Eugene Goodman on the storming of the Capitol: “Could have been bloodbath”

Eugene Goodman on the storming of the Capitol: “Could have been bloodbath”

Police officer Eugene Goodman may have prevented a disaster on January 6, 2021 at the Capitol. More than a year later he tells his view of things in a podcast.

A lot has been said about Eugene Goodman in the past year. His courage and foresight were praised, Goodman was dubbed a “hero” by politicians and the media, and he was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, one of the highest civilian honors in the United States. When the Capitol was stormed on January 6, 2021, the police officer deliberately lured angry Trump supporters away from the Senate plenum, possibly preventing worse things from happening. That day, the Senate and Congress were supposed to confirm the election of Joe Biden as US President.

But while the 41-year-old was being talked about, Goodman kept a low profile himself. Only now, more than a year later, has the police officer commented on the events of January 6th in Washington for the first time. In the podcast “3 Brothers, No Sense” he spoke about his view of things. “There could easily have been a bloodbath,” Goodman said. The fact that it didn’t come to that was thanks to the police officers in the Capitol.

Eugene Goodman: “I just worked”

After the storming of the Capitol, videos went viral showing Goodman holding off and pushing back a group of aggressive Capitol stormers. He later pretended to protect the entrance to the Senate Chamber, but in so doing lured the mob away from where the senators were supposed to be. Goodman also warned Senator Mitt Romney, who was moving toward the insurgents.

The policeman himself was surprised by the situation, as he now told. “I really didn’t know they were that far into the building,” said of the mob encounter. Some of the people were “angry” and “screamed”. A threatening situation, also for Iraq veterans: “You want to de-escalate, but above all you want to survive,” he said. “I just functioned.”

One year after the storming of the Capitol: "Many fear that this was just the dress rehearsal"

Through his military training, he learned to act with quick wit and to make decisions quickly. “Obviously I wasn’t thinking about the army at the time, but it definitely served me well,” Goodman said. It was a good decision that he and his colleagues did not escalate the situation, as some of the insurgents were armed.

The policeman from the Capitol does not want a memorial

Hundreds of supporters of former President Donald Trump were involved in the storming of the Capitol, who did not want to recognize his deselection. The demonstrators gained access to the building, the Senate hall and many senator offices. Five people died.

Had it not been for police officers like Eugene Goodman, the death toll could have been far higher. However, Goodman has little use for the fame and his sudden popularity. “I ask myself this every day: Who am I? Everyone keeps saying I’m the guy who saved the Senate,” Goodman said. “But I don’t need a monument. It’s just something for the birds to shit on.”

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Source From: Stern

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