World

Woman fatally shot storming U.S. Capitol had tweeted 'nothing will stop us'

The woman fatally shot by police during Wednesday's siege of the U.S. Capitol was identified by police Thursday as Ashli Babbitt, a U.S. Air Force veteran whose social media activity indicates she embraced far-fetched right-wing conspiracy theories.

'She was voicing her opinion and she got killed for it,' husband told media

Ashli Babbitt, 35, was a U.S. Air Force veteran who ran a pool-cleaning service with her husband. Her social media activity indicates she embraced right-wing conspiracy theories including QAnon. (Twitter account @Ashli_Babbitt)

The woman who died after being shot by police during Wednesday's siege of the U.S. Capitol was identified by police as Ashli Babbitt, a U.S. Air Force veteran whose social media activity indicates she embraced far-fetched right-wing conspiracy theories.

Babbitt, 35, loved her country and was an ardent supporter of U.S. President Trump, her husband, Aaron Babbitt, said in interviews with local media. Her posts and retweets on Twitter backed Trump's false assertions that he was defeated because Democrats elaborately rigged the Nov. 3 election.

Excited about attending Trump rally

The Twitter account @Ashli_Babbitt, which includes photographs of her, shared many posts in recent weeks flagging her excitement over attending the Trump rally on Jan. 6.

The day before, she wrote: "Nothing will stop us ... they can try and try and try but the storm is here and it is descending upon DC in less than 24 hours ... dark to light!"

At Wednesday's rally near the White House, Trump gave an incendiary speech filled with falsehoods for more than an hour that ended with exhortations to his supporters to march on the Capitol. Shortly after, some of them began smashing their way past barricades and into the building while Congress met to confirm president-elect Joe Biden's victory.

Videos of the shooting recorded by people at the scene show a woman draped in a Trump flag clambering up a doorway with smashed glass windows in a chaotic confrontation between the Trump-supporting intruders and police in an ornate hallway in the Capitol.

A Capitol Police officer on the other side of the doorway then fires his handgun, and the woman — whose appearance matches that of Babbitt's photos — falls backwards onto the ground, bleeding profusely and visibly in shock. People around her scream and try to tend to her injuries.

WATCH | Trump supporters storm barricades at U.S. Capitol:

Pro-Trump protesters storm barricades at U.S. Capitol

4 years ago
Duration 2:05
Thousands of people protested at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., crashing through barricades and climbing the steps as Congress voted to certify Joe Biden’s presidential election victory.

The U.S. Capitol Police confirmed in a statement on Thursday that a woman identified as Ashli Babbitt had been shot by an officer as protesters were forcing their way into the House Chamber. They said she later died of her injuries in a hospital.

Ran pool cleaning service

Babbitt used to live in Maryland before moving to San Diego, California, where she ran a pool cleaning service with her husband, according to public records.

Her husband told Fox 5 News in San Diego that she traveled with friends to Washington, though he did not join, and that he sent her a text message checking her status about 30 minutes before the shooting but never heard back.

"She loved her country and she was doing what she thought was right to support her country, joining up with like-minded people that also love their president and their country," he told Fox 5. "She was voicing her opinion and she got killed for it."

Served in U.S. Air Force

Babbitt served in the U.S. Air Force as a senior airman while on active duty from 2004 to 2008, the Air Force said in a statement. She also served in the Air Force Reserve between 2008 and 2010, and in the Air National Guard from 2010 until 2016, the statement said.

She served in the military with her ex-husband, Timothy McEntee, and did at least one tour in Iraq, said Sean McEntee, her former brother-in-law, in a telephone interview. He said he felt "shock and sadness" at the news of her death.

Babbitt posted a picture of herself on Twitter at a Trump boat rally in September, smiling with another person, both of them wearing tops bearing the slogans and imagery of QAnon, a sprawling cult-like conspiracy theory that has been embraced by some Trump supporters.

WATCH | How alternate social media platforms fuelled pro-Trump mob:

Alternative social media sites fuelled pro-Trump mob

4 years ago
Duration 2:03
Those who study how extremists use social media say Wednesday’s attack on Capitol Hill shouldn’t have been a surprise and authorities should be investigating the rapidly growing alternative media ecosystem that extremists use to spread their messages.

QAnon adherents believe claims by one or more unidentified people posting on internet message boards under the name 'Q' who say that Trump is secretly fighting a cabal of child-sex predators that includes powerful U.S. elites.

The officer who killed Babbitt, whose identity has not been released, is on administrative leave while the shooting is investigated, the Capitol Police said in a statement.