03-04-2021
WASHINGTON: After the deadly January 6 insurrection, the US Capitol became a fortress. On Friday, when some, but not all, of those security procedures were still in place, a knife-wielding assailant allegedly rammed into Capitol police officers with his car. The incident reinvigorates questions about how to protect the Capitol, and whether some enhanced security measures should become permanent.
Officer William Evans was pronounced dead from his injuries, according to a statement from Capitol Police. Evans was an 18-year veteran of the police force.
“It is with a very, very heavy heart that I announce one of our officers has succumbed to his injuries,” Capitol Police Chief Yogananda Pittman said Friday, adding that a second officer was injured. Pittman told reporters that after the unnamed man rammed two officers with his car and smashed the car into a security barrier, he exited the car brandishing a knife. The suspect has not yet been identified by police.
“The suspect did start lunging toward US Capitol police officers, at which time US Capitol police officers fired upon the suspect,” Pittman said. “At this time, the suspect has been pronounced deceased.”
Though the Capitol was mostly empty with Congress on recess, Friday’s incident will inevitably prompt questions about whether the remaining enhanced security put in place after January 6 was enough.
In the immediate aftermath of the insurrection, new security measures were put in place:
A 7-foot-high barrier of “non-scalable” metal fencing was put up around a four-mile perimeter surrounding the Capitol complex, blocking off a sprawling area around it and nearby buildings.
Capitol Police officers and a belated deployment of around 25,000 National Guard members protected the building ahead of President Joe Biden’s inauguration day. Some National Guard members told Vox at the time that they were positioned around the four miles of black fence “just in case and you know what I mean.”
Lawmakers were required to walk through metal detectors before stepping on their chamber’s floor. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office authorized fines for members who sidestepped the detectors after a number of Republican lawmakers sidestepped them.
In late January, Capitol Police planned to station members throughout airports and Union Station to monitor lawmakers and attempt to keep them safe while they were traveling.
Some of those remain in place, but other measures have been modified. For instance:
In March, law enforcement decided to take down the outer perimeter of fencing around the Capitol complex, though now there’s a smaller interior perimeter immediately surrounding the Capitol building.
The National Guard will also be deployed at the Capitol through mid-May at least. Originally, they were slated to leave on March 12, but USCP requested that a reduced presence stay on for another 60 days. Roughly 2,300 National Guard members will remain stationed at the Capitol until May 23. Videos on Friday showed members of the DC National Guard responding quickly to the incident and assisting Capitol Police in securing the perimeter.
Rare incidents like this have happened before, and each was contained even while extreme security measures weren’t in place. In 2006, a suspect crashed a car into a barrier near the Supreme Court and got into the Capitol building before being detained but Friday’s incident showed that the Capitol complex, the lawmakers inside, and the officers guarding it all still face serious threats. Now, likely, comes a big debate about how closed off the seat of American democracy really needs to be.
Enhanced security around the Capitol could become permanent
In early March, a Capitol security review found that the complex was extremely vulnerable, partly because the building’s police unit was “understaffed, insufficiently equipped, and inadequately trained.” The study, led by retired Army Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré, called for, among other things, the establishment of a “quick reaction force,” more Capitol Police officers, and better intelligence sharing.
Those suggestions were at the time well received by lawmakers, including some progressives who might be expected to question increased security funding.
Honoré’s report also called for a retractable fence that was “easily erected and deconstructed.”
Rep. Tim Ryan (D-OH), who is helping to lead Congress’s security response, told reporters on Friday a retractable fence and other measures will be considered. “We’ll be reviewing everything, at this point, including the fencing,” but he noted “it’s very, very early.”
“We can’t get too far ahead of ourselves without knowing that we have the ability to protect the Capitol, to harden the Capitol,” he continued. (Int’l Monitoring Desk)