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Pardoned Jan 6 felon heckles former Capitol police officer Harry Dunn outside building

Mary Papenfuss
in San Francisco
Friday 07 February 2025 13:23 GMT
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Then police officer Harry Dunn watches a video of the January 6, 2021 riots at the House Select Committee investigation into the violence in 2022.
Then police officer Harry Dunn watches a video of the January 6, 2021 riots at the House Select Committee investigation into the violence in 2022. (REUTERS)

A former police officer attacked during the January 6 insurrection was heckled outside the Capitol by a rioter pardoned by Donald Trump.

Former U.S. Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn was confronted after a gathering on the Capitol steps Wednesday honoring fellow fallen officer Brian Sicknick, who died after suffering two strokes the day after he was attacked and sprayed with bear mace during the riot.

While the D.C. Medical Examiner ruled the death resulted from natural causes, the report noted that “all that transpired” during the Capitol attack “played a role” in Sicknick’s death.

I was just appalled” by the pardons, Sicknick’s mother, Gladys Sicknick, said at the gathering, WUSA9-TV reported.

“All these people that are going to do bad, they say, ‘Well, I can do it. All these people got off, so I can do what I want,’” she noted.

Sicknick’s bother Ken also railed against the pardons."Brian died defending the United States Capitol against a mob of thousands that were sent by, who many believe, a fear-mongering narcissist who ... currently resides, at the White House. The mob wielded chemical sprays, Tasers, baseball bats, sharpened flagpoles as well as guns,” he said.

Then police officer Harry Dunn watches a video of the January 6, 2021 riots during the House Select Committee investigation into the violence in 2022.
Then police officer Harry Dunn watches a video of the January 6, 2021 riots during the House Select Committee investigation into the violence in 2022. (REUTERS)

As Dunn walked away from the building at the end of the event he was confronted by Brandon Fellows, a pardoned felon who was sentenced to 42 months in prison for a variety of offenses at the Capitol, including obstruction of an official proceeding, and disorderly and disruptive conduct.

Fellows taunted Dunn that he seemed “upset.”

“Damn right I’m upset,” Dunn responded.

Fellows admonished: ‘Yeah, well you should be. You should probably control your emotions.”

Dunn indicated to Fellows that he was not with “10,000 of your thugs.” He taunted: “Pull this same s*** that you did on January 6th! Pull that s*** now! Pull it now.”

Fellows bragged to Dunn that he “had a blast” at the White House, and “took some epic selfies.” He told the former officer: “You should probably lose some weight.”

A bystander shouted at Fellows: “You know you’re a loser, right?”

He answered: “Stay mad.”

Some 140 officers were attacked by Trump supporters at the Capitol January 6, 2021 in an effort to overturn the presidential election. He testified that rioters hurled racial slurs at him as he battled to protect lawmakers and himself in the building until his hands were bloody. He has since retired from the force.

It broke me,” he said in a 2023 interview with ABC News.

He has said he is “outraged” that some 1,500 rioters were pardoned last month, including nearly 200 who confessed to assaulting police, and hailed as “patriots” by Donald Trump.

Trump has a militia on call right now,” Dunn warned in an appearance early this week at American University in Washington, D.C..

At at a talk last week in Wisconsin he emphasized: “I’ll be damned if I ever stop pushing back against these lies, these narratives, these people, that think it’s okay what happened that day.”

As for Sicknick’s family, he told WUSA9: “I’m always here to support them — they lost so much. And the fact that they have it thrown in their face that what they went through and what they are going through didn’t happen, I just want to be supportive for them.”

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