ROCKY MOUNT, Va. (AP) — A Virginia town put two officers on leave after they went off-duty to events in Washington that led to a deadly riot at the U.S. Capitol.
The town of Rocky Mount issued a statement Sunday saying that two off-duty officers from the Rocky Mount Police Department were at what town officials called the “event” in Washington on Wednesday, in an apparent reference to a rally by Trump supporters that turned violent.
A photo posted on social media shows two men — identified as Rocky Mount Officers Jacob Fracker and Thomas Robertson – standing in front of the John Stark statue, located inside the Capitol’s Crypt. Stark of New Hampshire is remembered for the phrase, “Live free or die.” The officers have since said that they did nothing illegal.
The statement said that the Rocky Mount Police Department has put the two officers on administrative leave and notified federal authorities that the two officers attended the events. “The Town of Rocky Mount fully supports all lawful expressions of freedom of speech and assembly by its employees but does not condone the unlawful acts that occurred that day,” a town statement said.
On Wednesday at the rally near the White House, Trump repeated bogus election grievances and urged his supporters to march toward the Capitol. An angry and violent mob of his supporters then overpowered police and rampaged through the Capitol. Five people including a Capitol Police officer and a Trump supporter were killed in the chaos.
Town Manager James Ervin didn’t immediately respond to an email asking for more information on what the town’s officers did in Washington or whether they entered the Capitol. A police department spokeswoman said in an email that the town news release includes all the information she could release Sunday.