Monday, March 09, 2026

ANNALS OF TRUMPI$TAN: On March 7, 2026, at 4 AM, Jan. 6 plaque honoring police officers is now displayed at the Capitol after a 3-year delay. (Mary Clare Jalonick & Lisa Mascaro, AP)




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From Associated Press:


At 4 AM, Jan. 6 plaque honoring police officers is now displayed at the Capitol after a 3-year delay


By (Mary Clare Jalonick & Lisa Mascaro, AP:

WASHINGTON (AP) — Visitors to the U.S. Capitol will now have a visible marker of the siege there on Jan. 6, 2021, and a reminder of the officers who fought and were injuredthat day.

Steps from the Capitol’s West Front and where the worst of the fighting occurred, workers quietly have installed a plaque honoring the officers, three years after it was required by law to be erected. The plaque was placed on the Senate side of the hallway because that chamber voted unanimously in January to install it after House Speaker Mike Johnson, R-La., had delayed putting it up. 

“On behalf of a grateful Congress, this plaque honors the extraordinary individuals who bravely protected and defended this symbol of democracy on January 6, 2021,” the plaque says. “Their heroism will never be forgotten.” 

The Washington Post first reported the installation of the plaque, which was witnessed by a reporter about 4 a.m. EST Saturday. It is the first official marker of the violent day in the Capitol.

Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., led the recent effort to install it as he commemorated the fifth anniversary of the attack on the Senate floor in January and described his memories of hearing people break into the building. “We owe them eternal gratitude, and this nation is stronger because of them,” he said of the officers who were overwhelmed by thousands of President Donald Trump’s supporters and eventually pushed them out of the building.

The mob of rioters who violently forced their way past police and broke in were echoing Trump’s false claims of a stolen election after the Republican was defeated by Democrat Joe Biden. The crowd stopped the congressional certification of Biden’s victory for several hours, sent lawmakers running and vandalized the building before police regained control. More than 140 officers from the U.S. Capitol Police, the Metropolitan Police Department and other agencies were injured. 

The fight to have the plaque installed came as Trump returned to office last year and the Republican Congress has remained loyal to him. Trump, who has called Jan. 6 a “day of love,” has tried to deflect blame on Democrats and police for instigating the attack, and many Republicans in Congress have downplayed the violence.

3 years of delays 

Congress passed a law in 2022 that set out instructions for the honorific plaque listing the names of officers “who responded to the violence that occurred.” It gave a one-year deadline for installation, but the plaque never went up. 

Democrats who were angry about the missing plaque installed replicas of it outside their offices and called on the GOP leadership to erect it or explain why it was missing. 

After more than a year of silence — and a lawsuit from two officers who fought at the Capitol that day — Johnson’s office put out a statement on Jan. 5, the night before the fifth anniversary of the attack, that said the statute authorizing the plaque was “not implementable” and the proposed alternatives also “do not comply.”

Tillis went to the Senate floor later that week and passed a resolution, with no objections from any other senators, to place the plaque on the Senate side.

Officers object 

One of the officers who sued, Daniel Hodges of the Metropolitan Police Department, said Saturday that the lawsuit would continue.

Hodges, who was crushed and beaten by rioters while trapped in the central west front doors steps away from where the plaque is now displayed, said the overnight installation was a “fine stopgap” but that it was not in full compliance of the law.

The original statute said that the plaque should be placed “on” the west front of the Capitol — not near it — and that the officers names should be listed on the plaque itself. The new installation has a nearby sign with a QR code that leads to a 45-page document listing the thousands of names of the officers who responded to the Capitol that day.

“The weight of a judicial ruling would help secure the memorial against future tampering,” Hodges said. “Our lawsuit persists.”

Hodges and a former U.S. Capitol Police officer, Harry Dunn, said in the lawsuit that Congress was encouraging a “rewriting of history” by not following the law and installing the plaque. 

“It suggests that the officers are not worthy of being recognized, because Congress refuses to recognize them,” the lawsuit says. 

The Justice Department has sought to have the case dismissed. U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro and others argued that Congress “already has publicly recognized the service of law enforcement personnel” by approving the plaque and that displaying it would not alleviate the problems they claim to face from their work.

Memories of the day 

More than 1,500 people were charged after the attack, among the largest federal prosecutions in the nation’s history. When Trump returned to power in January 2025, he pardoned all of them within hours of taking office.

Ass

Associated Press contributor Allison Robbert contributed to this report.






ANNALS OF TRUMPI$TAN: Thousands in Iran Attend Burial of Children Killed in Bombing of School. (Malachy Browne & Pranav Baskar, NY Times, March 3, 2026)

From The New York Times:

Thousands in Iran Attend Burial of Children Killed in Bombing of School

There were students attending classes at the time that the school was destroyed. Some 175 people were killed by the attack on the girls’ elementary school.

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A large crowd, amid which are two vehicles bearing stages and a small elevated monument with people standing on its platform.
A picture made available by Iranian state-run media of the funeral of the victims of a strike on an elementary school. The school, adjacent to a naval base, was in session on Saturday when an airstrike hit it, killing 175 people, Iranian officials and rights groups said.Credit...Abbas Zakeri/Mehr News Agency, via Associated Press

Thousands of mourners filled the streets of a town in southern Iran on Tuesday during the funeral for victims of an airstrike on a girls’ elementary school, according to footage and images verified by The New York Times. The strike ranks among the deadliest attacks of the American-Israeli campaign against Iran.

The bombing of the school, which took place on Saturday, killed at least 175 people, many of them students attending class at the Shajarah Tayyebeh school, in the town of Minab, according to local health officials and Iranian state media. Several videos and images verified by The Times showed that at least half of the two-story building was destroyed in the explosion.

More than 800 people have been killed in the conflict across the Middle East since Saturday, when the United States and Israel launched their opening attacks on Iran, killing the country’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, and Iran responded with waves of retaliatory rocket and drone attacks against various countries in the region.

Before the funeral in Minab on Tuesday, workmen dug rows of graves at a cemetery about five miles from the elementary school, according to video footage verified by The Times. 

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An overhead view of rows and rows of graves being dug.
A handout picture released by the Iranian foreign media department of graves getting dug for the victims of a strike on an elementary school.Credit...Iranian Foreign Media Department, via Reuters

The procession of mourners swarmed around a truck loaded down with coffins. Some people wailed in grief as others showered caskets with sweets and rose petals, according to videos verified by The Times. Aerial photographs showed mourners at the cemetery as the coffins were lowered into the graves. Videos showed the crowd engaged in prayer and chanting in support of the Islamic republic.

The school was next to a naval base belonging to Iran’s most powerful military force, the Islamic Revolutionary Guards Corps. The school building was once part of the military site, satellite images reviewed by The Times show, but by 2016, the building had been walled off and was no longer connected to the base.

Neither the Israeli nor U.S. government has directly addressed the strike on the school. But the U.S. Central Command said on Saturday that it was “aware of reports concerning civilian harm” and was “looking into them.”

The strike on Shajarah Tayyebeh was one of two attacks that appeared to have hit schools on Saturday. Another strike appeared to have hit the Hedayat High School in Iran’s capital, Tehran, near 72nd Square in the district of Narmak, local media and rights groups said. Two students died in that attack, according to the U.S.-based Human Rights Activists News Agency, which focuses on Iran.

Intentionally attacking a school, hospital or other civilian structure is a war crime, and indiscriminate strikes also violate international law. Even if schools are used for military purposes, the law requires armed parties to avoid or minimize harm to civilians and civilian infrastructure, according to the International Committee of the Red Cross.

Malachy Browne is enterprise director of the Visual Investigations team at The Times. He was a member of teams awarded the Pulitzer Prize for International Reporting in 2020 and 2023.

Pranav Baskar is an international reporter and a member of the 2025-26 Times Fellowship class, a program for journalists early in their careers.