Monday, April 19, 2021

Capital Police Officer Brian Sicknick did not die in a vacuum.

US Capitol protests (click here)  Paramedics perform cardiopulmonary resuscitation on a patient on January 6, 2021, in Washington, D.C. Demonstrators breeched security and entered the US Capitol in Washington, DC, as Congress debated the a 2020 presidential election Electoral Vote Certification. 

First responders were triaging the victims of the insurrection on Capitol grounds.

Other people died that night and they died due to the same stress facing Capitol Officer Brian Sicknick. He died of natural causes under duress. He was faced with circumstances none of the police was expecting. The Capitol Police were told to "Hold Back" on the response to the insurrection. The police never was prepared through the chain of command. Basically, they were on their own to maintain order. 

Capitol Officer Brian Sicknick was overwhelmed by leadership that took orders from madmen. Capitol Officer Sicknick died on active duty while protecting US Senators and US Representatives. He did not fail them.

April 13, 2021
By Luke Broadwater

Washington - The Capitol Police had clearer advance warnings (click here) about the Jan. 6 attack than were previously known, including the potential for violence in which “Congress itself is the target.” But officers were instructed by their leaders not to use their most aggressive tactics to hold off the mob, according to a scathing new report by the agency’s internal investigator.

In a 104-page document, the inspector general, Michael A. Bolton, criticized the way the Capitol Police prepared for and responded to the mob violence on Jan. 6. The report was reviewed by The New York Times and will be the subject of a Capitol Hill hearing on Thursday.

Mr. Bolton found that the agency’s leaders failed to adequately prepare despite explicit warnings that pro-Trump extremists posed a threat to law enforcement and civilians and that the police used defective protective equipment. He also found that the leaders ordered their Civil Disturbance Unit to refrain from using its most powerful crowd-control tools — like stun grenades — to put down the onslaught.

The report offers the most devastating account to date of the lapses and miscalculations around the most violent attack on the Capitol in two centuries....


April 19, 2021
By Adam Goldman

Capitol Police Officer Brian D. Sicknick (click here) had multiple strokes hours after sparring with a pro-Trump mob during the Jan. 6 riot and died of natural causes, Washington’s medical examiner said on Monday.

The determination likely complicates the Justice Department’s efforts to prosecute anyone in the death of Mr. Sicknick, 42; two men have been charged with assaulting him by spraying an unknown chemical on him outside the Capitol.

But the autopsy found no evidence that Officer Sicknick had an allergic reaction to chemicals nor of any internal or external injuries, the medical examiner, Dr. Francisco J. Diaz, told The Washington Post, which first reported his finding.

Still, Dr. Diaz added of the riot, “All that transpired played a role in his condition.”...

That is exactly correct.