From Tom Fitton <[email protected]>
Subject NEW Ashli Babbitt Lawsuit!
Date January 6, 2024 12:36 AM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
Pursuing the Censorship Conspiracy



[INSIDE JW]

JUDICIAL WATCH FILES $30 MILLION SUIT ON BEHALF OF ASHLI BABBITT’S
HUSBAND AND ESTATE

[[link removed]]
The only homicide on January 6 was the unlawful shooting death of
Ashli Babbitt. Her homicide by Lt. Michael Byrd is a scandal beyond
belief. We have filed a historic lawsuit seeking a measure of justice
and government accountability for Ashli’s death.

We filed the wrongful death suit against the U.S. Government on behalf
of Ashli’s family. She was a U.S. Air Force veteran who was shot and
killed inside the U.S. Capitol by then-Capitol Police Lt. Byrd on
January 6, 2021 (_Estate of Ashli Babbitt and Aaron Babbitt, et al. v.
United States of America_
[[link removed]]
(No. 3:24-cv-00033).

The lawsuit includes claims against the U.S. Government for wrongful
death, assault and battery, and various negligence issues.

Babbitt was a 35-year-old resident of San Diego, California, where she
owned and operated a successful pool business with her husband Aaron.
Ashli traveled alone from San Diego to Washington, DC, to attend the
Women for America First (aka Save America) rally on January 6, 2021,
at the Ellipse.

As the lawsuit details:

> Ashli loved her country and wanted to show her support for President
> Trump’s America First policies and to see and hear the president
> speak live while he remained in office. Ashli did not go to
> Washington as part of a group or for any unlawful or nefarious
> purpose. She was there to exercise what she believed were her
> God-given, American liberties and freedoms.
>
> After the rally, Ashli, like a great many other patriotic Americans
> attending the rally, walked to the Capitol peacefully, a distance of
> approximately 1.5 miles. Two undercover Metropolitan Police
> Department officers followed close behind Ashli as she climbed the
> stairs to the West Terrace. Ashli entered the Capitol on the Senate
> side long after others had done so. Once inside, Ashli encountered a
> female Capitol Police officer, who directed her to walk south toward
> the House side. Ashli complied, walking alone through the Capitol
> and ultimately arriving at the hallway outside the main door to the
> House chamber, where demonstrators had gathered. From there, Ashli
> walked by herself east, along the hallway outside the House chamber,
> then turned south, reaching the hallway outside the Speaker’s
> Lobby at the southeast corner of the Capitol.

***

> The shooting occurred at the east entrance to the Speaker’s Lobby.
> After demonstrators filled the hallway outside the lobby, two
> individuals in the crowded, tightly packed hallway struck and
> dislodged the glass panels in the lobby doors and the right door
> sidelight. Lt. Byrd, who is a USCP commander and was the incident
> commander for the House on January 6, 2021, shot Ashli on sight as
> she raised herself up into the opening of the right door sidelight.
> Lt. Byrd later confessed that he shot Ashli before seeing her hands
> or assessing her intentions or even identifying her as female. Ashli
> was unarmed. Her hands were up in the air, empty, and in plain view
> of Lt. Byrd and other officers in the lobby.

***

> The facts speak truth. Ashli was ambushed when she was shot by Lt.
> Byrd. Multiple witnesses at the scene yelled, “you just murdered
> her.”
>
> Lt. Byrd was never charged or otherwise punished or disciplined for
> Ashli’s homicide.
The lawsuit further states:

> Lt. Byrd, who is a USCP commander and was the incident commander for
> the House on January 6, 2021, shot Ashli as she raised herself up
> into the opening of the right door sidelight.… Not one member of
> Congress was in the lobby, which was guarded by multiple armed
> police officers. Additional armed police officers were in the
> hallway outside the lobby and/or on the adjoining stairway. Ashli
> could not have seen Lt. Byrd, who was positioned far to Ashli’s
> left and on the opposite side of the doors, near an opening to the
> Retiring Room, a distance of approximately 15 feet and an angle of
> approximately 160 degrees. Sgt. Timothy Lively, one of the armed
> officers guarding the lobby doors from the hallway, later told
> officials investigating the shooting, “I saw him . . . there was
> no way that woman would’ve seen that.” Lt. Byrd, who was not in
> uniform, did not identify himself as a police officer or otherwise
> make his presence known to Ashli. Lt. Byrd did not give Ashli any
> warnings or commands before shooting her dead.

***

> Ashli remained conscious for minutes or longer after being shot by
> Lt. Byrd. Ashli experienced extreme pain, suffering, mental anguish,
> and intense fear before slipping into pre-terminal unconsciousness.
> The autopsy report identified the cause of death as a “gunshot
> wound to left anterior shoulder” with an onset interval of
> “minutes.” The fact that Ashli was alive and conscious in
> extreme pain and suffering is documented in videos of the shooting.
> Furthermore, nothing about the wound track described in the autopsy
> report would be expected to result in immediate death or
> instantaneous loss of consciousness, and Ashli’s lungs contained
> blood, further confirming that she was alive and breathing after
> being shot. Ashli was pronounced dead at Washington Hospital Center
> at 3:15 p.m. The medical examiner determined that the manner of
> death was homicide.
The lawsuit argues that, based on prior incidents involving Lt. Byrd,
the Capitol Police, Capitol Police Board, and ultimately Congress, as
Lt. Byrd’s employer, “knew or should have known that Lt. Byrd was
prone to behave in a dangerous or otherwise incompetent manner:”

> Less than two years before January 6, 2021, on or about February 25,
> 2019, Lt. Byrd left his loaded Glock 22 – the same firearm he used
> to shoot and kill Ashli Babbitt – in a bathroom in the Capitol
> Visitor Center (CVC) complex. Lt. Byrd’s loaded Glock was
> discovered during a routine security sweep later the same day.
> Approximately 15,00 to 20,000 people pass through the CVC, which
> serves as the main entrance for visitors to the U.S. Capitol, daily
> during peak season (March-July). Lawmakers and staff charged with
> oversight of the USCP were not made aware of the incident until
> contacted by a reporter.

> Lt. Byrd’s police powers had been revoked on more than one
> occasion prior to January 6, 2021, for failing to meet or complete
> semiannual firearms qualification requirements. In fact, Lt. Byrd
> had a reputation among peers for not being a good shot. Under
> USCP’s range management system, an officer who fails to meet
> firearm qualification requirements is given one week of remedial
> training. If the officer still fails to qualify after remedial
> training, police powers are then revoked until the officer
> qualifies.
>
> Lt. Byrd’s police powers also were revoked for a prior off-duty
> shooting into a stolen, moving vehicle in which the occupants were
> teenagers or juveniles. The stolen vehicle was Lt. Byrd’s car. Lt.
> Byrd fired multiple shots at the fleeing vehicle in a suburban area.
> Stray bullets from Lt. Byrd’s firearm struck the sides of homes
> nearby. An official investigation found that Lt. Byrd’s use of
> force was not justified.
Plaintiffs seek “the full and just amount of Thirty Million Dollars
($30,000,000), plus costs and interest according to law, and any and
all further relief to which Plaintiffs may be justly entitled.”

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court Southern District of
California.

We and our supporters are honored to represent Ashli’s steadfast
widower Aaron Babbitt and her estate in this legal action. Ashli was
shot in cold blood and the rule of law requires justice for her.

We are extensively investigating the events of January 6.

In October, we announced
[[link removed]]
that we received the court-ordered declaration
[[link removed]]
of James W. Joyce, senior counsel in the Office of the General Counsel
for the Capitol Police, in which he describes emails among senior
officials of the United States Capitol Police (USCP) in January 2021
that show warnings of possible January 6 protests that could lead to
serious disruptions at the U.S. Capitol.

In September, we received records
[[link removed]]
from
the Executive Office for United States Attorneys, a component of the
Department of Justice, in a FOIA lawsuit that detail the extensive
apparatus the Biden Justice Department set up to investigate and
prosecute January 6 protestors.

A previous review of records
[[link removed]]
from that lawsuit highlighted the prosecution declination memorandum
[[link removed]]
justifying the decision not to prosecute U.S. Capitol Police Lt.
Michael Byrd for the shooting death of Babbitt.

In January 2023, documents
[[link removed]]
from the Department of the Air Force, Joint Base Andrews, MD, showed
U.S. Capitol Police Lieutenant Michael Byrd was housed at taxpayer
expense at Joint Base Andrews after he shot and killed U.S. Air Force
veteran Ashli Babbitt inside the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021.

In November 2021, we released
[[link removed]]
multiple audio
[[link removed]],
visua
[[link removed]
[[link removed]]
and photo records
[[link removed]]
from the DC Metropolitan Police Department about the shooting death of
Babbitt on January 6, 2021, in the U.S. Capitol Building. The records
included a cell phone video
[[link removed]]
of the shooting and an audio of a brief police interview of the
shooter, Byrd.

In October 2021, United States Park Police records
[[link removed]]
related to the January 6, 2021, demonstrations at the U.S. Capitol
showed that on the day before the January 6 rally featuring President
Trump, U.S. Park Police expected a “large portion” of the
attendees to march to the U.S. Capitol and that the FBI was monitoring
the January 6 demonstrations, including travel to the events by
“subjects of interest.”

JUDICIAL WATCH SUES BIDEN CENSORSHIP AGENCY

Judicial Watch and I have been censored again and again by the
government and Big Tech. And we are fighting back.

We filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit against the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) for failing to respond to an
October 11, 2023, FOIA request for all records regarding Judicial
Watch and me held by DHS’ Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security
Agency (CISA) (_Judicial Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Homeland
Security_
[[link removed]]
(No. 1:24-cv-00003).

That we had to file a federal lawsuit to get basic information about
this targeting is another sure sign that CISA has been up to no good.

Our request specifically asked that the search for responsive records
include email accounts of CISA officials publicly implicated in
censorship operations.

On November 6, 2023, the House Judiciary Committee released a report
[[link removed]]
detailing “how the Department of Homeland Security’s (DHS)
Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) and the Global
Engagement Center (GEC, within the State Department) coordinated with
Stanford University and other entities to create the Election
Integrity Partnership to censor Americans’ speech in the lead-up to
the 2020 election.” I am listed as a target of this censorship
operation.

We have been in the forefront of uncovering government efforts to
censor free speech and suppress opposition.

On November 9, 2023, we reported
[[link removed]]
that
“CISA records show government involvement in the EIP [Election
Integrity Partnership] pressure on Google, Twitter, Facebook, TikTok,
Pinterest, Reddit and other platforms to censor
‘disinformation.’”

In October 2023, we sued
[[link removed]]
the Department of Justice (DOJ) for records of any payments made by
the FBI to Twitter (now known as X). The payments were disclosed in
internal Twitter documents (the “Twitter Files”) made available by
Elon Musk to journalists.

Also in October, we sued
[[link removed]]
the U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence
[[link removed]]
(ODNI) for records
concerning censorship of social media users.

In April 2023, we filed
[[link removed]]
two lawsuits
against the U.S. Department of Justice and other federal agencies for
communications between the agencies and Facebook and Twitter regarding
the government’s involvement in content moderation and censorship on
the social media platforms.

In a separate lawsuit file in June 2023, we sued
[[link removed]]
DHS for
all records of communications tied to the Election Integrity
Partnership. Based on representations from the EIP (see here
[[link removed]]
and here
[[link removed]]),
the federal
government, social media companies, the EIP, the Center for Internet
Security
[[link removed]]
(a non-profit
organization funded partly by DHS and the Defense Department
[[link removed]])
and numerous other leftist groups communicated privately via the Jira
[[link removed]]
software platform developed by Atlassian.

In February 2023, we sued
[[link removed]]
the DHS
for records showing cooperation between CISA and social media
platforms to censor and suppress free speech.

In January 2023 we sued
[[link removed]]
the DOJ for
records of communications between the FBI and social media sites
regarding foreign influence in elections, as well as the Hunter Biden
laptop story.
In September 2022, we sued
[[link removed]]
the
Secretary of State of the State of California for having YouTube
censor a Judicial Watch election integrity video.

In May 2022, YouTube censored a Judicial Watch video about Biden
corruption and election integrity issues in the 2020 election. The
video
[[link removed]],
titled “Impeach? Biden Corruption Threatens National Security,”
was falsely determined to be “election misinformation” and removed
by YouTube, and Judicial Watch’s YouTube account was suspended for a
week. The video featured an interview with me. Judicial Watch
continues to post its video
[[link removed]]
content on its Rumble channel
([link removed]).

In July 2021, we uncovered
[[link removed]]
records
from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), which
revealed that Facebook coordinated closely with the CDC to control the
Covid narrative and “misinformation” and that over $3.5 million in
free advertising given to the CDC by social media companies.

In May 2021, we revealed
[[link removed]]
documents
showing that Iowa state officials pressured social media companies
Twitter and Facebook to censor posts about the 2020 election.

In April 2021, we published
[[link removed]]
documents
revealing how California state officials pressured social media
companies (Twitter, Facebook, Google (YouTube)) to censor posts about
the 2020 election.

We have produced a four-part documentary, “Censored and Controlled
[[link removed]
that
details the coordinated effort by the FBI and other government
agencies and Big Tech to censor and suppress information on topics
such as Hunter Biden’s laptop, Covid-19, and election debates.

NEARLY HALF OF ILLEGALS ARRESTED IN 2023 HAD MULTIPLE CHARGES,
CONVICTIONS

They’re not sending us their best and brightest. Included with those
coming across our border are criminals and suspected terrorists, as
our _Corruption Chronicles_ blog reports
[[link removed]].


> As a result of the Biden administration’s reckless open border
> policies the federal agency charged with enforcing immigration laws
> inside the United States is getting slammed and discloses in its
> latest annual report
>
[[link removed]]
that
> enforcement arrests nearly doubled in a year in which thousands of
> criminals were apprehended including dozens of known or suspected
> terrorists. In fiscal year 2023, which ended in September,
> Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) arrested 170,590 illegal
> immigrants inside the country, almost half of them with criminal
> records. The criminal aliens had an average of four charges and
> convictions each, including more than 33,209 charges or convictions
> for assault, 7,520 for weapons offenses, 1,713 for homicide-related
> crimes and 1,615 for kidnapping. Removals also included 3,406 known
> or suspected gang members, 139 known or suspected terrorists, seven
> human rights violators, and 108 foreign fugitives wanted by their
> government for crimes including homicide, rape, terrorism, and
> kidnapping.
>
> Among the most pervasive criminal offenses were Driving Under the
> Influence (DUI) and possession of serious drugs. Assault was also
> quite common among the undocumented perpetrators arrested last year
> and so were weapons offenses, sexual assault, and burglary.
> Thousands of the arrested migrants stole vehicles, were charged
> and/or convicted of fraudulent activities, robbery, forgery and
> property damage. More than 1,000 committed homicide and kidnapping
> and other types of threats not specified but considered serious
> enough by the government to be included in the year-end figures.
> “At-large arrests grew as broader migration trends contributed to
> an increase in unlawful entries to the Southwest border, driven by
> factors such as violence, food scarcity, severe poverty,
> unemployment, corruption, climate change, the ongoing impact of the
> COVID-19 pandemic, and dire economic conditions outside the United
> States,” the ICE report states.
>
> The law enforcement agency with a staff of around 20,000 also
> conducted more than 200,000 domestic transfers of illegal immigrants
> last year and managed a record number of migrants under a
> controversial Biden administration catch-and-release policy known as
> Parole Plus Alternative to Detention (Parole+ATD) that freed over a
> million illegal aliens in the U.S. in a year, supposedly tracking
> them with technology and other tools. ICE Health Service Corps also
> spent a whopping $352 million to provide medical, dental, and mental
> health services for illegal immigrants detained in facilities
> throughout the nation, according to figures included in the
> document. “Those in ICE custody speak dozens of languages,
> including rare indigenous dialects, and the population includes
> individuals with a wide range of health statuses and unique physical
> and mental healthcare requirements — including some who receive
> comprehensive medical care for the first time after they are booked
> into detention,” the report says.
>
> ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) division conducted an
> unprecedented number of investigations last year and executed 14,000
> “noncitizen apprehensions,” seized an astounding 1.2 million
> pounds of narcotics, confiscated $5 million in assets and property,
> identified 1,806 victims of child exploitation, helped 731 victims
> of human trafficking, seized $949 million in criminally derived
> assets and more than $148 million in virtual currency from criminal
> elements. In cases involving drug cartels—officially known as
> Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCO)—that smuggle humans,
> narcotics, and money, HSI seized 69 firearms, 14,182 rounds of
> ammunition, 4,846 pounds of illicit drugs, and over $383,446 in
> currency. In one program alone, known as Operation Blue Lotus, HSI
> partnered with Customs and Border Protection (CBP), the frontline
> Homeland Security agency, to seize more than 8,200 pounds of
> fentanyl.
>
> The distressing figures in the new ICE report are hardly surprising
> considering that 2023 was a record-breaker for illegal immigration
> with a ghastly 2.48 million foreigners entering the U.S. through the
> southern border, surpassing what was previously a historical high of
> 2.38 million in 2022. The last month of the fiscal year (September),
> federal agents encountered an unbelievable 269,735 illegal aliens
> constituting an all-time high for a single month and a substantial
> increase over August. The crisis is only worsening with time. This
> week a mainstream media outlet reports that there were 302,000
> migrant encounters
>
[[link removed]
> the southwest border in December, marking the highest monthly total
> ever recorded.

Until next week,



[Contribute]
[[link removed]]


<a
href="[link removed]"
target="_blank"><img
src="[link removed]"
style="width:100%;height:auto;" alt="advertisement"></a>

[32x32x1]
[[link removed]]

[32x32x2]
[[link removed]]

[32x32x3]
[[link removed]]

[32x32x3]
[[link removed]]

Judicial Watch, Inc.
425 3rd St Sw Ste 800
Washington, DC 20024

202.646.5172



© 2017 - 2024, All Rights Reserved
Manage Email Subscriptions
[[link removed]]
|
Unsubscribe
[[link removed]]

View in browser
[[link removed]]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis