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Ashli Babbitt’s death was a tragedy — but not murder

Ashli Babbitt’s death was a tragedy — but not murder

I am well aware that a lot of folks on my conservative side of the philosophic divide will disagree with my assessment.  But I think we should not change principles based on a home team perspective.  

It has been my long-held belief that when people commit crimes – even relatively minor crimes – one of the possibilities is getting killed.  They may not have deserved it, but sh*t happens. 

The Babbitt case is tragic and heartbreaking.  By all accounts she was a nice person with good values.  But in a lapse of good judgment, she put herself in harm’s way – and occasionally taking such a risk has dire consequences.

Babbitt was not an innocent bystander. She was rioting.  She was committing several crimes as she entered the Capitol Building and attempted to enter the House Chamber in which members of Congress and staffers were still present.

Officer Michael Bird was stationed at the door – the last barrier between the members and the mob.  She was not an isolated person but the point person that was leading mob into the chamber.  

Some argue that since she was unarmed, she posed no threat to the security forces or those in the chamber.  She was part of a group that broke the door and knocked out the window through which she was entering the Chamber.  The mob was verbally and physically threatening injury and even death to those they were targeting.  Whether they would have followed through is unknown.  But the very fact that it was unknown required security to do whatever was necessary to stop them.

If she was successful, it is reasonable to believe that others would follow – enough to overpower the security forces.  Then what?

That is the essential question.  Facing an assault by an angry and violent mob, Bird would have been derelict in his duty if he had assumed that Babbitt and those who followed her onto the House floor would have calmed down.  Maybe just walk around and engage in small talk with the members on the floor?  The mob had already ignored warnings and demands that they cease and desist.  Their threats were credible if not ultimately real.

And a person does not have to be armed to pose a risk to others.  In a way, her potential weapon was all the others that would have followed – and there was no assurance that they were not armed with real weapons.  One Capitol Hill officer made the distinction between handling one person in the commission of a crime and handling a mob.  “The mob is the weapon,” he said.

Bird prevented a potentially greater tragedy by stopping the person in the lead of the mob.  No, she was not the official or recognized leader, but just the one who – by happenstance — took a leadership role by volunteering to be the first to break through security.  

Whether Babbitt was on a mission to do harm or just caught up in the energy of the moment is inconsequential.  Bird had no way to know the intent of the mob other than their voices and actions.  His job was to provide security … period.  That is what he did.

One of the reasons I call it a tragedy because a young vibrant woman lost her life who should not have.  But the primary responsibility rests unfortunately on her shoulders.  She was in the commission of a violent crime with the potential of injuring or killing innocent people.  It is surprising that there were not more rioters shot.  Lethal force is justified when an officer or others are in danger of imminent injury or death.  There were a number of situations in which Capitol police would have been justified in using lethal force.

As a footnote, let me make myself perfectly clear.  I have no sympathy for the rioters.  No … I do not believe they are part of any insurrection.  But they were violent and criminal.  It has been my consistent belief that the police should have been allowed to use more force – even deadly force – to stop the rioters, looters and arsonists who have caused so much harm, injury and death much too often in our major cities.  I have often writing about my belief that our police have been hamstrung by politicians for political reasons.  The response to the Capitol Hill riot and all those other riots is hypocrisy of the first magnitude.  No riot should be allowed to continue unabated regardless of the political viewpoint of the rioters.  Rioters are not heroes.  They may not be insurrectionists.  But they are criminals.  

So, there ‘tis.

About The Author

Larry Horist

So, there ‘tis… The opinions, perspectives and analyses of businessman, conservative writer and political strategist Larry Horist. Larry has an extensive background in economics and public policy. For more than 40 years, he ran his own Chicago based consulting firm. His clients included such conservative icons as Steve Forbes and Milton Friedman. He has served as a consultant to the Nixon White House and travelled the country as a spokesman for President Reagan’s economic reforms. Larry professional emphasis has been on civil rights and education. He was consultant to both the Chicago and the Detroit boards of education, the Educational Choice Foundation, the Chicago Teachers Academy and the Chicago Academy for the Performing Arts. Larry has testified as an expert witness before numerous legislative bodies, including the U. S. Congress, and has lectured at colleges and universities, including Harvard, Northwestern and DePaul. He served as Executive Director of the City Club of Chicago, where he led a successful two-year campaign to save the historic Chicago Theatre from the wrecking ball. Larry has been a guest on hundreds of public affairs talk shows, and hosted his own program, “Chicago In Sight,” on WIND radio. An award-winning debater, his insightful and sometimes controversial commentaries have appeared on the editorial pages of newspapers across the nation. He is praised by audiences for his style, substance and sense of humor. Larry retired from his consulting business to devote his time to writing. His books include a humorous look at collecting, “The Acrapulators’ Guide”, and a more serious history of the Democratic Party’s role in de facto institutional racism, “Who Put Blacks in That PLACE? -- The Long Sad History of the Democratic Party’s Oppression of Black Americans ... to This Day”. Larry currently lives in Boca Raton, Florida.

3 Comments

  1. Joseph S. Bruder

    She got pretty much what she deserved. If she’d have gotten through that window, she would have quickly been followed by more of the traitors, who would have overwhelmed the policeman, and it was just a couple hundred feet down the hall to members of Congress. Pence would have been hanging from a stairwell in short order. When she took one in the chest, other rioters began to re-evaluate their recent life choices, and the crowd quickly disappeared from that door.

    • Harold blankenship

      An unarmed woman got what she deserved? So did Trayvon Martin.

  2. Frank Stetson

    The tragedy was the initial breach of the Capitol; what followed was armed insurrection. Lucky there weren’t more fatalities and injuries.

    Throw the book at them as if they were BLM. Quit pussyfooting around judgement just because on skin color.

    Investigate everything to avoid the next wave. Capitol Police up to Trump; interrogate all. Find out why these disenfranchised citizens felt compelled to do this, we need to enfranchise them as citizens.

    As Mr Mahr noted: The first trade center folks used vans. Then the planes came. The first insurrection was incompetents led by incompetence. Let’s derail the next one.