Report: Kamala Harris Was At DNC When Pipe Bomb Was Found Outside
The Pro Trump News homepage has 60 new headlines every 24 hours - click here to see it.
A new report says that Kamala Harris was at the DNC when the pipe bomb was found outside of there–why are we just finding this out a year later?
Weird this is only coming out now. https://t.co/bGC7tpMaes
— Chuck Ross (@ChuckRossDC) January 7, 2022
ADVERTISEMENT
Kamala Harris, then the vice president-elect, was at the Democratic National Committee headquarters when a pipe bomb was found outside on Jan. 6, 2021, according to three people familiar with the matter.
“She was there until she was evacuated,” said a White House official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss the sensitive matter.
Harris said in a speech Thursday memorializing the attack that she was in a classified briefing room at the Capitol the morning of Jan. 6.
“She left to the DNC with plans to come back when proceedings started,” said a second source, who was inside the party’s main office with Harris. “Then [stuff] hit the fan. She called repeatedly to make sure staff was OK.”
Politico, which first reported that Harris was at her party’s main offices, cited a Capitol Police timeline showing that the bomb was discovered at 1:07 p.m. and that Harris was moved out about seven minutes later. Rioters were already clashing with police outside the Capitol, and then-President Donald Trump was telling supporters to “fight like hell.”
A year later the FBI still has not found who the pipe bomber is.
More than a year after a person was allegedly seen placing two devices that the FBI said were pipe bombs near the offices of the Republican and Democratic national committees in Washington, the bureau is no closer to learning that individual’s identity.
A hooded and masked individual was seen on Jan. 5, 2021—the night before the breach of the U.S. Capitol—placing items that the FBI and other law enforcement entities say were bombs near the two headquarters near Capitol Hill in Washington. Steve D’Antuono, the FBI’s lead agent in Washington, said the devices were disabled before they could explode.
“They could have exploded,” he told CBS News on Jan. 6. “They could have done serious physical injury or death.”
So far, investigators have carried out about 900 interviews and reviewed more than 39,000 video files in a bid to find the individual.
Advertisement
