Lawmakers vow a probe into Capitol Police for breach by mob

In the wake of the Wednesday’s storming of the Capitol in Washington, where pro-Trump mobs broke windows, entered both the Senate and House chambers, and vandalized offices, lawmakers want answers to how law enforcement handled the breach.

Capitol police officers in riot gear push back demonstrators trying to break a door at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. Lawmakers are raising questions about how easily the protesters were able to overwhelm the Capitol police and enter the building.

Jose Luis Magana/AP

January 7, 2021

Lawmakers are vowing an investigation into how law enforcement handled Wednesday’s violent breach at the United States Capitol, questioning whether a lack of preparedness allowed a mob to occupy and vandalize the building.

U.S. Capitol Police, who are charged with protecting Congress, turned to other law enforcement for help with the mob that overwhelmed the complex and sent lawmakers into hiding. Both law enforcement and Trump supporters deployed chemical irritants during the hours-long occupation of the complex before it was cleared Wednesday evening.

Four people died, one of them a woman who was shot and killed by police inside the Capitol. Three other people died after suffering “medical emergencies” related to the breach, said Robert Contee, chief of the city’s Metropolitan Police Department.

In Kentucky, the oldest Black independent library is still making history

Police said 52 people were arrested as of Wednesday night, including 26 on the Capitol grounds. Fourteen police officers were injured, Mr. Contee said.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., chairwoman of the House Administration Committee, said the breach “raises grave security concerns,″ adding that her committee will work with House and Senate leaders to review the police response – and its preparedness.

Lawmakers crouched under desks and donned gas masks while police futilely tried to barricade the building when people marched to the Capitol from a rally near the White House in support of President Donald Trump. Washington’s mayor instituted an evening curfew in an attempt to contain the violence.

Rep. Val Demings, D-Fla., a former police chief, said it was “painfully obvious” that Capitol police “were not prepared for today. I certainly thought that we would have had a stronger show of force, that there would have been steps taken in the very beginning to make sure that there was a designated area for the protesters in a safe distance from the Capitol.’’

In an interview with MSNBC Wednesday night, Ms. Demings said it appeared police were woefully understaffed, adding that “it did not seem that they had a clear operational plan to really deal with” thousands of protesters who descended on the Capitol following Mr. Trump’s complaints of a “rigged election.’’

Columbia’s president called the police. Students say they don’t know who to trust.

Law enforcement experts, speaking to The Washington Post, said they were mystified by the tactics that police used once the mob was already inside the Capitol. 

“It’s like watching a real-life horror movie. I mean, we train and plan and budget every day, basically, to have this not happen,” said Kim Dine, who was chief of the Capitol Police from 2012 to 2016, to The Washington Post. “How it happened, I can’t figure that out.”

“We protect the people, the place, and the process that makes us the United States. That’s why we’re there,” Mr. Dine said to The Washington Post, expressing surprise that the Capitol Police had allowed rioters to gather on the Capitol steps and were not immediately arrested once entering the building. “The people, the place, the process – all were attacked,” he said.

The rioters were egged on by Mr. Trump, who has spent weeks falsely attacking the integrity of the election and had urged his supporters to come to Washington to protest Congress’ formal approval of President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. The protests interrupted those proceedings for nearly seven hours.

Very few people were arrested for the breach, one person said, because officers didn’t have enough backup to take the time to arrest and detain them.

“There just weren’t enough personnel to do everything,” one law enforcement official briefed on the episode said.

The mob eventually entered both the Senate and House chambers and vandalized offices of lawmakers, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif. The Capitol Police, outnumbered, focused on helping lawmakers to safety and removing protesters, according to two people familiar with the incident, The Washington Post reported. Outside the Capitol building, D.C. police removed protesters from the external stairs, porticos, and balconies of the Capitol.

Ms. Demings said there were “a lot of unanswered questions and I’m damn determined to get answers to those questions about what went wrong today.”

A police spokeswoman could not immediately be reached for comment late Wednesday.

Rep. Karen Bass, D-Calif., said she was outraged to see accounts on social media of a Capitol Police officer posing for a photo with a protester. “Would you take a selfie with someone who was robbing a bank?” she asked. “I can’t imagine if a couple of thousand of [Black Lives Matters] protesters had descended on the Capitol ... that there would be 13 people arrested.”

Rep. Tim Ryan, D-Ohio, suggested there could be leadership changes at the Capitol police.

“I think it’s pretty clear that there’s going to be a number of people who are going to be without employment very, very soon because this is an embarrassment both on behalf of the mob, and the president, and the insurrection, and the attempted coup, but also the lack of professional planning and dealing with what we knew was going to occur,” Mr. Ryan said.

This story was reported by The Associated Press. AP writer Michael Balsamo contributed to this report.