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CNN —A jury has found David DePape guilty on two counts in the violent attack on Paul Pelosi, the husband of former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, last year in the couple’s San Francisco home. Then-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi ultimately factored the attack into her decision to step down from her leadership post. DePape recalled that he was focused on Nancy Pelosi and that her husband, Paul, was not on his list of targets. He later came to in a pool of blood after being violently struck in the head following a struggle with DePape, Pelosi said. A state case against DePape that includes charges of attempted murder, burglary and assault is expected to go to trial later this month.
Persons: David DePape, Paul Pelosi, Nancy Pelosi, DePape, Pelosi, Nancy Pelosi ”, , Jodi, David, Nancy Pelosi’s, , Paul, I’ll, ” DePape, “ She’s, ” Pelosi, “ I’ve, CNN’s Piper Hudspeth Blackburn, Jack Forrest, Paul LeBlanc, Veronica Miracle Organizations: CNN, San, Prosecutors, San Francisco, FBI, United States Capitol Police Locations: San Francisco, Washington
House Republicans have begun to make January 6 security camera footage publicly available. I watched as lawmakers fled for safety — and banded together — while rioters besieged the Capitol. AdvertisementAdvertisementRoger Stone in front of the O’Neill House Office Building, where the January 6 security camera footage can be viewed, in December 2021. Upstairs, I focused on a lone security camera in front of the House chamber. On another security camera in Longworth House Office Building, I watched lawmakers of both parties gathering near the secure location where they sheltered for the duration of the riot.
Persons: Kevin McCarthy, Tucker Carlson, Roger Stone, Anna Moneymaker, I'd, , Cori Bush, Bush, Steny Hoyer —, Madison Cawthorn, Eric Swalwell, Mike Pence —, Pence, Republican Sen, John Boozman, Democratic Sen, Dianne Feinstein, Lisa Murkowski, Dan Sullivan, Kevin Cramer, Sen, Jim Inhofe, Sheldon Whitehouse, Ashli Babbitt, there's, Barry Loudermilk Organizations: Republicans, Capitol, Service, House Republicans, Fox News, Administration, O'Neill, US Capitol Police, United States Capitol Police, Cannon House, Democratic, Rayburn House, Lawmakers, Republican, Democrat, Capitol Police, Republican Rep Locations: Wall, Silicon, O’Neill, Hart, Hart , Alaska Sens
CNN —A man with numerous firearms and materials to make an explosive was arrested Thursday in former President Barack Obama’s Washington, DC, neighborhood after claiming on an internet livestream that he had a detonator, law enforcement officials told CNN. Taylor Taranto, who had an open warrant for his arrest related to the January 6, 2021, US Capitol attack, was arrested by the Metropolitan Police Department and federal law enforcement. “There is no active threat to the community and this incident remains under investigation.”According to law enforcement officials, firearms and materials to make Molotov cocktails were found in Taranto’s car. There is currently no indication of a direct threat to the Obamas, law enforcement officials told CNN. In court filings related to the ongoing suit, Taranto admitted to being inside the Capitol during the attack, but denied any wrongdoing.
Persons: Barack Obama’s, Taylor Taranto, United States Capitol Police “, , Jason Bell, Jeffrey Smith, Taranto, Smith Organizations: CNN, Metropolitan Police Department, Team, United States Capitol Police, Terrorism Task Forces, MPD, Capitol, Capitol police Locations: Barack Obama’s Washington, DC, Taranto, ” Taranto
WASHINGTON — The House Jan. 6 committee found that law enforcement agencies gathered “substantial evidence” of potential violence at the Capitol as Congress met to formalize Joe Biden's election as president, a member of the panel said at its final meeting Monday. But the executive summary of the committee's final report doesn’t address questions of why the FBI, U.S. Capitol Police and other law enforcement agencies didn’t do more to increase security that day. The executive summary, released Monday, avoids criticizing or reaching conclusions about law enforcement and intelligence shortfalls in the lead-up to the attack, which many law enforcement experts have called the biggest intelligence failure since the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11, 2001. A representative for the committee didn’t respond to a request for comment about the decision not to include more information about the role law enforcement played ahead of the Capitol attack. The committee's executive summary discusses information that the FBI and other law enforcement agencies received in the days before Jan. 6, saying some of the intelligence was shared with partners like the Capitol Police.
Factbox: Threats and attacks on members of Congress
  + stars: | 2022-10-28 | by ( ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +5 min
Oct 28 (Reuters) - The assault on U.S. businessman Paul Pelosi, the husband of U.S. House of Representatives Speaker Nancy Pelosi, in their San Francisco home early on Friday morning comes amid a rising number of reported threats against members of Congress. According to data provided by the United States Capitol Police, a law enforcement agency charged with protecting members of Congress, cases related to "concerning statements and threats" jumped from 3,939 in 2017 to 9,625 in 2021. Aug. 29, 2022 - A Pennsylvania man pleaded guilty to threatening to shoot and kill an unnamed member of Congress, federal prosecutors said. Four of the people who stormed the Capitol died on the day of the attack. June 14, 2017 - U.S. Republican Representative Steve Scalise, then-Majority Whip, was shot in the hip and taken to the hospital after a gunman opened fire on Republican members of Congress at a baseball practice in Alexandria, Virginia, for their annual congressional charity game with Democratic members.
Prosecutors accused a former Capitol police officer of telling a January 6 rioter to delete evidence. But the following day, prosecutors say, Riley messaged Hiles directly over Facebook to urge him to remove posts — including selfies and videos — admitting his presence inside the Capitol. Kicking off Riley's trial on Tuesday, Dohrmann displayed several messages Riley exchanged with Hiles over Facebook in the weeks after January 6. "You see, the defendant never wanted these Facebook messages to see the light of day," she said. Despite Riley's encouragement to delete his Facebook messages, Hiles never removed them, allowing them to be used as evidence against the former Capitol police officer, Dohrmann said.
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