“Do what we’re trained to do!” We obtained recordings of internal Metropolitan Police radio traffic from the day of the Capitol attack. Synchronized with footage from the scene, they reveal what officers saw and said in real-time as they came under siege. nyti.ms/2PaPQQo
The recordings begin around 1 p.m. — right after the first breach of the building’s outer perimeter. MPD are called in as backup for Capitol Police, and we hear Inspector Robert Glover mobilizing his forces to respond.
“Cruiser 50. 64-54. 64-54. Mount up.” At first, Glover sounds calm. He tells Civil Disturbance Units (CDU) 64 and 54, MPD’s mobile bike squads, to mount up. They’re often dispatched in response to protests and large crowds.
But they quickly learn this isn’t a typical crowd. “CDU 12 up to help maintain the lines! They’re throwing bike racks!” The change in Glover’s voice is striking. Within minutes of arriving, he calls for another CDU, this one in hard gear, and for DSO, the munitions specialists.
“Be advised, the speech ended.” As Glover calls in officer injuries, the gauntlet only grows. Trump’s speech is over, and an intel unit warns that even more people are on their way to the Capitol. The crowd escalates its tactics — reports of explosions are heard over the radio.
As the fight becomes increasingly desperate, Glover authorizes his team to deploy more crowd-control munitions. “One sting ball deployment authorized. One sting ball deployment authorized to hold the line.” Here’s what that looks like.
But it’s still not enough. And when Glover asks about the several hard platoons that he has requested to fend off the crowd, he’s told there is only one currently available. “There’s 42, it’s the only other one until later.”
Now, it’s just past 1:45 p.m. and the police are about to take a major loss. “Cruiser 50. They’re scaling the scaffold!” The crowd breaks through scaffolding onto the building’s northwest steps. This puts them behind the lines of Glover and his team still on the lower terrace.
It also gets them closer to breaching the building — and at 2:12 p.m., that becomes a reality. But Glover and his team are still battling on the lower deck to keep the rest of the mob from taking over the entire west front of the Capitol.
Glover even requests backup from another agency. “Jock radio, can the Park support us with horses?” Photo metadata shows that mounted Park Police were active on the mall that day around the time Glover made the plea. But no horses arrive in time to help his team hold the line.
Around 2:28 p.m. — the police line crumbles. “Cruiser 50, we’re flanked! 10-33. I repeat, 10-33, west front of the Capitol! We have been flanked and we’ve lost the line!” Glover, finally, calls a 10-33, the last resort for officers in trouble. All hands.
What you hear in this video is only a fraction of the radio recordings from the day. They tell a story of the ferocity of the crowd: “Cruiser 50. The crowd is using munitions against us! They have bear spray in the crowd!”...
...the desperation of the officers under siege: “Unless we get more munitions we are not gonna be able to hold! We have multiple injuries!”...
...and the lapses in and obstacles to the police response: “We can’t get to you, we’re locked. That door they all came through is locked! How do we get to you?” nyti.ms/2PaPQQo
There is more reporting to come from Visual Investigations on what happened at the Capitol on January 6. Follow that storyline, and all of our other work, here: nytimes.com/spotlight/visu…
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Phone records, documents, interviews and thousands of hours of video expose the main Russian military unit responsible for a devastating atrocity: the killing of dozens of people along one street in Bucha, Ukraine. nyti.ms/3WsAm7M
We didn’t just find evidence of this unit’s presence on Yablunska Street. We caught them in the act. Vehicle markings seen in CCTV, calls made by soldiers from victims’ phones hours after their killings, and more evidence all place the unit at the scene at the time of the crimes.
As part of this effort, we compiled a visual record of killings along Yablunska Street. This was based on dozens of photos and videos from the street captured after the Russian retreat at the end of March. We used those visuals to map out where each person was killed.
An analysis of confidential Pentagon documents by the Visual Investigations team found that civilian casualty allegations had been dismissed based on flawed reviews of evidence — which we were able to correct using openly available sources. nytimes.com/2021/12/31/us/…
The investigation is based on a collection of documents obtained by @AzmatZahra. The trove chronicles alleged civilian casualty incidents from the height of the U.S. air war in Iraq and Syria. nytimes.com/interactive/20…
The documents reveal how civilian harm allegations are assessed. We found the process was riddled with inconsistencies. In one assessment, reviewers spent a great deal of time scouring evidence; in another, they apparently failed to do a simple Google Maps search.
Our investigation shows how a secretive compound in Kabul — the site of the Salt Pit, where the C.I.A. previously carried out torture on detainees — became the agency's hub for clandestine evacuations before parts of it were deliberately destroyed. nytimes.com/2021/09/01/wor…
As thousands surrounded Hamid Karzai International Airport hoping to escape, flights were also taking off from a different location — allowing those on board to circumvent checkpoints that had been set up at the airport by the Taliban and foreign troops.
That location is a compound less than three miles from the airport — home to Eagle Base, where the C.I.A. trained Afghan units, and the Salt Pit, a former black site where the agency engaged in torture including physical abuse, forced nudity and light and sleep deprivation.
Video from the Khaje Bughra neighborhood of Kabul as the U.S. claims to have carried out a drone strike in the city. Smoke rising from 34.57454, 69.16211.
Aftermath footage inside that courtyard from where the smoke was rising.
More aftermath footage, along with concerning claims about civilian casualties.
We analyzed, minute by minute, the crucial two-hour period during which a Trump rally to stop the certification of the election results gave way to a mob that nearly came face to face with Congress. Here’s what we found: nyti.ms/2XyySwf
As President Trump prepares to speak near the White House, his loyalists are already gathering at the Capitol. Inside, Congress prepares for proceedings to certify the Electoral College vote. Putting these timelines together shows the urgency of the situation.
For weeks, Trump had urged his supporters to go to D.C. to stop the certification of election results. Several simultaneous rallies are planned, including the “wild rally” on the Capitol lawn, as this supporter-made map shows.
Yesterday, after a weekend of protests against police brutality, President Trump walked from the White House to nearby St. John’s Church for a photo op. We took a closer look at the force used to clear protesters from that spot, and who was involved. nytimes.com/2020/06/02/us/…
The protesters, who had gathered near Lafayette Park and St John’s Church, appear peaceful. They chant George Floyd’s name.
The U.S. Army Military Police, the Secret Service and the U.S. Park Police, some mounted, are lined up, blocking H Street near St. John’s Church. Around 6:17PM, the various agencies begin to move on the protesters. A chemical agent is fired at them.