LEGAL
New video, audio show attack on Paul Pelosi in
excruciating detail
Evidence from the David De Pape case, including a 911
call from the Pelosi home, was obtained by a news coalition.
By JEREMY
B. WHITE
01/27/2023
12:47 PM EST
Updated:
01/27/2023 01:46 PM EST
https://www.politico.com/news/2023/01/27/paul-pelosi-attack-video-released-00079899
SAN
FRANCISCO — Newly released video footage and audio show Paul Pelosi’s violent
confrontation last fall with a home intruder who described his plans to attack
then-Speaker Nancy Pelosi and other elected officials.
A San
Francisco judge this week ordered multiple pieces of evidence against suspect
David DePape to be made public, including body camera footage, a 911 call from
the Pelosi home and a recording of DePape’s interview with police.
The
recordings — publicly revealed during a December court hearing — depict the
culmination of what authorities describe as DePape’s hunt for the congresswoman
and his fury toward elected officials.
Prosecutors
say DePape broke into the Pelosis’ San Francisco home in late October and
struck Paul Pelosi on the head with a hammer after demanding to know the
whereabouts of the congresswoman, who was in Washington, D.C. A bevy of state
and federal charges could send him to prison for life.
A press
coalition that includes POLITICO sought the release of body camera footage from
responding San Francisco Police Department officers, audio of Paul Pelosi’s 911
call, surveillance footage from the Pelosi home and audio of DePape’s police
interview.
The body
camera footage shows Paul Pelosi and DePape both grasping a hammer when
officers arrived at the Pelosi residence in the early morning hours of Oct. 28.
Officers order the men to drop the hammer, and DePape says “nope” before turning
it and swinging at Paul, after which both men topple to the floor and an
officer calls for a medic.
In footage
from a Capitol Police surveillance camera, DePape can be seen taking a hammer
and what appears to be a handful of zip ties out of the bags he brought with
him. DePape told officers he intended to kidnap Nancy Pelosi. At the end of the
video, DePape can be seen repeatedly swinging the hammer against the exterior
of the Pelosi residence and then climbing inside.
In a police
interview shortly after the attack, DePape describes his anger toward Nancy
Pelosi as “leader of the pack” of political figures who were “lying on a
consistent basis,” including by seeking to undermine former President Donald
Trump. He planned to kidnap the congresswoman and break her kneecaps if she did
not tell him the truth.
He accuses
Democrats of “spying on a rival campaign” and “submitting fake evidence” to
advance that effort, in a seeming reference to an investigation into the Trump
campaigns ties to Russia.
“The person
who was on the TV lying every day was Pelosi,” DePape said.
DePape is
calm and lucid in the interview, although he appears to fight tears when
describing his animosity toward Democrats. He said he knew officers would be on
the way after the 911 call but decided to stay anyway, likening himself to
American revolutionaries. “When I left my house, I left to go fight tyranny,”
he said. “I did not leave to go surrender.“
Officers
were summoned to the house after a call from Paul Pelosi. In audio from that
call, Paul Pelosi says “there’s a gentleman here just waiting for my wife to
come back, Nancy Pelosi.” He says he does not know DePape and ends the call
shortly after noting DePape is telling him “not to do anything” and “to just
put the phone down and do what he says.”
One of the
responding officers testified in December that he saw Paul Pelosi lying face
down with a “pool of blood” blooming around his head. The 82-year-old underwent
surgery for a skull fracture and injuries to his head and arm. Nancy Pelosi
told CNN’s Chris Wallace this month that her husband was still working to “get
back to normal” after the head injury.
The
break-in and attack stunned San Francisco and reverberated through national
politics, punctuating a torrent of violent rhetoric directed at Nancy Pelosi
and other elected officials.
DePape, who
entered a not guilty plea, said he targeted the congresswoman because she was
second in line for the presidency and that she embodied “evil in Washington,”
revealing his plans to break her kneecaps, according to prosecutors’ evidence.
He also
told police he wanted to go after others including California Gov. Gavin Newsom
and Hunter Biden, the president’s son.
DePape’s
online history shows him becoming immersed in extremist and Trump-aligned
narratives like the QAnon conspiracy theory. He is being held without bail
pending a trial, with a date likely to be set in February.
The San
Francisco District Attorney’s office and DePape’s public defender sought to
prevent the evidence from being released to media organizations by asserting it
could undermine his ability to get a fair trial. They argued it could be
manipulated and foment conspiracy theories.
“The
evidence of the crime could easily, once released into the public, be changed
so that members of the jury pool would see an inaccurate piece of evidence from
this trial before the trial even starts,” assistant district attorney Phoebe
Maffei argued.
Judge
Stephen M. Murphy disagreed, saying such arguments amounted to “speculation.”
“I fail to
see, in this case, how release of these exhibits will impact the defendant’s
right to a fair trial,” Murphy said.
Conspiracy
theories have shrouded the case from the beginning, as unsupported assertions
about a coverup or an undisclosed third person in the home proliferated on
social media.
San
Francisco District Attorney Brooke Jenkins has warned about misinformation, and
DePape’s attorney Adam Lipson on Wednesday lamented “the myriad of false
conspiracy theories that have been propagated regarding this case already.”
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