As President-elect Donald Trump was visiting the U.S. Capitol, police responded to an incident nearby in which a man attempted to set a car on fire. According to the United States Capitol Police, police were alerted to a man trying to set a car on fire near the Grant Memorial on Wednesday.
From the rioters who breached the Capitol building to the lawmakers trapped inside, from Trump-world turncoats, to the now president-elect himself, many who joined or were caught up in the riot are still living with fallout from the January 6 of four years ago.
The disturbing incident unfolded in front of the Ulysses S. Grant Memorial just before 5:30 p.m. – at the same time Trump, 78, was arriving at the Capitol Building.
A total of 61 San Antonio officers will travel to Washington to help provide security for Donald Trump inauguration on Jan. 20.
The special counsel's report criticized Donald ... Former Capitol Police officer wants to end the falsehoods about Jan. 6 A former member of the United States Capitol Police, who bravely defended ...
There remains no federal mechanism to determine the application of the insurrection clause of the 14th Amendment.
Four years after the January 6th attack on the Capitol the Department of Justice says they've charged more than a thousand people with federal crimes and President-elect Donald Trump has promised to pardon some of them.
The police confirmed on X that it took a second man into custody because of a suspicious vehicle, but the bomb squad has since cleared the vehicle.
Donald Trump will hold his inauguration ceremony in the US Capitol Rotunda due to extreme weather, similar to Ronald Reagan in 1985. Despite the venue change, Trump promises a memorable event, with live viewing at Capital One Arena and the presidential parade continuing as planned.
A robust security plan is in place across the nation’s capital ahead of the presidential inauguration, which will take place amid extra tight security.
Gregory Charles Peck, Jr., a Connelly Springs man charged in August, is expected to enter a plea on Thursday on a civil disorder charge and felony charges of assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers using a deadly or dangerous weapon.