35 Capitol Police officers under investigation in Jan. 6 incident

Protesters confront police at the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2020. (Video screenshot)

 

35 Capitol Police officers under investigation in Jan. 6 incident

 

Videos show law enforcement accommodating protesters

 

By Art Moore

 

Videos of police officers allowing or even encouraging people to enter the Capitol grounds during the Jan. 6 incident have been perplexing to many, and now 35 Capitol Police officers are under investigation for their actions on that day.

 

Six have been suspended without pay, and anyone whose actions are found to be unacceptable on Jan. 6 will be disciplined, department spokesman John Stolnis said in a statement Thursday.

 

Lawmakers and other Capitol Police officers have asked why the force was unprepared. The acting Capitol Police chief, Yogananda D. Pittman, said in a closed door hearing last month that she was aware two days before the event that there was “strong potential for violence.”

 

The Wall Street Journal reported several congressional committees also are investigating, and two Senate committees will hold a hearing Tuesday. A House committee will hold a hearing next week with Pittman and the acting House sergeant at arms.

 

‘It’s your house now’

 

In one of many viral videos, officers are seen standing along a doorway almost motionless as people file into the Capitol, reported the Fox affiliate in Washington, D.C.

 

Two accused rioters testified to the FBI that a Capitol Police officer told them, “It’s your house now.”

 

One officer suspended took a selfie with someone, according to lawmakers.

 

Another video shows officers removing a barrier to allow protesters to enter the grounds.

 

Did Capitol police accommodate protesters on January 6?

 

See the video: 

 

 

A video posted to YouTube shows Capitol Police Lt. Tarik Khalid Johnson wearing a red “Make America Great Again” hat while talking to several supporters of then-President Trump.

 

Johnson, who has since been suspended, is seen giving his megaphone to a protester before saying, “I’ll follow you.”

 

See the video:

 

 

 

Last month, the Wall Street Journal reported Johnson claimed he put on the cap to gain the protesters’ trust. His ultimate aim, he said, was to make his way through the crowd and into the building to save his fellow officers.

 

Retraction

 

More than 250 people have been charged by the Justice Department for storming the Capitol. Trump was impeached by the Democratic-controlled House on a charge of inciting an insurrection but was acquitted by the Senate.

 

The official death toll in the incident was five, including veteran Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick.

 

However, three died of “medical emergencies,” and one was a protester, Ashli Babbit, who was shot by police as she attempted to enter the Speaker’s Lobby inside the Capitol.

 

And now investigators who sought to build a federal murder case in Sicknick’s death have determined that initial reports alleging he was struck with a fire extinguisher by Trump supporter aren’t true, CNN reported.

 

Veteran investigative journalist Glenn Greenwald wants to know why the media spent “an entire month definitively affirming what appears to be a completely false story about the only person said to have been killed by the Capitol mob: Officer Brian Sicknick.”

 

From wnd.com

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