A 42-year-old man attacked the husband of top US politician Pelosi with a hammer. Now the suspect has to answer in court. He is said to have had other politicians in his sights. In addition, he did not expect to survive the day.
After the attack on the husband of US top politician Nancy Pelosi, the alleged perpetrator appeared in court for the first time on Tuesday (local time). His attorney pleaded not guilty during the brief hearing in San Francisco, US media consistently reported from the courtroom. The 42-year-old is accused of, among other things, attempted murder, burglary, abuse and deprivation of liberty of an elderly person and threatening an official. The court decided to initially detain the man with no possibility of bail.
A few days before the US general election, Paul Pelosi was attacked and seriously injured in the couple’s home in San Francisco. In the middle of the aggressive election campaign, the perpetrator broke in on Friday night, demanded Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic Chair of the House of Representatives, and brutally attacked her 82-year-old husband.
According to a court document released Monday, the man had planned to hold Nancy Pelosi hostage and fracture her kneecaps. That’s what he told the police. He wanted to force the Democrat into a wheelchair to show other members of Congress that their “actions have consequences”.
District Attorney Brooke Jenkins told CNN on Tuesday evening that the attacker had targeted other politicians in addition to Nancy Pelosi. “There were other officials that were obviously his target, obviously he first showed up at the House of Speakers,” she said. According to his own statements, the alleged perpetrator did not expect to survive the day of the attack. He told police he was on a “suicide mission”.
In a separate federal proceeding, the suspect is charged with attempted kidnapping of a government official and assaulting a family member of a government official. He could face decades in prison if convicted, according to the US Department of Justice.
Meanwhile, individual Republicans used the attack for mockery in the election campaign. The aspiring Republican Kari Lake, for example, spoke at an election campaign appearance in the state of Arizona on Monday (local time) about protecting schools from attackers and joked about the attack on Pelosi’s husband Paul. Lake, who is running for Arizona’s governorship in the upcoming Nov. 8 US election, argued that if politicians and lawmakers were to be protected, children should be too. “Nancy Pelosi – well, she’s protected when she’s in DC,” Lake said, adding, “Obviously her house isn’t very well protected.” The audience responded with laughter.
Earlier, Republican Virginia Governor Glenn Youngkin referred to Nancy Pelosi and her husband during a campaign appearance and said: “There is no room for violence anywhere – but we will send her back to be with him in California. ” According to recent polls, the Republicans have a good chance of gaining a majority in the House of Representatives. The attack increased fears of politically motivated violence in the United States. President Joe Biden drew a connection to Republican rhetoric surrounding his predecessor, Donald Trump.