Pelosi attack suspect told police he was on 'suicide mission,'
prosecutors say
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[November 02, 2022]
By Paresh Dave
SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) -The man charged
with breaking into U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's home and clubbing
her husband with a hammer later told police he was on a "suicide
mission" and had planned to target more politicians, according to court
documents prosecutors filed on Tuesday.
Prosecutors' motion seeking to keep David Wayne DePape, 42, in pre-trial
custody shed new light on his alleged intentions as he pleaded not
guilty to attempted murder of Paul Pelosi, 82, and other state charges.
DePape also was ordered to remain jailed without bond.
DePape showed up for his first court appearance since Friday's attack
with his right arm in a sling, a consequence, his court-appointed public
defender said, of a dislocated shoulder sustained when he was arrested.
The attorney, Adam Lipson, told reporters after the hearing that
DePape's legal team would review a number of issues that might factor
into his defense, including his "vulnerability" to "political
misinformation" and his mental state.
He pointed to extensive media attention given to the notion, propounded
by experts on extremism, that exposure to hate speech trafficked online
and amplified by public figures could inspire some mentally unstable
individuals to commit acts of political violence.
News coverage of the Pelosi attack has focused on a recent spate of
online messages from an individual named "daviddepape" espousing racist,
anti-Semitic and anti-LGBTQ sentiments, while embracing the right-wing
conspiracy theory known as QAnon.
The attack, which left Paul Pelosi hospitalized, has stoked fears about
politically motivated violence a week before midterm elections that will
decide control of Congress during one of the most vitriolic and
polarized campaign seasons in decades.
Appearing in San Francisco Superior Court, DePape was arraigned on state
charges of attempted murder, assault with a deadly weapon, burglary,
elder abuse, false imprisonment and threatening a public official.
Through his attorney, DePape entered a plea of not guilty to all
charges, which prosecutors have said could carry a maximum prison
sentence of 13 years to life.
DePape stared straight ahead toward a chalkboard at the front of the
courtroom during most of the proceedings, which lasted less than 15
minutes.
He spoke little during the hearing, answering "yes" when Judge Diane
Northway questioned him about waiving his right to a preliminary hearing
in 10 days.
And he shouted out, in unison with his lawyer, the correct pronunciation
of his name (de-PAP) when asked by the judge.
Northway ordered DePape to remain in custody without bail for pretrial
proceedings, at least until a formal detention hearing is held. But
Lipson told a throng of reporters in the courthouse corridor afterward
that his client already remains under a federal detention "hold" as
well.
The judge also issued a protective order requiring DePape to keep away
from the Pelosis and their home and to refrain from trying to
communicate with them.
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David Wayne DePape, 42, who is charged
with breaking into U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's San Francisco
home and clubbing her husband in the head with a hammer, wears his
arm in a sling before San Francisco Superior Court Judge Diane
Northway at the Criminal courts in San Francisco, California U.S.
November 1, 2022 in this courtroom sketch. REUTERS/Vicki Behringer
PREDAWN INTRUSION
DePape is accused in court documents of forcing his way into the
Pelosi home in San Francisco before dawn on Friday with plans to
take the speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives hostage, and
to break her kneecaps unless she told him the "truth" under his
questioning. The 82-year-old speaker herself was away in Washington
at the time.
Prosecutors' newly filed court motion quoted him as telling police
afterward he "really didn't want to hurt" Paul Pelosi, but added,
"this was a suicide mission."
The suspect also listed for police several more prominent federal
and state politicians and others he had planned to target, according
to the district attorney's detention motion.
The court filing further detailed Paul Pelosi's emergency-911 call
for help, which prosecutors said the intruder disrupted and then cut
short after he caught Pelosi using his cellphone in the bathroom.
Police arrived minutes later, just in time to witness the two men
struggling with a hammer before the intruder grabbed the tool away
and struck Pelosi over the head, at which point officers rushed in
to subdue DePape and arrest him, according to similar accounts
contained in state and federal court documents.
The San Francisco district attorney's court filing added the grim
detail that Paul Pelosi was left unresponsive for three minutes and
regained consciousness in a pool of his own blood.
The real estate and venture capital executive has since undergone
surgery for skull fractures and injuries to his hands and right arm
and remained hospitalized on Tuesday.
Police later recovered zip ties in the home, as well as a roll of
tape, rope, a second hammer, a pair of gloves and a journal in
DePape's backpack, according to the federal affidavit. Officers said
the intruder broke in through a glass door to the residence with the
same hammer he is accused of using to strike Paul Pelosi.
The Washington Post on Tuesday reported that surveillance cameras
trained on the Pelosi home by U.S. Capitol Police captured the
attack in real time, but officers did not notice the images until
after local police had already arrived.
Federal prosecutors have charged DePape separately with assault and
attempted kidnapping charges punishable by up to 50 years in prison.
He was yet to be scheduled for a court appearance in the federal
case.
Nancy Pelosi issued a statement late on Monday saying her husband
was continuing to make "steady progress on what will be a long
recovery process."
(Reporting by Paresh Dave in San Francisco; Writing and additional
reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Editing by Tom Hogue, Howard Goller,
David Gregorio, Simon Cameron-Moore and Himani Sarkar)
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