This is how the Old Colonel commented to this dishonest and misleading 2
October Washington Post article:
Former Special Forces soldier and onetime congressional candidate arrested in Capitol riot case
The article (pasted in below) included this dishonest
passage:
“Five people died as a result of the riot, including a U.S. Capitol Police officer, and many more were wounded. Ashli Babbitt, a 35-year-old Air Force veteran, was shot and killed by an officer as she tried to force her way through doors inside the building.”
And here is how the Old Colonel commented to debunk the WaPo misinformation and set the record straight.
30yr-Army-COL
I think the events of 6 January were horrendous and
condemn everyone that participated but for Mr. Hawkins to claim “Five people
died as a result of the riot” is disingenuous, misleading and untrue.
Dr. Francisco Diaz, the district's chief medical examiner,
announced the causes of deaths as:
Capitol Police officer Brian D. Sicknick suffered
two strokes and died of natural causes a day after he
confronted rioters at the Jan. 6 insurrection, the District’s chief medical
examiner has ruled…. the autopsy found no evidence the 42-year-old officer
suffered an allergic reaction to chemical irritants…”
Ashli Babbitt, 35, died by homicide from
a gunshot to the left shoulder. She was shot by a Capitol police officer while
trying to climb through a door near the House chamber.
Kevin Greeson, 55, died of natural
causes from cardiovascular disease. From Greeson, of Athens, Alabama.
Benjamin Phillips, 50, died of natural causes from
cardiovascular disease. According to the Philadelphia Inquirer, Phillips
of Ringtown, Pennsylvania, was a computer programmer who founded a social media
website for Trump supporters.
Roseanne Boyland, 34, died by accident from acute
amphetamine intoxication. Boyland, of Georgia, wanted to be a sobriety
counselor.
The Only person that died on 6 Jan or as a result of the events of that day was Ashli Babbitt. Two people with heart
disease died of a heart attack, one drug abuser OD’ed, and the Capitol Police
Officer died of natural causes but none of the deaths were attributed by the DC Medical Examiner to the 6 January Capitol riot.
“Democracy Dies in Darkness and the WaPo is Turning Out the Lights.”
30yr-Army-COL
Two people with heart disease have heart attacks, one drug user OD’s and one person has two strokes unconnected to the Insurrection. The DC Medical Examiner attributed three to “natural causes” and one to an “accident.”
The most disingenuous thing in this article is Derick
linking to this early incorrect WaPo article about Officer Sicknick’s cause of
death latter corrected:
Derick should have linked to this later WaPo article
correcting the misinformation in his referenced article and written after the
Medical Examiner accurately determined Officer Sicknick’s cause of death was
“natural”:
That is a blatant effort to mislead readers. Typical Fake News from a dishonest WaPo writer (can’t call him a “reporter” or even a “journalist”). More confirmation: Democracy Dies in Darkness and the WaPo is Turning Out the Lights.
National
Former
Special Forces soldier and onetime congressional candidate arrested in Capitol
riot case
By Derek Hawkins October 2, 2021 at 2:55 p.m. EDT
Supporters of former president Donald Trump climb the west wall of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. (Jose Luis Magana/AP)Congress was days away from certifying the 2020 election results when Jeremy Brown, a retired Special Forces soldier and onetime Congressional candidate, offered others a ride to the U.S. Capitol in an RV he dubbed “GROUND FORCE ONE.”
“Plenty of Gun Ports left to fill,” he wrote on encrypted chat app Signal, according to federal court documents. “We can pick you up.”
Brown, who showed up to the Capitol on Jan. 6 decked out in military gear, was arrested this week in Tampa, in connection with the riot that sought to stop lawmakers from formally tallying President Biden’s victory over Donald Trump. Federal prosecutors charged Brown with knowingly entering restricted grounds and engaging in “disorderly or disruptive conduct.”
Brown couldn’t immediately be reached for comment Saturday. It was not clear if he had hired an attorney.
Roughly 600 people have been charged in the attack, some of them highly trained former military or law enforcement officers. Brown, who is in his 40s, had deployed twice each to Iraq and Afghanistan, Army officials told The Washington Post in January. In 2020, he filed paperwork to run as a Republican in the Florida congressional district that encompasses Tampa but dropped out before the general election.
Was the attack on the U.S. Capitol an attempted coup?
Many have argued that President Donald Trump's efforts amounted to an attempted coup on Jan. 6. Was it? And why does that matter?
Five people died as a result of the riot, including a U.S. Capitol Police officer, and many more were wounded. Ashli Babbitt, a 35-year-old Air Force veteran, was shot and killed by an officer as she tried to force her way through doors inside the building.
According to a statement of facts from the FBI, law enforcement agents spoke with Brown by phone on Jan. 6 and 7. He told them he was in Washington to provide security “for VIPs at the 'Stop the Steal’ rally.” He made similar statements to The Post in January.
Later in the month, a witness who claimed to have known Brown for “multiple years” gave investigators photos of him in military garb outside the Capitol, according to court documents. Investigators compared the photos with other images and body-camera footage from the riot, saying they showed Brown wearing the same distinctive attire outside the building’s east doors.
At the time, Brown was equipped with a helmet, radio and a tactical vest. He also carried zip ties and had “large surgical trauma shears” tucked into a vest pack, documents state.
Though he was not identified inside the building, images show that Brown was standing more than 100 feet within the restricted grounds law enforcement set up to protect the certification ceremony, investigators said. They said phone location records obtained through a search warrant also showed him in the restricted area.
D.C. police had to push Brown back with their batons as they tried to secure the scene, according to the statement of facts.
“During this encounter, BROWN repeatedly claimed that the officers were, in his opinion, violating the laws and the Constitution of the United States,” the court papers state.
Investigators said they got further details about Brown’s alleged activities from another Capitol riot defendant who has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding.
According to court documents, the defendant said he used a ride-share to go to Brown’s house on Jan. 4 to prepare for the trip to Washington — an assertion investigators said was backed up by records from the ride-share company. He said Brown and others had discussed travel plans and “rendezvous points” over Signal in the weeks leading up to the riot.
In a Jan. 1 group chat, Brown laid out an itinerary titled “GROUND FORCE ONE Departure Plan,” according to court documents. He allegedly talked about conducting “Pre Combat Inspections” before leaving and mentioned picking people up along the way as they headed toward Washington through North Carolina. The goal, he said, was to arrive in the nation’s capital two days before Congress convened.
“This will give us the 4th/5th to set up, conduct route recons, CTR (Close Target Reconnaissance) and any link ups needed with DC elements,” he said in the chat, according to court documents.
He signed off with a rallying cry: “READY? GO!!!”
The arrest comes as a growing number of Capitol riot cases make their way through the courts. Many have been charged with nonviolent misdemeanors and avoided jail time, though there have been exceptions.
Earlier in the week, two friends, Derek Jancart and Erik
Rau, were sentenced to 45 days in jail after pleading guilty to disorderly
conduct, after prosecutors noted several aggravating factors, including having
spent 40 minutes inside the U.S. Capitol.
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