Not wide enough, of course. But wider.
I already wrote about my questions concerning Officer Sicknick’s cause of death, in posts appearing on January 11, January 26, January 30, and February 5. The ambiguities and contradictions in the articles, plus the missing autopsy report, were clear signs that something was not right with the version we had been getting so far. But now a site called Revolver has picked up the story (I doubt from me) with this February 9 article entitled, “MAGA Blood Libel: Why Are They Hiding The Medical Report?”
And now Tucker Carlson has taken up the question as well, and the intrepid Glenn Greenwald has been tweeting up a storm about it (to read the Greenwald thread please scroll up as well as down).
One tweet of Greenwald’s also mentions that the initial reporting about the rioter with the zip ties is false, too. I hadn’t heard that before, but I had heard about the zip-tie guy. In the first few days after January 6th, an upset relative had sent me a photo of “zip-tie guy,” and asserted that this picture proved that people came into the Capitol prepared with equipment and the intent to take members of Congress hostage.
I certainly thought that was possible – after all, I have no trouble assuming there would be some opportunistic people in the crowd bent on worse than a protest. But later I recall reading a story – I don’t recall where – that the zip-tie guy said that he had actually picked up the zip ties while in the Capitol, and that he had found them lying around. This seemed improbable to me at the time, but doing a search just now I see that the prosecutor in his case agrees with that description [emphasis and additions in brackets mine]. The misleading headline is “The Capitol riot’s ‘zip-tie guy’ appeared to take the plastic handcuffs from Capitol police, prosecutors say,” which for me conjures up an image of him taking them from the hands or pockets of police. But if you read the article it says instead that prosecutors claim that the zip-ties were on “a table” when zip-tie guy picked them up:
Munchel, who broke into the building with his mom, was labeled “zip-tie guy” after he was photographed barreling down the Senate chamber holding the restraints. His appearance raised questions about whether the insurrectionists who sought to stop Congress from counting Electoral College votes on January 6 also intended to take lawmakers hostage.
But according to the new filing [by the prosecutor], Munchel and his mother took the handcuffs from within the Capitol building — apparently to ensure the Capitol Police couldn’t use them on the insurrectionists — rather than bring them in when they initially breached the building.
“At one point, MUNCHEL spots plastic handcuffs on a table inside a hallway in the Capitol. MUNCHEL exclaims, ‘zipties. I need to get me some of them motherf—ers,” and grabs several white plastic handcuffs from on top of a cabinet,” the filing says, adding: “As MUNCHEL and [his mother, Lisa Eisenhart,] are attempting to leave, Eisenhart says words to the effect of, ‘Don’t carry the zip ties, just get ’em out of their hand.'”
Prosecutors submitted the filing in an effort to keep Munchel, who was arrested on January 10, detained until his trial.
He and Eisenhart each face several charges in relation to their actions at the Capitol building and are among at least 169 people currently charged.
Much of the evidence included in the filing was taken from videos recorded by Munchel himself: He kept an iPhone mounted to his chest…
Video footage reviewed by prosecutors also suggests Munchel and his mother carried weapons while in Washington, DC — despite the district’s strict gun laws — and abandoned them only before they got into the building.
“We’re going straight to federal prison if we go in there with weapons,” Eisenhart told Munchel before they entered the Capitol building, according to prosecutors.
We can put ’em in the backpacks,” Eisenhart then said, before stashing “tactical bags” outside the building, according to prosecutors.
They sound really intent on murder or kidnapping, don’t they? The complaint against Munchel alleges that he dressed in tactical gear, had weapons that were not brought into the Capitol, shouted “treason,” picked up the zip ties “gleefully”, ” and may have been guilty of violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds, conspiracy, and civil disorders.
Oh, and that shaman? Was he going to assassinate someone? Apparently not:
In a filing seeking the detention of “QAnon Shaman” Jacob Chansley, for example, prosecutors said he planned to “capture and assassinate elected officials” before walking back on that claim.
NOTE: By the way, in the impeachment trial, the Democrats have asserted that Trump’s words are responsible for “murder”:
In its article of impeachment, the Democrat-controlled House alleged that former president Donald Trump, by his “incitement of insurrection,” was responsible for murder. That is an essential rationale for impeaching Trump. It is the most serious accusation that has been leveled. The impeachment article states that, incited by Trump to storm the Capitol and “fight like hell,” Trump supporters “injured and killed law enforcement personnel,” among other heinous acts.
The accusation about killing law-enforcement personnel refers, of course, to Capitol police officer Brian Sicknick, who was pronounced dead on the night of January 7, more than 24 hours after the siege on the Capitol had ended.
Adding to the serious but vague accusation in the impeachment article, the Democratic House impeachment managers, who are the prosecutors in the Senate trial, elaborated in their publicly filed pretrial memo (at p. 28): “The insurrectionists killed a Capitol Police officer by striking him in the head with a fire extinguisher.”
Now there’s a move to abandon the seemingly unprovable fire extinguisher claim, and they’re trying to say that Officer Sicknick was killed by bear spray wielded by some rioters. I’ve looked up whether bear spray can cause death, and there’s no mention of it in the many articles I read, although it definitely can cause temporary nasal and eye problems if sprayed up close and in the face. But Officer Sicknick took ill many many hours after his pepper spray encounter. And again, we have had no mention of any autopsy reports even though it’s been about five weeks since his death.
And then there’s the whole “Calvary/cavalry” thing.