AP - By MICHAEL BALSAMO, ERIC TUCKER and NOMAAN MERCHANT
WASHINGTON
(AP) — The man who rammed a car into two officers at a barricade
outside the U.S. Capitol, killing one of them before he was shot to
death by police, had been suffering from delusions, paranoia and
suicidal thoughts, a U.S. official told The Associated Press on
Saturday. Investigators believe it was an isolated incident from a
disturbed young man.
Video
of the Friday afternoon attack shows the driver emerging from the
crashed car with a knife in his hand and starting to run at the pair of
officers, Capitol Police acting Chief Yogananda Pittman told reporters.
Police shot the suspect, 25-year-old Noah Green, who died at a hospital.
Investigators
are increasingly focused on Green’s mental health as they work to
identify any motive for the attack, said the official, who was not
authorized to speak publicly about an ongoing investigation and spoke to
The AP on condition of anonymity. The official said investigators had
talked to Green’s family, who spoke of his increasingly delusional
thoughts.
In
online posts since removed, Green described being under government
thought control and said he was being watched. He described himself as a
follower of the Nation of Islam and its longtime leader, Louis
Farrakhan, and spoke of going through a difficult time when he leaned on
his faith. Some of the messages were captured by the group SITE, which
tracks online activity.
“To
be honest these past few years have been tough, and these past few
months have been tougher,” he wrote in late March. “I have been tried
with some of the biggest, unimaginable tests in my life. I am currently
now unemployed after I left my job partly due to afflictions, but
ultimately, in search of a spiritual journey.”
It
was the second line-of-duty death this year for the U.S. Capitol
Police, still struggling to heal from the Jan. 6 insurrection. The
attack underscored that the building and campus — and the officers
charged with protecting them — remain potential targets for violence.
Authorities
installed a giant fence around the Capitol perimeter and for months
restricted traffic along the roads closest to the building, but they had
begun pulling back some of the emergency measures. And the most recent incident could delay the gradual reopening of the building’s grounds to the public.
“I
just ask that the public continue to keep U.S. Capitol Police and their
families in your prayers,” Pittman said. “This has been an extremely difficult time for U.S. Capitol Police after the events of Jan. 6 and now the events that have occurred here today.
Police
identified the slain officer as William “Billy” Evans, an 18-year
veteran who was a member of the department’s first responders unit.
House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi hailed Evans as a “martyr for our democracy,”
while Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said he was “heartbroken.”
Pelosi and Schumer both spoke Friday with members of Evans’ family.
President
Joe Biden said in a statement that he and his wife were heartbroken to
learn of the attack and expressed condolences to Evans’ family. He
directed flags at the White House to be lowered to half-staff.
In
2013, officers with the Capitol Police and Secret Service fatally shot a
woman inside her car after she led them on a high-speed chase that
began outside the White House. Miriam Carey’s family said she suffered
from postpartum depression with psychosis but was not dangerous.
Friday’s
crash and shooting happened at a security checkpoint near the Capitol
typically used by senators and staff on weekdays, though most were away
from the building for the current recess. The attack occurred about 100
yards (meters) from the entrance of the building on the Senate side of
the Capitol.
The Washington region remains on edge nearly three months after a mob of insurrectionists loyal to former President Donald Trump stormed the building as Congress was voting to certify Biden’s presidential win.
Five people died in the Jan. 6 riot, including Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick,
who was among a badly outnumbered force trying to fight off the
intruders. It took hours for the National Guard to arrive, a delay that
has driven months of finger-pointing among that day’s key decision
makers.
Almost
140 Capitol Police officers were wounded in that attack, including
officers not issued helmets who sustained head injuries and one with
cracked ribs, according to the officers’ union. Two officers, one from
Capitol Police and another from Washington’s Metropolitan Police
Department, died by suicide following the Jan. 6 attack.
Capitol Police and National Guard troops were called upon soon afterward to secure the Capitol during Biden’s inauguration
and faced another potential threat in early March linked to conspiracy
theories falsely claiming Trump would retake the presidency.
The
area was locked down for hours Friday but has since reopened, and
National Guard troops stood outside the building on Saturday.
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Merchant
reported from Houston. Associated Press news researchers Randy
Herschaft and Rhonda Shafner in New York, and Associated Press writers
Colleen Long, Mary Clare Jalonick, Lisa Mascaro, Mark Sherman and Lolita
C. Baldor contributed to this report.
___
This story has been corrected by referring to Louis Farrakhan as the Nation of Islam’s longtime leader, not its founder.