioters, who kept trying to break through those doors, smashing the glass with flagpoles, helmets and other objects.

At the same time, Babbitt tried climbing through one of the doors where the glass was broken out. A Capitol Police officer inside the Speaker’s Lobby then fired a single round from his service weapon, striking Babbitt in the shoulder, prosecutor­s said.

Schamel pointed out that the officer fired only one shot and did so only after identifyin­g himself and “ordering the mob not to come through the barricade.”

“He used tremendous restraint in only firing one shot, and his actions stopped the mob from breaking through and turning a horrific day in American history into something so much worse,” Schamel said.

She fell to the ground before a police tactical team rushed into the area and gave first aid. Babbitt was later pronounced dead at a hospital.

Babbitt is one of five people who died in or outside the Capitol on Jan. 6, including a police officer. Three other people died of medical emergencie­s.

The Justice Department does not bring criminal charges in most police shootings it investigat­es in part because of the high burden for prosecutio­n.

 ?? MVA VI AP ?? THIS UNDATED DRIVER’S
LICENSE photo from the Maryland Motor Vehicle Administra­tion (MVA), provided by the Calvert County Sheriff’s Office, shows Ashli Babbitt.
MVA VI AP THIS UNDATED DRIVER’S LICENSE photo from the Maryland Motor Vehicle Administra­tion (MVA), provided by the Calvert County Sheriff’s Office, shows Ashli Babbitt.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States