Adam Lipson, a public defender, told reporters that he
would mount a vigorous defense for the man accused of attacking Paul
Pelosi.Credit...Carlos Barria/Reuters
Suspect in Pelosi Attack Had Other Targets,
Authorities Say
The man accused of breaking into the home of House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and assaulting her husband told the police that he also
planned to confront other state and federal politicians.
By Tim Arango,
Holly Secon and Kellen Browning
Nov. 1,
2022
Updated
9:28 p.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/11/01/us/pelosi-attack-depape-arraignment.html
SAN
FRANCISCO — After an intruder broke into the San Francisco home of House
Speaker Nancy Pelosi and bludgeoned her husband with a hammer, leaving him
unconscious for three minutes as he lay in a pool of blood, the attacker told
the police that he had other targets: a local professor and several prominent
state and federal politicians.
The new
details of the attack, which police officers say was motivated by the
assailant’s desire to take Ms. Pelosi hostage, interrogate her and break her
kneecaps if she “lied,” emerged on Tuesday from prosecutors as the suspect
appeared in court for the first time.
The
suspect, David DePape, 42, pleaded not guilty to several state felony charges
after investigators say he broke into the Pelosi residence last week in the
well-to-do Pacific Heights neighborhood and demanded to see Ms. Pelosi, the
country’s third most powerful politician, who was in Washington at the time.
The filing
by local prosecutors on Tuesday provided chilling details, including how Mr.
Pelosi, in a terrifying situation, was able to surreptitiously call 911 while
he was in the bathroom and the intruder was in the house. It also offered
insights into a disturbed man seemingly enthralled by the conspiracy theories
that have portrayed Ms. Pelosi as an enemy of the country.
After
breaking into the home by slamming his body through a glass door on the back
porch, the intruder found Mr. Pelosi, 82, asleep in his bedroom just after 2
a.m., according to the filing. He demanded to see Ms. Pelosi, and when he was
told she wouldn’t be back for days, the suspect said he would wait for her.
Mr. Pelosi,
sitting on his bed, asked why.
“Well,
she’s No. 2 in line for the presidency, right?” the intruder said, according to
the police. Soon after, he told Mr. Pelosi that “we’ve got to take them all
out.”
At another
point, when Mr. Pelosi asked if he could call anyone for Mr. DePape, the
suspect “ominously responded that it was the end of the road for Mr. Pelosi,”
the authorities said.
The police
said that without any questioning, Mr. DePape told them that he was on a
suicide mission. The authorities said he believed he had been captured by home
security cameras and recorded on the 911 call, but remained undeterred.
The
“defendant’s intent could not have been clearer: he forced his way into the
Pelosi home intending to take the person third in line to the presidency of the
United States hostage and to seriously harm her,” prosecutors wrote as they
asked the court to detain Mr. DePape without bail.
The latest
filing came a day after federal prosecutors filed a complaint against Mr.
DePape that said that he directly targeted Ms. Pelosi and intended to make an
example of her to other members of Congress.
“I’m sick
of the insane fucking level of lies coming out of Washington, D.C.,” he told
officers at the scene, according to the local filing. “I came to have a little
chat with his wife.”
During the
911 call that prompted a dispatcher to send officers, Mr. Pelosi left the phone
on speaker and, trying to keep the assailant calm, was able to gently imply to
the dispatcher that something was amiss.
At one
point, to defuse the situation, prosecutors wrote, Mr. Pelosi told the
dispatcher that he didn’t need the police. When the dispatcher told him to call
back if he changed his mind, he said, “No, no, no, this gentleman just, uh,
came into the house, uh, and he wants to wait for my wife to come home.”
In the days
since the attack, those who know Mr. DePape have described a shy man who once
seemed to live the lifestyle of a Bay Area hippie, making hemp jewelry and
attending protests against a ban on public nudity, but who in recent years fell
into homelessness, isolation and darkness, spending his time immersed in an
online world of conspiracy theories and bigotry.
About six
years ago, according to his most recent employer, Mr. DePape was down on his
luck, living under a tree in a park and hanging around outside a lumber store
in Berkeley, Calif., looking for work.
“You know
how people sit outside and wait for someone to come and offer them work?”
recalled Frank Ciccarelli, a carpenter who builds houses and makes furniture.
“He was sitting there. So I picked him up. So he started working for me. And he
really worked out well.”
For the
next several years, Mr. Ciccarelli became close to Mr. DePape, even as he
worked less and seemed to spend more time online, immersed in right-wing
conspiracy theories — right up until a week ago, when he paid Mr. DePape his
most recent wages.
At his
court appearance on Tuesday, Mr. DePape, with long brown hair, wore a jail
uniform of a long-sleeve orange shirt and orange pants, as well as a black face
mask. He did not turn around to face the assembled news outlets, but his
attorney spoke in his ear several times and he nodded. When the judge asked him
if he was prepared to waive his right to a hearing within 10 days, Mr. DePape
nodded slightly and said, “Yes.”
Mr. DePape
was assigned a public defender, Adam Lipson, to represent him. In comments
after Tuesday’s court appearance, Mr. Lipson said that Mr. DePape was recently
moved to the county jail from a hospital, where he was treated for a dislocated
shoulder he sustained during the arrest.
Mr. Lipson
promised to mount a “vigorous defense” and signaled that one possible strategy
could be to highlight his client’s “vulnerability” to the misinformation and
conspiracy theories that have become so prominent in American political life.
Mr.
Ciccarelli, 76, described Mr. DePape as a quiet person and diligent worker — an
easygoing guy, at least until the topic of politics came up. He said he spent
several hours a day with Mr. DePape, four or five days a week. “I think I know
him better than anyone does.”
Over the
six years he has known Mr. DePape, Mr. Ciccarelli said, he witnessed a
transformation from a shy and hardworking, but troubled, man into someone who
was increasingly isolated and captive to his darkest thoughts.
“If you got
him talking about politics, it was all over,” Mr. Ciccarelli recalled in an
interview this week. “Because he really believed in the whole MAGA,
‘Pizzagate,’ stolen election — you know, all of it, all the way down the line.”
Mr.
DePape’s sympathies for the most extreme right-wing conspiracy theories are one
piece of the growing investigation into his background.
The state
charges against Mr. DePape came on Monday, along with several federal charges,
including the attempted murder of Mr. Pelosi, who remains in intensive care at
a local hospital after undergoing surgery on Friday, according to a person
familiar with the situation. In a statement on Monday, Ms. Pelosi said her
husband, “is making steady progress on what will be a long recovery process.”
Mr. DePape
grew up in British Columbia in Canada and moved to California about two decades
ago to pursue a relationship with a woman he had met in Hawaii. For a time, he
house-sat for a woman in the East Bay area who ran an urban farm for low-income
residents, and sometimes helped take care of the chickens.
From 2002
to 2009, Mr. DePape was registered to vote in San Francisco County and declared
himself affiliated with the Green Party, according to county records that
showed he voted once, in 2002. He attested to being eligible to vote.
After
working together for a few years, Mr. Ciccarelli helped Mr. DePape get away
from the streets, moving him into a friend’s garage studio in Richmond, Calif.
“Once he
was housed, he had much more time to spend on his computer,” Mr. Ciccarelli
said. “Because when you’re living under a tree, you don’t have a plug.”
On
Saturday, the F.B.I. raided the garage in Richmond and seized two hammers, a
sword and a pair of gloves.
As he spent
more time on his computer in recent months, Mr. DePape appeared to have
produced a voluminous record of his political leanings — ranting about the 2020
election being stolen, appearing to deny the gassing of Jews at Auschwitz and
claiming that schoolteachers were grooming children to be transgender. Mr.
DePape’s blog was registered at the Richmond address where he resided.
Mr.
Ciccarelli, who said he was scheduled to work with Mr. DePape on Monday, said
he never heard Mr. DePape make racist comments, but said he had become
increasingly isolated the last few years and wanted to work less in the
carpentry business.
“He was
completely caught up in the fantasy, in the MAGA fantasy,” he said.
Over the
last few days, Mr. Ciccarelli has struggled to make sense of the news about his
friend. “He did a monstrous thing, but he’s not a monster,” he said. “He’s
really decent, gentle — it sounds crazy to say gentle — but he was a very
gentle soul. But he was going downhill. He went down the rabbit hole.”
Charlie
Savage, Alan Feuer, Luke Broadwater and Livia Albeck-Ripka contributed reporting.
Tim Arango is a
Los Angeles correspondent. Before moving to California, he spent seven years as Baghdad bureau
chief and also reported on Turkey. He joined The Times in 2007 as a media
reporter. @tarangoNYT
Kellen
Browning is a technology reporter in San Francisco, where he covers the gig
economy, the video game industry and general tech news. @kellen_browning
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