Police officers who guarded US Capitol sue to block Trump’s $2.3b ‘slush fund’

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A 2022 photo showing police officers  Daniel Hodges (left) and Harry Dunn.

Police officer Daniel Hodges (left) had been pinned in a revolving door by a rioter, and Mr Harry Dunn had endured physical and racist abuse during the 2021 Capitol riot.

PHOTO: KENNY HOLSTON/NYTIMES

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  • Two Capitol police officers sued to block Trump's US$1.8 billion fund. They claim it finances insurrectionists, calling it presidential corruption.
  • The fund emerged from Trump's settlement with the IRS over tax leaks. It aims to compensate "weaponisation" victims, but its scope is questioned.
  • Officers Dunn and Hodges, Jan 6 survivors, allege the fund is a "slush fund." They suffered violence and trauma defending the Capitol.

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WASHINGTON - Two police officers who defended the US Capitol from rioters on Jan 6, 2021, filed a lawsuit on May 20 seeking to halt President Donald Trump’s nearly US$1.8 billion (S$2.3 billion) fund to compensate victims of political “weaponisation”.

In a complaint filed in federal court in Washington, former Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn and Metropolitan Police Department officer Daniel Hodges alleged Mr Trump has “created a US$1.776 billion taxpayer-funded slush fund to finance the insurrectionists and paramilitary groups that commit violence in his name”.

The lawsuit seeks a court order blocking payments from the fund, calling it “the most brazen act of presidential corruption this century”.

Mr Trump settled on May 18 with the Internal Revenue Service, agreeing to drop his US$10 billion lawsuit over the leak of his tax returns during his first term. As part of the settlement, the Justice Department created the fund to compensate victims of political “weaponisation”.

US acting attorney-general Todd Blanche faced repeated questions over that fund during congressional testimony on May 19.

Mr Blanche said the money could be given to members of any political party and is not limited to Jan 6 defendants.

The standard for who will get money, he said, is defined broadly by those who experienced “weaponisation”.

Mr Dunn, a black 15-year veteran of the police force that protects US lawmakers, has been vocal about the physical and racist abuse he endured during the attack as Trump supporters sought to prevent Congress from certifying Mr Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential election victory, including before a bipartisan House of Representatives panel that investigated the deadly riot.

He has said he battled post-traumatic stress disorder from the event.

During the Capitol attack, Mr Hodges was pinned in a revolving door by a rioter wielding a police shield, a moment that became a viral video.

He remains on Washington’s police force and has testified before Congress about his experience. REUTERS

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