Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Police Response Slammed: 'When Black Folks Are Protesting ... They (Are) Shot With Rubber Bullets'
Civil rights leaders blasted law enforcement agencies for their slow response to rioters at the U.S. Capitol Wednesday, noting the massive show of police聽force聽in place for Black Lives Matter demonstrations last year聽over police killings of unarmed Black men and women. "When Black folks are protesting and progressives are protesting peacefully they were tear-gassed, they were arrested, they were shot with rubber bullets. They were shot with real bullets,"聽said Derrick Johnson, president of the national NAACP. "We watched it take place all summer long when people were peacefully demonstrating." (Hauck and Barfield Berry, 1/7)
The violent pro-Trump mob that stormed the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday sent shock waves across the nation and enraged Bay Area supporters and organizers of racial justice protests, who said police appeared to show much more restraint 鈥 and use significantly less force 鈥 in responding to the largely white crowd. 鈥淚t is America鈥檚 double standard on full display,鈥 said Zahra Billoo, a civil rights lawyer and executive director of the Council on American-Islamic Relations in the Bay Area. 鈥淚t is not surprising, but it is nonetheless disappointing to see how this violent mob of people attempting to disrupt law and order are treated so differently than civil rights advocates, like myself, and other Muslims and minorities who have been advocating for change through law and order for decades.鈥 (Sanchez, 1/6)
When Chanelle Helm helped organize protests after the March聽13 killing of Breonna Taylor, Louisville police responded with batons, stun grenades and tear gas. The 40-year-old Black Lives Matter activist still bears scars from rubber bullets fired at close range. So Helm was startled and frustrated Wednesday to see a White, pro-Trump mob storm the U.S. Capitol 鈥 breaking down barricades, smashing windows and striking police officers 鈥 without obvious consequence. 鈥淥ur activists are still to this day met with hyper-police violence,鈥 Helm said. 鈥淎nd today you see this full-on riot 鈥 literally a coup 鈥 with people toting guns, which the police knew was coming and they just let it happen. I don鈥檛 understand where the 鈥榣aw and order鈥 is. This is what white supremacy looks like.鈥 (Klemko, Kindy, Bellware and hawkins, 1/6)
Was the Capitol's lack of security related to coronavirus? 鈥
The Capitol Police was short some officers Wednesday, because they had been infected with the coronavirus or exposed to someone in a way that required quarantine, according to people familiar with the situation. However, law enforcement officials said, the Capitol Police and other federal agencies also seemed to underestimate the potential threat posed by Trump鈥檚 supporters 鈥 even as the D.C. police grew more alarmed. (Leonig, Davis, Lamothe and Fahrenthold, 1/7)
Former Senate historian Donald Ritchie said the Capitol Police might be excused for misreading the pro-Trump crowd. 鈥淭his is just so totally out of character for the way in which Americans protest or Americans congregate or show their political feelings,鈥 Mr. Ritchie said, noting that the Capitol has seen massive protests over myriad issues over its history. 鈥淚鈥檓 astonished that it happened,鈥 he said, 鈥渇or the same reasons the police were astonished that it happened.鈥 The coronavirus pandemic also posed new challenges for the police department. As Congress has remained open for business during the pandemic, at least a dozen officers had tested positive for the coronavirus by May 2020, and were concerned about their working conditions, The Wall Street Journal previously reported. (Viswanatha and Gurman, 1/7)