How security failures enabled Trump mob to storm U.S. Capitol
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[January 07, 2021]
By Joseph Tanfani, John Shiffman, Brad Heath and Mark Hosenball
(Reuters) - The bloody chaos inside the
U.S. Capitol on Wednesday came after the police force that protects the
legislative complex was overrun by a mob of Trump supporters in what law
enforcement officials called a catastrophic failure to prepare.
The siege of the Capitol, home to both the U.S. Senate and the House of
Representatives, represents one of the gravest security lapses in recent
U.S. history, current and former law enforcement officials said, turning
one of the most recognizable symbols of American power into a locus of
political violence.
While events such as a presidential inauguration involve detailed
security plans by numerous security agencies, far less planning went
into protecting the joint session of Congress that convened on Wednesday
to ratify the results of the 2020 presidential election, the officials
said. That lapse came despite glaring warning signs of potential
violence by hardline supporters of President Donald Trump, who are
inflamed by Trump’s baseless claims of a stolen election and hope to
block the inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden.
And security initially was handled almost entirely alone by the U.S.
Capitol Police, a 2,000-member force under the control of Congress and
dedicated to protecting the 126-acre Capitol Grounds. For reasons that
remained unclear as of early Thursday, other arms of the U.S. federal
government’s vast security apparatus did not arrive in force for hours
as rioters besieged the seat of Congress. The Capitol is a short walk
from where Trump in a speech railed against the election just before the
riot began, calling the vote an “egregious assault on our democracy” and
urging his supporters to “walk down to the Capitol” in a “Save America
March.”
The counting of the electoral votes of the presidential election by
Congress, normally a formality, was preceded by weeks of threats in
social media that planned pro-Trump protests could descend into
violence. Despite those rumblings of danger, the Capitol Police force
did not request advance help to secure the building from other federal
agencies such as the Department of Homeland Security, according to one
senior official. And National Guard reinforcements, summoned by the
city’s mayor, were not mobilized until more than an hour after
protesters had first breached the barricades.
In stark contrast, those agencies were aggressively deployed by the
Trump administration during last summer’s police brutality protests in
Washington and elsewhere in the United States.
The Capitol Police did not respond to requests for comment.
The force’s officers are trained to keep protesters off the Capitol’s
marble outdoor steps, to protect the complex like a citadel. But there
are so many windows and doors in the 19th-century complex that it is
difficult to defend them all, said Terrance Gainer, who served as
Capitol Police chief and later as the U.S. Senate’s Sergeant at Arms,
its chief law enforcement officer.
“Once they lost the steps, they lost the doors and windows,” Gainer
said.
As hordes of rioters streamed into the heart of American government,
they could be seen on camera roaming freely through the historic halls –
swinging from a balcony, rifling through the offices of House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, and even sitting in the chair reserved for the Senate’s
presiding officer. One rioter was captured by a Reuters photographer
casually shouldering a large Confederate battle flag as he strode inside
the Capitol - a searingly evocative inversion of the failed 1861-1865
insurrection against the American republic by Southern states in an
effort to perpetuate slavery.
“I truly had to suspend my disbelief because I didn’t think you could
breach the Capitol,” said Gainer, the former Capitol Police chief. “I
have great confidence in the men and women who protect Congress, but
there will need to be a full accounting. We’re going to have to have a
deep dive into what went wrong.”
Lawmakers inside the building blamed a lack of preparation for the
historic security breach. “I think police did a good job under the
circumstances, but there clearly wasn’t enough planning,” said
Representative Vicente Gonzalez, a Texas Democrat.
The long-planned protest, Gonzalez said, called for an “overwhelming
display of force” by police.
‘IT LOOKED LIKE THE KEYSTONE COPS’
Some Democratic members of Congress, worried about the prospects of
violence, tried for more than a week to press agencies for information
about what they knew about threats or countermeasures, according to one
congressional source. But there was no sign anyone was gathering serious
intelligence about possible disturbances or planning to counter them,
this source said.
Typically, law enforcement agencies in the American capital spend weeks
or months planning for large protests, one former Justice Department
official said. Officials from dozens of agencies, including local
police, Capitol Police, the Secret Service and the federal Parks Police,
ordinarily gather at the Washington field office of the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, the premier national law-enforcement agency, to
coordinate their response. But it’s not clear how much of that planning
happened for Wednesday’s event.
A senior federal law enforcement official familiar with the planning to
protect other federal sites on Wednesday, including the grounds where
Trump spoke, said that he was shocked that the Capitol Police were not
better prepared.
“It looked like the Keystone Cops out there,” said the official, who
spoke on condition of anonymity. “It should have never happened. We all
knew in advance that these people were coming, and the first order of
policing is presence.”
“The Capitol Police force is essentially a guard force, so it’s hard to
understand why they weren’t better prepared.”
The challenges of securing the Capitol have been discussed in hearings
and in reports for years. In 2013, Gainer said he proposed a fence, to
be called the Capitol Gateway, to stop such a mass assault. It was never
built.
“The idea was roundly defeated,” he said, because members of Congress
wanted to protect the public’s access, and did not want the complex to
look like a fortress.
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An explosion caused by a police munition is seen while supporters of
U.S. President Donald Trump gather in front of the U.S. Capitol
Building in Washington, U.S., January 6, 2021. REUTERS/Leah
Millis/File Photo
TRUMP LAUNCHED MARCH TO THE CAPITOL
Trump on Twitter promised a “wild” event aimed at reversing his loss
in last November’s election - and appeared to encourage his
supporters to act. “Our country has had enough, and we will not take
it anymore,” Trump said at Wednesday’s rally. “You have to show
strength, and you have to be strong."
The White House did not respond to requests for comment on Trump’s
role in inspiring the violent protests or on the collapse of
security at the Capitol.
As Trump returned to the White House, the crowd headed to the
Capitol building.
After a perimeter was quickly breached, Capitol Police officers
seemed to be alone in battling the extremists on the building’s
steps, according to witness accounts and video from the scene. They
were unable to secure all the doors and windows in the sprawling
complex. Protesters surged inside the building, which contains the
chambers of both houses of Congress. Video footage showed Capitol
Police overwhelmed by vastly superior numbers of intruders as the
mob grew into the thousands.
Two U.S. officials said that Washington city officials had hoped to
avoid a militarized response in the days before the protest. The
fear: They were concerned about a repeat of the scenes of the harsh
federal response to anti-racism protests that took place across the
street from the White House in June. They said it was unclear why it
took as long as it did for the city police force to arrive at the
Capitol.
Whatever the case, they added, the delay was too long. A U.S.
defense official said Washington Mayor Muriel Bowser requested
National Guard troops at around 2 p.m. That was about 45 minutes
after the rioters had breached the first barricade. Acting Defense
Secretary Chris Miller activated the full D.C. National Guard at
about 2:30, the official said.
By then, the Capitol was under lockdown. In the rotunda, the iconic
circular room under the Capitol dome, tear gas masks were being
distributed. Police evacuated Vice President Mike Pence - who was
there to preside over the formal counting of the Electoral College
votes for the election he and Trump lost - and members of the House
of Representatives and Senate. The police used pepper spray and tear
gas on the protesters. They tried to barricade doors with furniture
but quickly lost the battle.
One woman was shot and killed by Capitol police inside the building,
and pipe bombs were recovered at the offices of the Democratic and
Republican national committees, Washington Police Chief Robert
Contee said. He didn’t explain what prompted officers to shoot the
woman.
CALLS TO ‘RISE UP’ FOR TRUMP
While the mob invasion of the Capitol was unprecedented, there were
ample warning signs in the days leading up to the protests. Many
Trump supporters who traveled to the capital shared plans and
organized on social media websites such as Parler, a Twitter-like
service that has attracted right-wing extremist groups.
Some posters discussed ways to illegally sneak guns into Washington.
In a post on the social media app Parler, the leader of the
far-right extremist group the Proud Boys, Enrique Tarrio, promised
the group’s attendance at Wednesday’s rally. Tarrio was arrested on
Monday in Washington for destruction of property during a protest
last month and possession of a firearm magazine. He pleaded not
guilty but was ordered to leave the city on Tuesday.
Joe Biggs, a Proud Boys organizer, said more than 65 members of his
group attended the protests but that he did not know whether any of
them entered the Capitol building. He said he advised other Proud
Boys to stay inside and avoid confrontations with police.
On Twitter, starting on Jan. 1, there were 1,480 posts from accounts
related to the QAnon conspiracy theory movement that referenced
Trump’s rally on Jan. 6 and contained references to violence, said a
former intelligence official who monitors extremists on social
media. These included calls for “Patriots to Rise Up.”
In one popular post on the TikTok video app, a man said that
bringing guns to Washington is the “entire reason we’re going.”
Neil Trugman, a former Capitol Police intelligence officer, called
Wednesday’s invasion of the complex unfathomable. He said the force
generally prepares for much smaller groups under rules designed to
allow for maximum expression of free speech rights.
“We’re all witnessing something we never imagined," said Trugman,
who recently retired as chief of police for Amtrak, the U.S.
passenger rail company. “I’m not sure any chief of police could have
handled this any differently.”
He blamed Trump for inciting the riot: “This is no longer just a
protest. They crossed the line. This is terrorism.”
(Reporting by Joseph Tanfani, John Shiffman, Brad Heath, Mark
Hosenball; Additional reporting by Idrees Ali, Michael Berens,
Andrea Januta, Linda So, Jaimi Dowdell and Ted Hesson; Editing by
Jason Szep and Brian Thevenot)
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