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Investigators recommend no charges for Capitol Police officer accused of killing pro-Trump rioter

WASHINGTON, DC — Investigators have recommended that prosecutors decline to bring charges against a U.S. Capitol Police officer in the shooting of a pro-Trump rioter who was killed during the insurrection, according to people familiar with the matter.

The shooting of the Capitol rioter, Ashli Babbitt, remains under investigation by the DC Metropolitan Police, the US Attorney’s Office in Washington, DC, and civil rights prosecutors, a routine process for shootings involving the Capitol Police. A final decision hasn’t been made, the people familiar with the probe said.

Justice Department officials could make a final decision in the coming days.

A spokesperson for DC’s Metropolitan Police Department said in an email that “it is irresponsible to make an investigatory assumption or to jump to any conclusion without completing the thorough investigation.” The U.S. Attorney’s Office in DC did not comment. The Wall Street Journal was first to report on the recommendation.

Babbitt’s fatal shooting on January 6 occurred as a crowd pushed toward a doorway — barricaded by chairs and guarded by Capitol Police — that was the entrance to the Speaker’s Lobby in the U.S. Capitol building. Babbitt was given medical assistance immediately and taken to a hospital, where she was pronounced dead.

In a new federal criminal case announced against a man at the front of the crowd when Babbitt was shot, prosecutors pieced together how the crowd had threatened police minutes before the shooting.

The new charges against Zachary Jodan Alam offer the clearest portrait yet in court of the circumstances around Babbitt’s shooting, though graphic video of the violence and her falling has been publicly available since shortly after the siege.

Alam allegedly punched and kicked the glass panels of the closed doors, tried to smash it with a helmet, pushed himself against an officer and shouted in the faces of officers “f**k the blue.” After Alam smashed a window, Babbitt was shot, according to a new affidavit from the FBI used to support Alam’s charges.

Alam backed away after Babbitt was shot, prosecutors say. He was arrested during the weekend in eastern Pennsylvania, the U.S. Justice Department said on Monday.

Alam did not have an attorney listed to represent him as of Monday night and could not be reached for comment, as he was in jail after his arrest.

Babbitt was an ardent Trump supporter who held strong political views, her mother previously said, and was “passionate enough to die for what she believed in.”

A frequent attendee of pro-Trump rallies, she flew to Washington, D.C., from San Diego, California, with the intent to participate in the protest, her mother said.

A CNN review of Babbitt’s social media accounts found Babbitt frequently voiced support for Trump and other Republican figures on Facebook. She also shared content promoting political conspiracy theories often pushed by far-right figures.

Babbitt served as a senior airman in the US Air Force from 2004 to 2008 under the name Ashli Elizabeth McEntee, according to military records. She was a member of the Air Force Reserve from 2008 to 2010 and was in the Air National Guard from 2010 until November 2016, records show.

Article Topic Follows: Politics

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