President Donald J. Trump said he plans to investigate why Ashli Babbitt's fatal shooting on January 6 and why the U.S. Department of Justice is still opposed to the $30 million illegal lethal lawsuit filed by Aaron Babbitt and judicial surveillance.
In a March 25 interview with Newsmax's Greg Kelly, President Trump said he plans to find Lt. Colonel Michael Byrd, who killed Babbitt from a hidden standpoint before establishing whether she is armed or a threat. Byrd said he was afraid of his life.
“She stood there innocently.”
Kelly said that Bird, now the captain assigned to a training role that earns nearly $190,000 a year, was promoted in 2023 and was awarded a medal by the Biden administration after a fatal shooting.
“I think that's a dishonorable thing,” Trump said. “I'll look at it. I'll see it too. His reputation was something I wouldn't say either. Let's look at his reputation.
Trump's comments seemed like a likely reference Letters released in the second half of 2024 US Rep. Barry Rudermilk (R-Ga.) detailed the history of Byrd's alleged offensive personal actions and the reckless use of his service weapons. Loudermilk, then chairman of the House Trustees' Oversight Committee, said that records of three disciplinary cases against Byrd were somehow missing.
Loudermilk wrote to Capitol Police Chief J. Thomas Manger, saying Byrd was given $36,000 in unlimited funds in 2021 as a “holding bonus,” while other Capitol officers each received about $3,000. Bird has refunded more than $21,000 for security upgrades to his personal residence in Prince County, George, Maryland.
Manger recently announced an effective retirement plan on May 2nd.
Capitol Police Lt. Col. Michael Byrd appears to have his finger on the trigger of his service weapon while walking down the floor of the US home when he smashed a window at the entrance to the US Capitol home on January 6, 2021. photograph
Bird I complained violently According to a letter from Loudermilk, in a slow-paced email with the ultimately doomed plan to provide him with cash from the Capitol Police Pherisers Memorial Fund.
Capitol Police said they paid Housebird at the Andrews joint facility for costs over $35,000 from July 2021 to late January 2022 to late January 2022, at a cost of over $35,000. Judicial Watch Inc. When he left the base for some reason, Bird was provided with details of Capitol Police's official protection, but sources told Blaze News it would cost $425 an hour.
A Blaze News investigation found Byrd was recommended to fire a 2001 incident that he abandoned his post in the House Speaker's office for a card game at a nearby cloakroom and lied to researchers at the Department of Home Affairs.
House investigators also lied to local police, detailing the incident in which Byrd allegedly fired a fire on a vehicle running away from his home.
President Trump showed he didn't know that DOJ continued to oppose the $30 million federal Illegal death Submitted on January 5th, 2024.
“I'm going to look into it. You're just telling me that for the first time,” Trump told Kelly. “I haven't heard of that.
“I'm a huge Ashli Babbitt fan, right?” Trump said. “Ashri Babbitt is a really good guy who's a big Maga fan, a Trump fan and she was standing there innocently. They say they're trying to hold back the crowd – and the guy did something he can't think of when he shot her, I think it's dishonorable.
“We're ready to fire when we get back on them. The guns are drawn.”
Legacy Media portrayed veterans for 14 years in the U.S. Air Force and several years in the DC National Guard as rioters and rebels, but ample video from the corridor where she was shot dead proves that she tried to stop the violence she erupted.
Babbitt cried out to three Capitol police officers standing outside the entrance to the speaker's lobby, calling f**king help as rioter Zachary Alam smashed the window leading to the speaker's lobby.
Babbitt eventually halted the riots in Aram when she planted a left hook on his nose and put on glasses. A few seconds later, she attempted to climb through the broken window just behind Alam and was soon shot by Bird.
Trump's investigation into Babbitt's shooting will undoubtedly reveal a video showing Bird not following the shooting by moving Babbitt's position forward after he collapsed to determine if Budbit was an aggressive threat. He fired fire at dozens of people from his hidden position, including seven Capitol police officers.
Bird retreats into the seating area of the speaker's lobby and within a minute I made a false broadcast On police radio he claims it was on fire and was “ready to fight back.”
“We fired in the lobby. We got a FOT. [sic]Bird said on Capitol Police Radio. The gun is drawn. ”

Ashli Babbitt slams Rioter Zachary Jordan Alam into the nose after destroying several windows at the entrance to the Capitol speakers' lobby on January 6, 2021. Babbitt was fatally shot a few seconds later. Blaze News graphics with Sam Montoya photos. Used with permission.
The Aaron Babbitt lawsuit filed by Judicial Watch Inc. said it delayed the false broadcasts from reaching Ashli Babbitt, creating a dangerous situation as there was no reason to believe this was not an active shooter scenario yet.
“The facts tell the truth. Ashli was ambushed when he was shot by Lieutenant Colonel Byrd,” the lawsuit said. “Several witnesses on the scene cried out, “You just killed her.” …Bird T has never been charged, punished or disciplinary for Ashli's murder. ”
After judicial surveillance filed a lawsuit in San Diego, where Ashli Babbitt lived, the DOJ got approval to transfer the case to the District of Columbia, seeking approval from a judge. Judicial Watch is trying to bring the case back to San Diego. The decision to move the case to DC was issued by a judge before judicial oversight had even had the opportunity to file opposition. The Babbitt case trial is set for July 2026.
President Trump will also learn about the suspicious individual in the crowd where Babbitt, who has not yet been identified, was shot dead 50 months after the shooting. The two most notable people were called “Flick and Flack” and were escorted from the Capitol building and secretly met with Capitol police near the edge of Capitol's property.
President Trump said his decision on Jan. 6 to issue pardons to more than 1,500 former defendants was largely due to the mistreatment they received from the DOJ and federal courts.
“They were treated very unfairly, very horrifying,” Trump said. “Some of them didn't even enter the building, the judges, the systems, the hatred, the vitriol, the prosecutors – the way they wanted to destroy these people.”
Trump explained how many defendants entered the court in hopes of defending himself, but said, “I destroyed the way they were treated. I was given a year in prison.
“I took care of them,” the president said. “I said I was going and I did.”
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