Police recount mayhem and 'attempted coup' in U.S. Capitol riot
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[July 28, 2021]
By Richard Cowan and Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Four police officers
on Tuesday told lawmakers they were beaten, taunted with racial insults,
heard threats including "kill him with his own gun" and thought they
might die as they struggled to defend the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 against
a mob of then-President Donald Trump's supporters.
Often tearful, sometimes profane, the officers called the rioters
"terrorists" engaged in an "attempted coup" during a 3-1/2 hour
congressional hearing in which they also criticized Republican lawmakers
who have sought to downplay the attack.
"I feel like I went to hell and back to protect the people in this
room," said District of Columbia police officer Michael Fanone,
referring to lawmakers. "The indifference shown to my colleagues is
disgraceful," Fanone added, slamming his hand onto the witness table.
It was a dramatic first hearing for a Democratic-led House of
Representatives committee formed despite opposition by Trump's fellow
Republicans to investigate the worst violence at the Capitol since the
British invasion in the War of 1812.
Some Democrats have suggested Trump, who made an incendiary speech to
supporters before the riot repeating false claims that the 2020 election
was stolen from him through widespread voting fraud, be called to
testify. The officers recounted how rioters fought on Trump's behalf,
seeking to prevent Congress from formally certifying now-President Joe
Biden's election victory.
"He himself helped create this monstrosity," Capitol Police Officer
Aquilino Gonell said of Trump as he described rioters wielding weapons
including police shields, batons, sledgehammers, flag poles, Taser
devices, chemical irritants, metal pipes, rocks, broken table legs and
metal guard rails.
The officers urged lawmakers to determine whether Trump or others helped
instigate the riot.
"There was an attack carried out on Jan. 6, and a hit man sent them. I
want you to get to the bottom of that," Capitol police officer Harry
Dunn testified.
Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson and Republican panel member Liz
Cheney warned against "whitewashing" a riot in which more than 535
people now face criminal charges, even as Trump allies portray the panel
as politically motivated.
Cheney, stripped of her House Republican leadership post after
denouncing Trump's election falsehoods, asked: "Will we be so blinded by
partisanship that we will throw away the miracle of America?"
The committee, expected to explore questions about how the riot was
organized and financed as well as law enforcement's lack of
preparedness, heard the most detailed public account to date of what
police encountered. More than a hundred officers were injured by
hundreds of rioters.
Fanone said he was pulled into the crowd, beaten, shocked repeatedly
with a Taser, robbed of his badge and knocked unconscious, suffering a
heart attack. Fanone said he heard a rioter say "kill him with his own
gun."
"I yelled out that I have kids," Fanone said, appealing to his
assailants' humanity.
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Metropolitan Police Officer Michael Fanone testifies during the
opening hearing of the U.S. House (Select) Committee investigating
the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, on Capitol Hill in
Washington, U.S., July 27, 2021. REUTERS/Jim Bourg/Pool
Dunn, who is Black, said rioters repeatedly called
him a racial slur. Dunn said he challenged their claims that no one
had voted for Biden by telling them that he had done so.
'MEDIEVAL BATTLEFIELD'
Gonell, an Iraq war veteran and naturalized U.S. citizen born in the
Dominican Republic, likened the violence to "a medieval battlefield"
and recalled rioters labeling him a traitor who should be executed.
Gonell said he thought to himself, "This is how I'm going to die."
Washington officer Daniel Hodges called the rioters "terrorists,"
citing the term's legal definition. He said they told him: "You will
die on your knees!"
Hodges said many rioters appeared to be white nationalists. While
Black and Hispanic colleagues faced racial slurs, Hodges, who is
white, said rioters tried to recruit him, asking, "Are you my
brother?"
The rioters sent lawmakers and then-Vice President Mike Pence
scrambling for safety. Four people died on Jan. 6: one rioter shot
by police and three others who experienced medical emergencies. A
policeman who was attacked by rioters died the following day. Two
others later committed suicide.
"Some people are trying to deny what happened, to whitewash it, to
turn the insurrectionists into martyrs," Thompson said. "And all of
it for a vile, vile lie."
Democrats created the panel after Republicans blocked formation of
an independent bipartisan investigatory commission. House Minority
Leader Kevin McCarthy acted to prevent fellow Republicans from
joining the committee after Democratic House Speaker Nancy Pelosi
rejected two of his choices amid concerns they would undermine its
integrity. Two Republicans picked by Pelosi are serving.
Republican Jim Jordan, one of the two Pelosi blocked, called the
hearing a "partisan January 6th charade."
The Senate meanwhile inched closer to approving around $900 million
in emergency aid to bolster Capitol police funding and establish a
"quick-reaction force" to respond to any future attacks, among other
things.
During the hearing, Democrat Stephanie Murphy asked Hodges what he
was fighting for as he confronted the rioters.
"Democracy," Hodges replied.
(Reporting by Richard Cowan and Sarah N. Lynch; Additional reporting
by David Morgan; Editing by Andy Sullivan and Will Dunham)
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