Paul Pelosi attack suspect sought to take speaker hostage, prosecutors
say
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[November 01, 2022]
By Paresh Dave and Steve Gorman
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -The man accused of
bludgeoning U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's husband with a hammer
after breaking into the couple's home threatened to take her hostage and
break her kneecaps if she lied under his questioning, according to a
federal criminal complaint filed on Monday.
David Wayne DePape's alleged intentions emerged as federal prosecutors
charged the 42-year-old suspect with assault and attempted kidnapping in
Friday's predawn break-in at the Pelosis' San Francisco home.
Several state charges were filed separately in San Francisco Superior
Court, including attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon,
burglary, elder abuse and threatening a public official, District
Attorney Brooke Jenkins announced at a news conference. An arraignment
was set for Tuesday, her office said.
The 82-year-old speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, a Democrat
who is second in the line of succession to the U.S. presidency, was in
Washington at the time of the assault. Her husband, Paul Pelosi, 82, a
real estate and venture capital executive, has undergone surgery for
skull fractures and injuries to his hands and right arm, and he remained
hospitalized on Monday.
"Paul is making steady progress on what will be a long recovery
process," the speaker said in a statement on Monday.
The attack, which Jenkins called "politically motivated," has stoked
fears about partisan extremist violence just over a week ahead of the
midterm elections, on Nov. 8, that will decide control of Congress
during one of the most vitriolic and polarized U.S. campaigns in
decades. Democrats' continued control of both the House and the Senate
is at stake.
As one of the highest-ranking Democrats in Washington and a longtime
representative of one of America's most liberal cities, Nancy Pelosi has
been a frequent lightning rod for expressions of conservative criticism
and contempt.
Her office was ransacked during the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S.
Capitol by a mob of supporters of Republican President Donald Trump,
some of whom hunted for her during the melee, following a fiery speech
by Trump featuring false claims that his defeat in the 2020 presidential
election was the result of fraud.
AWAKENED BY STRANGER
DePape was arrested by police officers dispatched to the Pelosis' home
after Paul Pelosi placed an emergency-911 call reporting an intruder,
according to an FBI affidavit filed as part of the federal criminal
complaint.
The San Francisco Police Department recovered zip ties in the bedroom
and in the hallway near the front door. Police also found a roll of
tape, rope, a second hammer, a pair of gloves and a journal in DePape's
backpack, the affidavit said. The intruder had broken in through a glass
door to the residence.
Paul Pelosi, who was initially left unconscious from the attack, later
told police that he was asleep when a stranger, armed with a hammer,
crept into his second-floor bedroom and awakened him, demanding to speak
with his spouse, the complaint states.
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People stand near police tape outside
the home of U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi where her husband Paul
Pelosi was violently assaulted after a break-in at their house,
according to a statement from her office, in San Francisco,
California, U.S., October 28, 2022. REUTERS/Carlos Barria
According to Paul Pelosi's account in the affidavit, he told the
intruder that his wife would be away for several days and the
intruder responded that he would stay and wait for her. Pelosi's
husband recounted that he managed to slip away to the bathroom to
place the 911 call, the affidavit said.
The suspect told police in an interview following his arrest that he
planned to hold Nancy Pelosi hostage for questioning, and that if
she told the "truth" he would let her go but if she "lied" he would
break her kneecaps, according to the FBI affidavit.
He told police he did not flee the Pelosi home after Paul Pelosi's
911 call because, according to the affidavit, "much like the
American founding fathers with the British, he was fighting against
tyranny without the option to surrender."
Authorities said police officers arriving at the Pelosi home saw
DePape and Pelosi struggling over a hammer. As the officers shouted
at both men to drop the tool, DePape yanked the hammer away and
struck Pelosi in the head before officers subdued DePape and took
him into custody.
DePape was charged in federal court with one count of assault on a
family member of a U.S. official and one count of attempted
kidnapping of a U.S. official. Prosecutors alleged the offenses
stemmed from the suspect's intent to retaliate against the House
speaker for her "performance of official duties."
The federal charges carry a combined maximum sentence of 50 years in
prison, the Justice Department said in a statement announcing the
charges. The state charges are punishable by a prison sentence of 13
years to life, Jenkins said.
Online messages recently posted to several websites by an internet
user named "daviddepape" expressed bigoted sentiments against
minorities, Jews, women and transgender people while embracing the
cult-like, right-wing conspiracy theory QAnon.
Older online messages promoted quartz crystals and hemp bracelets.
Reuters could not confirm the posts were created by the suspect
charged on Monday.
Experts on extremist ideology have said Friday's attack appeared to
be an example of a growing trend they call "stochastic terrorism,"
in which sometimes-unstable individuals are inspired to violence by
hate speech and scenarios they see online and hear echoed by public
figures.
(Reporting by Paresh Dave in San Francisco and Steve Gorman in Los
Angeles; Additional reporting by Sarah N. Lynch in Washington,
Brendan O'Brien in Chicago and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Editing
by Howard Goller, Rosalba O'Brien and Leslie Adler)
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