Capitol riot: Officers describe racial slurs at 6 January hearing
- Published
Police officers who fought back against Trump supporters in the US Capitol on 6 January have given evidence about the violence and hatred they experienced.
They were testifying at the first hearing of a Congressional committee set up to investigate the attack.
Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, who is black, said he was taunted with a racial epithet by the mob.
The inquiry is being conducted almost entirely by Democrats, after most Republicans boycotted the committee.
However, two Republicans - Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger - have broken ranks to join the investigation.
"If those responsible are not held accountable... this will remain a cancer on our constitutional republic," Ms Cheney said as the hearing began.
The select committee was formed after Republicans objected to a independent commission like the one that investigated the 11 September 2001 attacks.
The four officers described being beaten and assaulted by rioters who had come to disrupt the certification of President Joe Biden's election victory.
Officer Dunn said he told several protesters that he had voted for Mr Biden.
"Does my vote not count? Am I nobody?" he told them, after they wrongly claimed that the election was fraudulent.
"That prompted a torrent of racial epithets," he testified. "One woman in a pink Maga [Make America Great Again] shirt yelled, 'You hear that, guys, this [expletive] voted for Joe Biden!"
"No one had ever - ever - called me a [expletive] while wearing the uniform of a Capitol Police officer."
The officers also criticised Republicans who have downplayed the violence of 6 January.
Officer Michael Fanone slammed his fist on the desk as he accused them of a "disgraceful" violation of their oaths of office.
What did the officers say?
Officer Dunn said that he did not fully process the racial comment until the following days."I was just trying to survive that day, and get home.
"When I was able to process it, it was so emotional. It was so disheartening and disappointing that we live in a country like that, where they attack you because of the colour of your skin. "Just to hurt you. Those words are weapons."Capitol Police Sergeant Aquilino Gonnell described the scene as a "medieval battlefield".He tearfully described returning home and pushing his wife away because of the amount of chemical irritant that had soaked into his uniform. During his testimony, the Iraq War veteran went on to shame Republicans for their "continuous shocking attempt" to "ignore or destroy the truth" about that day.Asked by Congresswoman Cheney about Donald Trump's claim that they were a "very loving crowd", Sgt Gonnell hit back: "I'm still recovering from those hugs and kisses.""If that was hugs and kisses, we should all go to his house and do the same thing to him."He later said that he did not mean for anyone to go to Mr Trump's home, and apologised for the "outburst".