Gunshots, broken glass as Trump supporters breach U.S. Capitol
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[January 07, 2021]
By Patricia Zengerle
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Security officers in
dark suits drew their pistols and trained them on the shouting mob
trying to smash their way through the door of the normally sedate House
of Representatives chamber. The extraordinary scene unfolded amid the
unprecedented assault on the U.S. Congress by supporters of President
Donald Trump on Wednesday.
It was one of many shocking moments that played out on television
screens across the world as the seat of the world's greatest democracy
came under assault from hundreds of protesters angered by Trump's loss
to his Democratic opponent Joe Biden in the November presidential
election.
One woman was shot and killed in a chaotic crush of people near a
stairway. A video posted on social media showed what sounded like a
gunshot and an officer in dark clothing armed with a rifle standing near
where she fell. Other officers rushed to assist her. The circumstances
of her shooting, including who fired the shots, were not clear.
What began as a raucous protest against Trump’s defeat boiled over into
a siege of the Capitol, a symbol of U.S. democracy, that paralyzed
Congress as it went through the final steps of ratifying the victory of
President-elect Joe Biden.
Rioters brawled with police officers, pushed their way past metal
security barricades, broke windows and forced their way inside the
building, forcing lawmakers in both the House and the Senate to suspend
their work and instead go into hiding in offices and other secured
rooms.
A gray-bearded protester used what looked like a plexiglass riot shield
to break a glass window of the Capitol, clearing the way for rioters to
climb through.
Members with military experience, including Democratic Representative
Jason Crow, a former U.S. Army Ranger, and Republican Representative
Markwayne Mullin, a former mixed martial arts fighter, jumped in to
help. Representative Reuben Gallego, a former Marine, told fellow House
members how to put on their gas masks.
Much of the melee was captured in photos and videos posted on social
media, news footage and witnessed by Reuters journalists.
The rioters who stormed the Capitol roamed freely through the corridors,
carrying flags – at least one a large Confederate battle ensign – and
snapping photographs.
One man posed for a photo in the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
the top Democrat in Congress, one booted foot propped on the corner of
her desk. Another grinned at a news photographer as he carted a lectern
down a hallway.
As demonstrators pressed closer to lawmakers, they scuffled with
officers. One group discharged a fire extinguisher, leaving a haze. Tear
gas blew into the rotunda beneath the iconic building's soaring dome.
Some rioters besieged the House of Representatives chamber while
lawmakers were inside, banging on its doors, cutting off escape routes.
"It...felt like it was happening in slow motion,” Democratic
Representative Eric Swalwell said.
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Pro-Trump protesters scale a wall as they storm the U.S. Capitol
Building, during clashes with Capitol police at a rally to contest
the certification of the 2020 U.S. presidential election results by
the U.S. Congress, in Washington, U.S, January 6, 2021.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton
Security officers piled furniture against the chamber’s door and
drew their pistols. Lawmakers and reporters heard loud popping
noises from outside and dived for cover on the floor.
"I was opening my gas mask and we heard pop, pop, pop and we all
went down," Democratic Representative Vicente Gonzalez told Reuters.
After 15 minutes, Capitol Police officers secured enough of a
pathway through the Capitol to escort House members from the chamber
to another location, urging them to hurry as they wound down stairs
and through tunnels to avoid the chaos.
'BANANA REPUBLIC'
Many House members were in their offices when the assault happened
because Pelosi had limited the number of people in the chamber to 11
from each party because of concerns about the coronavirus pandemic.
Some evacuated at the urging of Capitol police while others
barricaded themselves inside their offices
Representative Mike Gallagher, a Republican from Wisconsin, said in
a video on social media that he was "sheltering in place" in his
office. "This is banana republic crap that we're watching happen
right now," he said.
Across the Capitol, other demonstrators pushed into the Senate
gallery, where minutes earlier security officials had evacuated
lawmakers and Vice President Mike Pence, who presided over the
vote-counting.
A few climbed down from the gallery to the chamber floor, then
climbed to the dais for photographs. One man, bare-chested and
wearing a fur hat with horns, his face painted red, white and blue,
posed for photos there holding an American flag.
Dozens of lawmakers hunkered in a secure room for hours while
officers worked to clear the building. Lawmakers from both parties,
riven hours earlier by the election outcome, prayed together for
American democracy.
When Congress returned on Wednesday night to resume counting the
votes, clusters of armed agents, some wearing tactical gear and
carrying automatic weapons, were stationed around the Capitol.
(Reporting By Patricia Zengerle, Brad Heath, Doina Chiacu and Dan
Burns, editing by Ross Colvin and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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