Family of Cunt who broke into the Capitol building gets 5,000000 courtesy of Trump.

BIGBOOTYKN

Member
May 14, 2025
45
43
18
Why will there be outrage when a Canadian citizen is compensated for not being provided the due process he is entitled to, and that too as a minor?
Cause he is a terrorist and was fighting in a war kid or not ! This just proves how evil and demonic Islam is that it will have kids fighting !!! Our society is just destroyed if we support this pos getting 10.5
Fuck his due process he should have gotten the gas chamber
 

richaceg

Well-known member
Feb 11, 2009
16,389
7,966
113
It’s libtards like you that are so complacent and naive to believe this is a beautiful world ! It’s people like you that will have my grandkids praying to Allah and living under Sharia law lol
Wow the ignorance is special in this one
Complacent? You're being nice.
 

Robert Mugabe

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2017
10,342
7,502
113
Kirk, the problem was she had about 20 other rioters with her, all of whom were violent and dangerous. That's why she got shot. If it was just 1 women, sure tazer her and cuff her. It's a lot harder when her 19 friends are going to swarm you, beat you and take your guns.
There are many reasons that crowd sizes get inflated or deflated. Large size is a symbol of popularity, especially in the Trump era, and estimates of how many people congregate is often overstated. It seems, though, that many people—those blaming it all on Donald Trump, those defending their being overwhelmed, those claiming a well-planned attack, those blaming the Trump Pentagon for not taking swifter action—has an interest in being content with a low estimate, in not admitting that that 120,000 people were there to show solidarity with the president, believing that the election was indeed stolen.

 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,739
17,818
113
It’s libtards like you that are so complacent and naive to believe this is a beautiful world ! It’s people like you that will have my grandkids praying to Allah and living under Sharia law lol
Wow the ignorance is special in this one
Jimi, calm down, buddy. I'm just looking out for you so you can stay a while, man! LOL

Plus, stress can lead to gout, I hear. ;)
 

crocket

Active member
Nov 10, 2001
948
234
43
What’s next free money for people that cross the board illegally?? How about free housing when breaking into the country ?? Or how about free phones and free food and free everything for illegals that have broken the countries immigration laws ?? Seems like you libs have hypocrisy on high levels
The fake boss gov rump is chasing the migrants to Canada. Average incoming is 100 daily! They get processed and assessed if their claim is legit or not.
Do you know that Canada also pledges money to foreign countries that have disasters! Yes we do that too! We donate millions every year!
 

mandrill

monkey
Aug 23, 2001
81,522
109,615
113
It’s libtards like you that are so complacent and naive to believe this is a beautiful world ! It’s people like you that will have my grandkids praying to Allah and living under Sharia law lol
Wow the ignorance is special in this one
Jimi, Sharia Law got shot down in Ontario 20 years ago and hasn't been heard from since.

It's more likely that your grandkids will pray to a little statuette of an obese old man with orange skin and peach colour hair.
 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
28,823
9,961
113
Room 112
Kirk, the problem was she had about 20 other rioters with her, all of whom were violent and dangerous. That's why she got shot. If it was just 1 women, sure tazer her and cuff her. It's a lot harder when her 19 friends are going to swarm you, beat you and take your guns.
I guess if they had granted Trump's request for the National Guard, Babbitt probably would still be alive today.
 

Robert Mugabe

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2017
10,342
7,502
113
I guess if they had granted Trump's request for the National Guard, Babbitt probably would still be alive today.
He requested the National Guard? When? The reports were that he was sitting in front of the tv watching it without lifting a finger or making a call. Eating popcorn probably.
Popcorn Donald Trump eating.gif
 
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ButterBath

Member
Feb 5, 2025
37
42
18
Read the fine print and I imagine you find that you aren't meant to storm the Capitol building and beat up the cops who are on duty to serve and protect. 5 cops died as a result of the riot. Don't see their families getting compensation. To the tune of 5 million anyways.
Correction: NO police were killed during the riot. one cop died the next day from what medical examiners have deemed natural causes (stroke). fyi, strokes are one of the leading causes of death in the usa.

the only death to have occurred at the capitol that day was this poor UNARMED veteran who was shot by police.
 
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Robert Mugabe

Well-known member
Nov 5, 2017
10,342
7,502
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Correction: NO police were killed during the riot. one cop died the next day from what medical examiners have deemed natural causes (stroke). fyi, strokes are one of the leading causes of death in the usa.

the only death to have occurred at the capitol that day was this poor UNARMED veteran who was shot by police.
" This poor UNARMED veteran who was shot by the police" Was a traitorous shit disturbing cunt who wouldn't have gotten shot if she hadn't been trying to break into the Capitol building.
Law Enforcement
Ocasio-Cortez’s statement that the Capitol attack resulted in “almost 10 dead” includes five police officers, none of whom died at the scene on Jan. 6.

A stroke victim: A Capitol Police release the day after the riots said that USCP Officer Brian Sicknick “passed away due to injuries sustained while on-duty.” The report stated that Sicknick “was injured while physically engaging with protesters. He returned to his division office and collapsed.”

The New York Times, citing unnamed law enforcement officials, initially reported that Sicknick was struck by a fire extinguisher, but later updated its story to say that medical experts said he did not die of blunt force trauma.

As they storm the U.S. Capitol, Trump supporters clash with police and security forces in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6, 2021. Credit: Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images.
The Washington Post reported on April 19 that District of Columbia Chief Medical Examiner Francisco J. Diaz found that Sicknick suffered two strokes nearly eight hours after being sprayed with a chemical irritant during the riot. Diaz told the Post that Sicknick died of natural causes, but “all that transpired played a role in his condition.”
That day, US. Capitol Police released a statement that read: “The USCP accepts the findings from the District of Columbia’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner that Officer Brian Sicknick died of natural causes. This does not change the fact Officer Sicknick died in the line of duty, courageously defending Congress and the Capitol.”
Four suicides: Four other police officers committed suicide in the days and months after the riot.
The first was U.S. Capitol Police Officer Howard Liebengood, 51, who had been guarding the Capitol for 15 years and was on duty at the Capitol on Jan. 6. He took his own life three days after the riots.
The following day, Trump ordered flags at the White House be lowered to half-staff in honor of both Sicknick and Liebengood.
Several days later, D.C. Police Officer Jeffrey Smith, 35, who was injured in the riots on Jan. 6, also committed suicide.
Smith’s wife, Erin, told the Washington Post her husband related to her the fear and panic he experienced the day of the assault on the Capitol, and that he was afraid he might die.
In defending the Capitol, Smith was struck on the helmet by a metal pole thrown by rioters. Later that night, his wife said he went to the police medical clinic, where he was prescribed pain medication and put on sick leave.
Smith’s wife said he “wasn’t the same” in the days after the riot and seemed to be in constant pain. After visiting a police clinic on Jan. 14 and being ordered back to work, Smith shot himself on the way to work, the Post reported.
The families of Liebengood and Smith both sought to have them recognized as “line of duty” deaths, which would afford their families enhanced benefits.
In a letter sent to Rep. Jennifer Wexton of Virginia, Liebengood’s widow wrote, “After assisting riot control at the Capitol on January 6th, USCP scheduled Howie to work lengthy shifts in the immediate days following. He was home for very few hours over the course of four days. Although he was severely sleep-deprived, he remained on duty- as he was directed- practically around the clock from January 6th through the 9th. On the evening of the 9th, he took his life at our home.”
In the letter, reported by CNN, Serena Liebengood concluded, “The Liebengood family wants Howie’s death to not have been in vain. Recognition of the cause of his death, much like the critical examination of the riot itself, will remain central to how we make right those tragedies and help avoid their repetition.”
The Liebengood family later provided a statement to CNN, “Howie dedicated 15 years of his life to protecting these elected officials, as well as millions of visitors at the U.S. Capitol each year. Officials on both sides of the aisle witnessed firsthand the catastrophic events of January 6. We are certain they recognize that this tragedy led to Howie’s death.”
As part of a lawsuit brought by Smith’s widow to have her husband’s suicide ruled “in the line of duty,” Jonathan L. Arden, the former chief medical examiner of the District of Columbia, provided a declaration that stated “there is hard and reliable evidence that Jeffrey Smith changed after the physical and emotional trauma he experience on January 6, 2021 as he became withdrawn and upset. These facts, together with the timing of the suicide (nine days after the trauma) strongly supports causality.”
“The acute, precipitating event that caused the death of Officer Smith was his occupational exposure to the traumatic events he suffered on January 6, 2021,” Arden wrote.
However, “line of duty” benefits are not typically granted to those who commit suicide, and the cases for both Liebengood and Smith are still pending. Smith’s case, because he was a D.C. police officer, is before the D.C. Police and Firefighters’ Retirement and Relief Board. According to D.C. law, survivor benefits are only provided when a death is the “sole and direct result of a personal injury sustained” while performing duty as an officer, and was not caused by “his intention to bring about his own death.”
But Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner and Reps. Don Beyer and Jennifer Wexton wrote in a letter to D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser that an exception for Smith ought to be made “both as a legal and a practical
matter.”
“As a legal matter, Officer Smith’s symptoms were clearly the ‘sole and direct result of a personal injury’ since he had never experienced these symptoms prior to being attacked on January 6,” the letter states. “He cannot have had intent to bring about his own death if he was not in control of his actions due to severe brain trauma, any more than someone who suffers a medical emergency while driving and inadvertently crashes can be said to have had intent to bring about their own death.”
Kaine told NBC News that if the board did not make an exception for Smith, he would consider legislation that would include suicide as a line-of-duty death.
Since he was a member of the Capitol Police, Liebengood’s case is pending before the federal Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs. The families of Liebengood and Smith may also be eligible for additional federal benefits if their deaths are determined to have been “in the line of duty.”
Other elected officials have also lobbied for Smith and Liebengood to get the “line of duty” designation, and legislation was introduced in May to extend federal benefits to “public safety officers who are diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder or acute stress disorder following a stressful situation while on duty.” The legislation has not progressed out of committee.
In May, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi introduced legislation to award congressional gold medals to the U.S. Capitol Police and the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department for their efforts in protecting the Capitol on Jan. 6. The text of the legislation specifically notes the “sacrifice of heroes including Capitol Police Officers Brian Sicknick and Howard Liebengood, Metropolitan Police Department Officer Jeffrey Smith.”
The legislation passed the House 406-21, (most of the “no” votes were from Republicans who objected to the use of the term “insurrection” to describe the events on Jan. 6), and it passed by unanimous consent in the Senate. It was signed into law by President Joe Biden on Aug. 5.
In July, six months after the riot at the Capitol, two Metropolitan Police Department officers who responded to the Capitol on Jan. 6 committed suicide.
According to People magazine, Kyle DeFreytag, 26, was not involved with the clashes with rioters during the breach of the Capitol, but was deployed to the Capitol to help enforce the curfew put in place after the mob had been cleared from the building.
The same day the Metropolitan Police Department announced DeFreytag’s death, it confirmed that another officer, Gunther Hashida, had also committed suicide.
Metropolitan Police Department spokesperson Kristen Metzger told CNN that Hashida was assigned to the emergency response team within the special operations division and had helped secure the Capitol on Jan. 6.
On Aug. 2, the Washington Post reported: “Authorities drew no connection between the riot and his death. An official familiar with the investigation said Hashida had struggles beyond Jan. 6 that could have played a role.”
Robert J. Contee III, the chief of the Metropolitan Police Department, said “that he could not say whether the riot was the cause of the suicides,” the New York Times reported.
At the start of a press briefing on Aug. 3, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki honored the two officers.
“I wanted to take a moment to recognize the passing of Metropolitan Police Officer Gunther Hashida and Officer Kyle DeFreytag — two officers who bravely defended the Capitol, both during and after the insurrection on January 6th,” Psaki said. “Their deaths are a sad reminder of that shameful day in our country’s history and of the physical and mental scars left on the officers who risked their lives to protect our Capitol and our democracy.”
Update, March 21, 2022: On March 7, the District of Columbia’s Police and Firefighters’ Retirement and Relief Board declared that Metropolitan Police Officer Jeffrey Smith’s suicide in the days after the Jan. 6 riot was a line-of-duty death. The board concluded “that Officer Smith sustained a personal injury on January 6, 2021, while performing his duties and that his injury was the sole and direct cause of his death.” As a result, Smith’s widow, Erin Smith, will receive an annuity equal to 100% of her husband’s salary.
 
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ButterBath

Member
Feb 5, 2025
37
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" This poor UNARMED veteran who was shot by the police" Was a traitorous shit disturbing cunt who wouldn't have gotten shot if she hadn't been trying to break into the Capitol building.
Law Enforcement
Ocasio-Cortez’s statement that the Capitol attack resulted in “almost 10 dead” includes five police officers, none of whom died at the scene on Jan. 6.

A stroke victim: A Capitol Police release the day after the riots said that USCP Officer Brian Sicknick “passed away due to injuries sustained while on-duty.” The report stated that Sicknick “was injured while physically engaging with protesters. He returned to his division office and collapsed.”

The New York Times, citing unnamed law enforcement officials, initially reported that Sicknick was struck by a fire extinguisher, but later updated its story to say that medical experts said he did not die of blunt force trauma.

As they storm the U.S. Capitol, Trump supporters clash with police and security forces in Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6, 2021. Credit: Roberto Schmidt/AFP via Getty Images.
The Washington Post reported on April 19 that District of Columbia Chief Medical Examiner Francisco J. Diaz found that Sicknick suffered two strokes nearly eight hours after being sprayed with a chemical irritant during the riot. Diaz told the Post that Sicknick died of natural causes, but “all that transpired played a role in his condition.”
That day, US. Capitol Police released a statement that read: “The USCP accepts the findings from the District of Columbia’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner that Officer Brian Sicknick died of natural causes. This does not change the fact Officer Sicknick died in the line of duty, courageously defending Congress and the Capitol.”
Four suicides: Four other police officers committed suicide in the days and months after the riot.
The first was U.S. Capitol Police Officer Howard Liebengood, 51, who had been guarding the Capitol for 15 years and was on duty at the Capitol on Jan. 6. He took his own life three days after the riots.
The following day, Trump ordered flags at the White House be lowered to half-staff in honor of both Sicknick and Liebengood.
Several days later, D.C. Police Officer Jeffrey Smith, 35, who was injured in the riots on Jan. 6, also committed suicide.
Smith’s wife, Erin, told the Washington Post her husband related to her the fear and panic he experienced the day of the assault on the Capitol, and that he was afraid he might die.
In defending the Capitol, Smith was struck on the helmet by a metal pole thrown by rioters. Later that night, his wife said he went to the police medical clinic, where he was prescribed pain medication and put on sick leave.
Smith’s wife said he “wasn’t the same” in the days after the riot and seemed to be in constant pain. After visiting a police clinic on Jan. 14 and being ordered back to work, Smith shot himself on the way to work, the Post reported.
The families of Liebengood and Smith both sought to have them recognized as “line of duty” deaths, which would afford their families enhanced benefits.
In a letter sent to Rep. Jennifer Wexton of Virginia, Liebengood’s widow wrote, “After assisting riot control at the Capitol on January 6th, USCP scheduled Howie to work lengthy shifts in the immediate days following. He was home for very few hours over the course of four days. Although he was severely sleep-deprived, he remained on duty- as he was directed- practically around the clock from January 6th through the 9th. On the evening of the 9th, he took his life at our home.”
In the letter, reported by CNN, Serena Liebengood concluded, “The Liebengood family wants Howie’s death to not have been in vain. Recognition of the cause of his death, much like the critical examination of the riot itself, will remain central to how we make right those tragedies and help avoid their repetition.”
The Liebengood family later provided a statement to CNN, “Howie dedicated 15 years of his life to protecting these elected officials, as well as millions of visitors at the U.S. Capitol each year. Officials on both sides of the aisle witnessed firsthand the catastrophic events of January 6. We are certain they recognize that this tragedy led to Howie’s death.”
As part of a lawsuit brought by Smith’s widow to have her husband’s suicide ruled “in the line of duty,” Jonathan L. Arden, the former chief medical examiner of the District of Columbia, provided a declaration that stated “there is hard and reliable evidence that Jeffrey Smith changed after the physical and emotional trauma he experience on January 6, 2021 as he became withdrawn and upset. These facts, together with the timing of the suicide (nine days after the trauma) strongly supports causality.”
“The acute, precipitating event that caused the death of Officer Smith was his occupational exposure to the traumatic events he suffered on January 6, 2021,” Arden wrote.
However, “line of duty” benefits are not typically granted to those who commit suicide, and the cases for both Liebengood and Smith are still pending. Smith’s case, because he was a D.C. police officer, is before the D.C. Police and Firefighters’ Retirement and Relief Board. According to D.C. law, survivor benefits are only provided when a death is the “sole and direct result of a personal injury sustained” while performing duty as an officer, and was not caused by “his intention to bring about his own death.”
But Sens. Tim Kaine and Mark Warner and Reps. Don Beyer and Jennifer Wexton wrote in a letter to D.C. Mayor Muriel Bowser that an exception for Smith ought to be made “both as a legal and a practical
matter.”
“As a legal matter, Officer Smith’s symptoms were clearly the ‘sole and direct result of a personal injury’ since he had never experienced these symptoms prior to being attacked on January 6,” the letter states. “He cannot have had intent to bring about his own death if he was not in control of his actions due to severe brain trauma, any more than someone who suffers a medical emergency while driving and inadvertently crashes can be said to have had intent to bring about their own death.”
Kaine told NBC News that if the board did not make an exception for Smith, he would consider legislation that would include suicide as a line-of-duty death.
Since he was a member of the Capitol Police, Liebengood’s case is pending before the federal Office of Workers’ Compensation Programs. The families of Liebengood and Smith may also be eligible for additional federal benefits if their deaths are determined to have been “in the line of duty.”
Other elected officials have also lobbied for Smith and Liebengood to get the “line of duty” designation, and legislation was introduced in May to extend federal benefits to “public safety officers who are diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder or acute stress disorder following a stressful situation while on duty.” The legislation has not progressed out of committee.
In May, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi introduced legislation to award congressional gold medals to the U.S. Capitol Police and the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department for their efforts in protecting the Capitol on Jan. 6. The text of the legislation specifically notes the “sacrifice of heroes including Capitol Police Officers Brian Sicknick and Howard Liebengood, Metropolitan Police Department Officer Jeffrey Smith.”
The legislation passed the House 406-21, (most of the “no” votes were from Republicans who objected to the use of the term “insurrection” to describe the events on Jan. 6), and it passed by unanimous consent in the Senate. It was signed into law by President Joe Biden on Aug. 5.
In July, six months after the riot at the Capitol, two Metropolitan Police Department officers who responded to the Capitol on Jan. 6 committed suicide.
According to People magazine, Kyle DeFreytag, 26, was not involved with the clashes with rioters during the breach of the Capitol, but was deployed to the Capitol to help enforce the curfew put in place after the mob had been cleared from the building.
The same day the Metropolitan Police Department announced DeFreytag’s death, it confirmed that another officer, Gunther Hashida, had also committed suicide.
Metropolitan Police Department spokesperson Kristen Metzger told CNN that Hashida was assigned to the emergency response team within the special operations division and had helped secure the Capitol on Jan. 6.
On Aug. 2, the Washington Post reported: “Authorities drew no connection between the riot and his death. An official familiar with the investigation said Hashida had struggles beyond Jan. 6 that could have played a role.”
Robert J. Contee III, the chief of the Metropolitan Police Department, said “that he could not say whether the riot was the cause of the suicides,” the New York Times reported.
At the start of a press briefing on Aug. 3, White House Press Secretary Jen Psaki honored the two officers.
“I wanted to take a moment to recognize the passing of Metropolitan Police Officer Gunther Hashida and Officer Kyle DeFreytag — two officers who bravely defended the Capitol, both during and after the insurrection on January 6th,” Psaki said. “Their deaths are a sad reminder of that shameful day in our country’s history and of the physical and mental scars left on the officers who risked their lives to protect our Capitol and our democracy.”
Update, March 21, 2022: On March 7, the District of Columbia’s Police and Firefighters’ Retirement and Relief Board declared that Metropolitan Police Officer Jeffrey Smith’s suicide in the days after the Jan. 6 riot was a line-of-duty death. The board concluded “that Officer Smith sustained a personal injury on January 6, 2021, while performing his duties and that his injury was the sole and direct cause of his death.” As a result, Smith’s widow, Erin Smith, will receive an annuity equal to 100% of her husband’s salary.
so youre attributing the suicides for four ppl to the protest? lol. nice try.
 

squeezer

Well-known member
Jan 8, 2010
22,739
17,818
113
@The Oracle

Luke just put out a video of your favorite singer who composed a song in response to Trump. I think you will enjoy it! ;)

 
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