Sen. Johnson blames Capitol attack on ‘fake Trump supporters’

Sen. Ron Johnson spoke at a Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs & Senate Rules and Administration joint hearing on Capitol Hill, Washington, Tuesday, Feb. 23, 2021, to examine the January 6 attack on the Capitol. (AP Photo/Andrew Harnik, Pool)

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UPDATED 3:10 PM PT – Tuesday, February 23, 2021

Sen. Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) claimed the rioters who attacked the Capitol building in January were “fake Trump supporters” and other groups.

During the hearing on the incident Tuesday, Johnson read excerpts from an article in The Federalist, which detailed a first hand account of the attack.

“For a few seconds, I saw what looked like police in a tussle with some of marchers up front, what appeared to be an organized group in civilian clothes. This organized group, I would call the plain clothes militants. They fit right in with MAGA people,” Johnson explained.

Johnson noted the alleged eyewitness account of the day, which painted the crowd marching to the Capitol building as largely positive and festive. He pointed out the eyewitness identified four groups of people who didn’t fit in, including plain clothes militants and fake Trump supporters.

“Suddenly, energy surged from the front of the crowd as the anti-riot police above on the inaugural platform visibly tensed up. One fired a tear gas canister, not at the plain clothes militants, the frontline, but into the crowd itself, then another,” Johnson stated. “Flash grenades went off in the middle of the crowd.”

Johnson went on to say he does not believe the incident was foreseeable or predictable.

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