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  • Former Capitol Police officer reflects on 5th anniversary of Jan. 6 riot – WTOP News

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    Nearly five years after the Jan. 6 attack, former Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn reflected on what happened during the riot and its aftermath.

    Tuesday will mark five years since hundreds of supporters of President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol and reiterated his false claims that the election was stolen.

    U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Harry Dunn testifies during a House select committee hearing on the Jan. 6 attack on Capitol Hill in Washington, Tuesday, July 27, 2021. (Jim Bourg/Pool via AP)(AP/Jim Bourg)

    The riot happened on Jan. 6, 2021, as Congress was certifying former President Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election.

    More than 100 officers were injured in the Capitol riot; one died and several others took their own lives in the aftermath.

    About 1,500 people were convicted on charges associated with their actions during the attack, including some who were convicted of injuring police officers who were trying to protect the Capitol.

    On the day he was sworn into office for a second term, Trump pardoned the 1,500.

    WTOP’s Anne Kramer and Shawn Anderson reflected on the attack with former Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, who was at the Capitol on that day.

    Former Capitol Police Sgt. Harry Dunn reflects on the 5th anniversary of the Capitol Riot with WTOP’s Shawn Anderson and Anne Kramer.

    The following transcript has been lightly edited for clarity.

    • Shawn Anderson:

      This has to be an incredibly difficult time for you. Walk us through what you were thinking about, and feeling, as the anniversary comes up tomorrow.

    • Harry Dunn:

      Well, it hasn’t just been this specific time being a difficult one. Every day since that day has been a difficult one. Not because of what happened on that day, but what happened in the aftermath and what continues to happen.

      The lying about what happened, the whitewashing about what happened, denying what happened, not acknowledging the heroic actions by the Capitol Police, the Metropolitan Police, the other departments that responded to save.

      It has been described as a peaceful protest, a tourist visit, by members of Congress, by the president of the United States, and they’re doing whatever they can to change the narrative of that day. It’s really unfortunate, because everybody saw with their own eyes what happened that day.

    • Anne Kramer:

      How difficult, Harry, is that to process — what’s being said? One of your colleagues told The Associated Press the same thing you’ve just mentioned, how difficult it is, even from family and friends, who don’t believe what happened was a big deal or doubt the police in the events of that day.

    • Harry Dunn:

      It’s extremely frustrating. But this isn’t anything new. Tomorrow will be five years and five years of dealing with it. So it’s kind of like you’ve almost gotten used to it.

      I hate that feeling, but I’ll never stop continuing to remind people what really did happen that day, to push back against the lies that are happening. A lot of people are saying, ‘Hey, we should move on from Jan. 6, we should get over it.’ I agree 100%. I would love nothing more than to get over it. But when you have people like the president, this administration doing everything they can, and they’re still talking about it. They’re still bringing it up.

      There’s an active lawsuit in the court to compel the architect of the Capitol to hang a federally mandated plaque up honoring the officers that day. Imagine officers having to go to court to sue to be recognized. It’s just really unfortunate the lengths that they’re going through to whitewash and change the history of that day.

    • Shawn Anderson :

      You became such an activist after Jan. 6, even trying to run for Congress in the state of Maryland. How do you talk to people as you continue to speak to the public these days? What do you tell them as you share your story?

    • Harry Dunn:

      It’s funny that you call me an activist, because I just think it’s standing up and doing what you believe in your heart is right. And I think that’s what it all comes down to, doing what you believe is right. Standing up for when you think something’s wrong, like John Lewis said, ‘Get into good trouble.’ And that’s kind of like been my mantra.

      I don’t know how this is all going to turn out. Everything that’s going on in the world, everything that’s going on with Jan. 6. I don’t know how it’s all going to turn out, none of us do. But I do know that if we don’t show up, if we don’t keep standing up and resisting and there’s some kind of opposition, that it won’t go well for us.

      So the message that I always say out there is keep showing up even when it’s bleak, even when it’s hard. And that’s in everything that you’re doing in life, not just Jan. 6 or political matters, just you have to continue getting up and showing up.

    • Anne Kramer:

      Harry tomorrow, the former leader of the proud boys, Enrique Tarrio, who was convicted and then pardoned by President Trump for his role in the Capitol riot is supposed to hold what’s being called a memorial march to honor those who died. What’s going through your head when you hear this is going to happen tomorrow?

    • Harry Dunn:

      When I first saw it that my honestly reaction was ‘whatever,’ like, I don’t give any credence to anything that those individuals do. They were convicted and pardoned by another criminal themselves, just to be blunt. Criminals pardoned by a criminal and that’s literally all that I see them as.

      Jan. 6 was bad for a lot of people, not just the officers who suffered violence that day; for America, for the rioters who participated, it was a bad day for everybody. And everybody should be seeking transparency. I mean the Proud Boys have lawsuit against the Department of Justice for convicting them, or whatever the specifics of their cases.

      But I just think it’s really unfortunate that they are seeing themselves as the good guys, so to speak, when there were hundreds of officers who protected the Capitol, protected members of Congress who they may or may not agree with just because it’s the right thing to do. They did their jobs. And it’s just really unfortunate. So when I saw that news, I was just like ‘whatever.’

    • Shawn Anderson:

      We mentioned that you did run for Congress a few years after Jan. 6. You didn’t make it through the primary first time around running for Congress? Do you still foresee a political career in your future? Will you try again in some way?

    • Harry Dunn:

      I see a career in just public service and just wherever I can be helpful, wherever I can be useful. I don’t want to give a politician answer. So no, I’ll never rule out an opportunity to run for Congress again. I haven’t ruled it out, but I haven’t made a decision to do so either at this moment.

      But I will always continue to show up, metaphorically speaking, when there’s a fight for it to show up. I will always be there, hopefully on the right side of it.

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    Jessica Kronzer

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  • Officers who defended the Capitol on Jan. 6 say their struggles linger, 5 years after the riot – WTOP News

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    More than 140 police officers were injured during the fighting on Jan. 6, which turned increasingly brutal as the hours wore on.

    FILE – U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Harry Dunn listens as Washington Metropolitan Police Department officer Daniel Hodges testifies before the House select committee hearing on the Jan. 6 attack on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 27, 2021.
    (Brendan Smialowski/Pool via AP, File)

    Brendan Smialowski/Pool via AP, File

    Capitol Riot Anniversary Police
    FILE – U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell left, and U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Harry Dunn stand after a House select committee hearing on the Jan. 6 attack on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 27, 2021.
    (AP Photo/ Andrew Harnik, Pool, File)

    AP Photo/ Andrew Harnik, Pool, File

    Capitol Riot Anniversary Police
    FILE – Rioters loyal to President Donald Trump rally at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, Jan. 6, 2021.
    (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File)

    AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File

    Capitol Riot Anniversary Police
    FILE – U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell wipes his eye as he watches a video being displayed during a House select committee hearing on the Jan. 6 attack on Capitol Hill in Washington, July 27, 2021.
    (Jim Lo Scalzo/Pool via AP, File)

    Jim Lo Scalzo/Pool via AP, File

    WASHINGTON (AP) — As Donald Trump was inaugurated for the second time on Jan. 20, 2025, former Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell put his phone on “do not disturb” and left it on his nightstand to take a break from the news.

    That evening, after Gonell spent time with family and took his dog on a long walk, his phone started to blow up with calls. He had messages from federal prosecutors, FBI agents and the federal Bureau of Prisons — all letting him know that the new president had just pardoned about 1,500 people who had been convicted for their actions at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. The pardons included rioters who had injured Gonell as he and other officers tried to protect the building.

    “They told me that people I testified against were being released from prison,” Gonell said. “And to be mindful.”

    Gonell was one of the officers who defended the central West Front entrance to the Capitol that day as Congress was certifying Democrat Joe Biden’s victory and hundreds of Trump’s supporters broke into the building, echoing his false claims of a stolen election. Gonell was dragged into the crowd by his shoulder straps as he tried to fight people off. He almost suffocated. In court, he testified about injuries to his shoulder and foot that still bother him to this day.

    “They have tried to erase what I did” with the pardons and other attempts to play down the violent attack, Gonell said. “I lost my career, my health, and I’ve been trying to get my life back.”

    Five years since the siege, Gonell and some of the other police officers who fought off the rioters are still coming to terms with what happened, especially after Trump was decisively elected to a second term last year and granted those pardons. Their struggle has been compounded by statements from the Republican president and some GOP lawmakers in Congress minimizing the violence that the officers encountered.

    “It’s been a difficult year,” said Officer Daniel Hodges, a Metropolitan Police Department officer who was also injured as he fought near Gonell in a tunnel on the West Front. Hodges was attacked several times, crushed by the rioters between heavy doors and beaten in the head as he screamed for help.

    “A lot of things are getting worse,” Hodges said.

    An evolving narrative

    More than 140 police officers were injured during the fighting on Jan. 6, which turned increasingly brutal as the hours wore on.

    Former Capitol Police Chief Thomas Manger took over the department six months after the riot. He said in a recent interview that many of his officers were angry when he first arrived, not only because of injuries they suffered but also “they resented the fact that they didn’t have the equipment they needed, the training they needed ” to deal with the unexpectedly violent crowd.

    Several officers who fought the rioters told The Associated Press that the hardest thing to deal with has been the effort by many to play down the violence, despite a massive trove of video and photographic evidence documenting the carnage.

    Trump has called the rioters he pardoned, including those who were most violent toward the police, “patriots” and “hostages.” He called their convictions for harming the officers and breaking into the building “a grave national injustice.”

    “I think that was wrong,” Adam Eveland, a former District of Columbia police officer, said of Trump’s pardons. If there were to be pardons, Eveland said, Trump’s administration should have reviewed every case.

    “I’ve had a hard time processing that,” said Eveland, who fought the rioters and helped to push them off the Capitol grounds.

    The pardons “erased what little justice there was,” said former Capitol Police Officer Winston Pingeon, who was part of the force’s Civil Disturbance Unit on Jan. 6. He left the force several months afterward.

    Pushback from lawmakers and the public

    Hodges and Gonell have been speaking out about their experiences since July 2021, when they testified before the Democratic-led House committee that investigated Jan 6. Since then, they have received support but also backlash.

    At a Republican-led Senate hearing in October on political violence, Hodges testified again as a witness called by Democrats. After Hodges spoke about his experience on Jan. 6, Sen. Peter Welch, D-Vt., asked the other witnesses whether they supported Trump’s pardons of the rioters, including for those who injured Hodges. Three of the witnesses, all called by Republicans, raised their hands.

    “I don’t know how you would say it wasn’t violent,” says Hodges, who is still a Washington police officer.

    It has not just been politicians or the rioters who have doubted the police. It also is friends and family.

    “My biggest struggle through the years has been the public perception of it,” Eveland said, and navigating conversations with people close to him, including some fellow police officers, who do not think it was a big deal.

    “It’s hard for me to wrap my head around that, but ideology is a pretty powerful thing,” he said.

    Improvements in safety and support

    As police officers struggled in the aftermath, Manger, the former Capitol Police chief, said the department had to figure out how to better support them. There were no wellness or counseling services when he arrived, he said, and they were put in to place.

    “The officers who were there and were in the fight — we needed to make sure that they got the help that they needed,” Manger said.

    Manger, who retired in May, also oversaw major improvements to the department’s training, equipment, operational planning and intelligence. He said the Capitol is now “a great deal safer” than it was when he arrived.

    “If that exact same thing happened again, they would have never breached the building, they would have never gotten inside, they would have never disrupted the electoral count,” Manger said.

    Pingeon, the former Capitol Police officer, said he believes the department is in many ways “unrecognizable” from what it was on Jan. 6 and when he left several months later.

    “It was a wake-up call,” he said.

    Pressing on

    Pingeon, who was attacked and knocked to the ground as he tried to prevent people from entering the Capitol, said Jan. 6 was part of the reason he left the department and moved home to Massachusetts. He has dealt with his experience by painting images of the Capitol and his time there, as well as advocating for nonviolence. He said he now feels ready to forgive.

    “The real trauma and heartache and everything I endured because of these events, I want to move past it,” he said.

    Gonell left the Capitol Police because of his injuries. He has not returned to service, though he hopes to work again. He wrote a book about his experience, and he said he still has post-traumatic stress disorder related to the attack.

    While many of the officers who were there have stayed quiet about their experiences, Eveland said he decided that it was important to talk publicly about Jan. 6 to try to reach people and “come at it from a logical standpoint.”

    Still, he said, “I’ve had to come to terms with the fact that just because something happened to me and was a major part of my world doesn’t mean that everyone else has to understand that or even be sympathetic to that.”

    He added: “The only thing I can do is tell my story, and hopefully the people who respect me will eventually listen.”

    Copyright
    © 2026 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, written or redistributed.

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    WTOP Staff

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  • UPDATE: Every Texan Charged for Crimes During the Jan. 6 Capitol Breach

    UPDATE: Every Texan Charged for Crimes During the Jan. 6 Capitol Breach

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    UPDATE Feb. 6, 2023: On Friday, Feb. 2, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia announced that a Fort Worth man had been found guilty for his role in the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol breach, and a Houston-area woman had been arrested for her role in the events that attempted to delay the certification of the 2020 presidential election.

    Jason Benjamin Blythe, 24, was found guilty of assaulting an officer with a deadly or dangerous weapon, a metal crowd control barrier, in this instance, and on a misdemeanor charge for committing an act of physical violence on the Capitol grounds. According to a press release, Blythe stayed on the Capitol grounds “for hours,” while he resisted officers and climbed the media tower near the Capitol steps. A sentencing hearing for Blythe is scheduled for June 13.

    Judy Fraize, 70, of Highlands, was arrested on Monday and charged with four crimes, including disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds and disorderly conduct in a Capitol building. Federal court records identify Fraize in more than a dozen images taken from the Capitol’s closed circuit security video. At one point during her time inside the building, Fraize, sporting a red Make America Great Again cap, can be heard yelling at an officer “we gotta take our country back!” Investigators zeroed in on Fraize by connecting her to a mobile device registered under her name and linked to her Gmail account that was used at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

    These are the latest developments related to Texans arrested in connection to the Jan. 6 insurrection to add to the total since the Observer originally published this article on Nov. 8, 2023. The article and list below is updated to reflect the latest information as of Feb. 6, 2024.

    Just over three years ago, thousands of pro-Donald Trump protesters stormed into the building in an attempt to prevent Congressional certification of the election of President-elect Joe Biden. The chaos quickly became deadly when Ashli Babbitt, a Trump supporter who illegally attempted to climb through a shattered Capitol window while at the front of a violent mob, was shot and killed by police.

    The third anniversary of the insurrectionist attacks on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, is just over two weeks away. Nearly three years ago, thousands of pro-Donald Trump protesters stormed into the building in an attempt to prevent Congressional certification of the election of President-elect Joe Biden. The chaos quickly became deadly when Ashli Babbitt, a Trump supporter who illegally attempted to climb through a shattered Capitol window while at the front of a violent mob, was shot and killed by police.

    Since then, law enforcement agencies have continued to announce the arrests of many of those who participated, no doubt aided by a host of videos and photos posted to social media by the eventual defendants of their Jan. 6 rampage exploits. The U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia released a report detailing the arrests, charges, pleas and other action that have followed in the wake of the attack.

    “The government continues to investigate losses that resulted from the breach of the Capitol, including damage to the Capitol building and grounds, both inside and outside the building,” the report reads. “As of October 14, 2022, the approximate losses suffered as a result of the siege at the Capitol totaled $2,881,360.20. That amount reflects, among other things, damage to the Capitol building and grounds and certain costs borne by the U.S. Capitol Police.”

    So far, more than 1,200 arrests have been made in connection with the Jan. 6 case, and more than half of them have already resulted in guilty pleas.

    Filmmaker Alexandra Pelosi, daughter of former U.S. Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi, recently released her latest documentary, The Insurrectionist Next Door, a harrowing look at several of the people who were arrested for their roles in the Jan. 6 attack.

    “The government continues to investigate losses that resulted from the breach of the Capitol, including damage to the Capitol building and grounds, both inside and outside the building.” – U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia

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    Some of the subjects featured in the film displayed no remorse for their actions, while others had undergone a change of heart since early 2021. One man admitted he didn’t really know what he was even doing that day since he had never been a Trump supporter. Perhaps as much as any other point, the film hammers home the fact that the hordes of rioters involved on Jan. 6 represent an unexpectedly wide cross-section of the American population, and that it’s not a stretch to think one of them might be living near you.

    That’s especially true if you live in Texas. The Lone Star state is home to the second most people charged with a role in the Capitol breach, behind only Florida. An X account that tracks arrests related to the Jan. breach, @Jan6thData, reports that Texas is now home to more than 100 Jan. 6 arrests with North Texas being home to more than a third of that total.

    People from nearly all 50 states have been arrested for their Jan. 6 misdeeds, but Texas sits near the top of the list. According to a July report from the Center for Policy and Research at Seton Hall University, Texas, Florida, Pennsylvania, New York and California account for just over 43% of those charged with Capitol breach crimes.

    Texans played pivotal roles in the violent attack on the peaceful transfer of power above and beyond the basic number of participants. On the second anniversary of the attack and following the release of a 2022 Congressional report on Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election, the Texas Tribune wrote “[t]he Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection would not have been possible without the help of a number of key Texans.” Later in the piece, Tribune reporter Robert Downen noted the massive report read “like a who’s who of Texas conspiracy theorists, conservative activists and extremists.”

    The charges that the dozens of arrested Texans face include, but are not limited to, entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds; disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds; engaging in physical violence in a restricted building or grounds; disorderly or disruptive conduct in the Capitol grounds or buildings; acts of physical violence in the Capitol grounds or buildings; parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a Capitol building; obstruction of law enforcement during civil disorder; assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers; and seditious conspiracy.

    There will likely be more added to the list of people charged. The U.S. Attorney’s 34-month report noted that “the FBI currently has 13 videos of suspects wanted for violent assaults on federal officers and (ONE) video of (TWO) suspects wanted for assaults on members of the media on January 6th and is seeking the public’s help to identify them.”

    But before those suspects are arrested, let’s take a look at all of the Texans who have been charged by the United States Attorney for the District of Columbia for their role in the attack (in alphabetical order, with location of arrest).

    Daniel Page Adams, Goodrich

    Wilmar Jeovanny Montano Alvarado, Houston

    Philip Anderson, Mesquite

    David Arredondo, El Paso*

    Thomas John Ballard, Fort Worth*

    Richard Franklin Barnard, Liberty*

    Dana Jean Bell, Princeton

    Kevin Sam Blakely, McKinney*

    Jason Blythe, Fort Worth

    Brandon Bradshaw, San Antonio

    Cory Ray Branan, Midland*

    Paul Thomas Brinson, Flower Mound

    Larry Rendell Brock, Fort Worth*

    Daniel Ray Caldwell, The Colony*

    Steven Cappuccio, Universal City*

    Luke Russell Coffee, Dallas

    Thomas Paul Conover, Keller*

    Nolan B. Cooke, Sherman*

    Christian Cortez, Seabrook*

    Jenny Louise Cudd, Midland*

    Matthew Dasilva, Lavon

    Nicholas Decarlo, Fort Worth*

    Lucas Denney, Kinney County*

    Robert Wayne Dennis, Garland*

    Alexander Fan, Houston

    Jason Farris, Arlington

    Frederic Fiol, San Antonio

    Judy Fraize, Highlands

    Jacob Garcia, Fort Worth*

    Anthime Joseph Gionet, Houston*

    Billy Joe Gober, Smithville

    Daniel Goodwyn, Corinth*

    Christopher Ray Grider, Austin*

    Leonard Gruppo, Lubbock*

    Stacy Wade Hagar, Waco

    Alex Kirk Harkrider, Carthage*

    Donald Hazard, Hurst

    Alan Hostetter, Parker County*

    David Howard, Frisco

    Jason Lee Hyland, Plano*

    Adam Jackson, Katy

    Brian Jackson, Katy

    Sergio Jaramillo, Dallas

    Raul Jarrin, Houston

    Shane Jenkins, Houston

    Joshua Johnson, Plano

    David Lee Judd, Carrollton

    Joseph Zvonimir Jurlina, Austin

    John Lammons, Galveston

    Benjamin Larocca, Seabrook*

    Joshua R. Lollar, Spring

    Duong Dai Luu, Katy

    Mario Mares, Ballinger

    Michael Marroquin, Nederland

    Felipe Antonio Martinez, Austin

    Victor Martinez, San Antonio

    Matthew Carl Mazzacco, San Antonio*

    Kyle McMahaon, Watauga

    William Hendry Mellors, Houston

    Jalise Middleton, Forestburg

    Mark Middleton, Forestburg

    Garrett Miller, Richardson

    Samuel Christopher Montoya, Austin*

    Andrew Jackson Morgan Jr., Maxwell

    Dawn Munn, Borger*

    Kayli Munn, Borger*

    Kristi Marie Munn, Borger*

    Thomas Munn, Borger*

    Ryan Taylor Nichols, Tyler*

    Jason Douglas Owens, Blanco*

    Paul Orta, Rio Hondo

    Nathan Donald Pelham, Frisco

    Tam Dinh Pham, Houston*

    Daniel Dink Phipps, Corpus Christi

    Jeffrey Reed, Rosanky

    Guy Wesley Reffitt, Bonham*

    Sebastian Reveles, Dallas

    Stewart Elmer Rhodes III, Little Elm*

    Eliel Rosa, Midland*

    Jennifer Leigh Ryan, Plano*

    Aron Sanchez, Dallas

    Katherine Staveley Schwab, Fort Worth*

    Geoffrey Samuel Shough, Austin*

    Jonathan Owen Shroyer, San Antonio

    Troy Anthony Smocks, Dallas*

    Kellye Sorelle, Junction

    Edward Spain Jr. (city not provided)*

    Andrew Taake, Houston*

    Timothy Tedesco, Corpus Christi

    Chance Anthony Uptmore, San Antonio*

    James Herman Uptmore, San Antonio*

    Sean David Watson, Alpine*

    Adam Mark Weibling, Katy*

    Dustin Ray Williams, Brady

    Elizabeth Rose Williams, Kerrville*

    Vic Williams, Odessa*

    Jeffrey Shane Witcher, Bastrop*

    Darrell Alan Youngers, Houston*

    Ryan Scott Zink, Lubbock
    *Defendant has either pleaded guilty to or has been found guilty of at least one count against them as of Feb. 6, 2024.



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    Kelly Dearmore

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