For the previous few weeks, Rose Koepsell has woke up to probably the greatest views in Washington.
Washington, D.C
After the People’s Convoy disbanded, this offshoot headed to D.C.
Koepsell, 57, from a small city close to Lake Tahoe, Calif., isn’t staying in an expensive resort room. She’s been residing in her Dodge Grand Caravan alongside the Mall by the Nationwide Gallery of Artwork.
That’s the place she and different members of the newly fashioned 1776 Restoration Motion — which broke off from the Folks’s Convoy demonstrations in opposition to coronavirus mandates earlier this 12 months — have parked their protest.
They had been hoping that hundreds or perhaps even hundreds of thousands of different People would be part of their trigger, Tom Fisher, 70, a retired state park ranger from Arizona stated as he stood within the shade on a blistering sizzling Washington afternoon final week.
As an alternative, there are about two dozen stalwarts who’ve camped out with American flag-draped vehicles and vehicles since July 6 to exhibit in opposition to what they are saying is America’s sluggish however positive abandonment of the Structure and to name for a peaceable return “to a constitutional Republic by the restoration of an ethical society.”
“I’m disenchanted,” Fisher stated. “I believed as soon as we occupied D.C., folks would come out.”
Folks didn’t. The response, as a substitute, has been largely indifference. In addition to some heckling and trolling. And a few criticism that 1776 Restoration Motion is simply one other group utilizing a narrowly outlined patriotism to grift for {dollars} and social media clout.
The protesters deny all of that. They are saying their trigger is pure. For the previous few weeks in Washington, their morning ritual has been the identical. The primary-risers get espresso going. Somebody places out doughnuts and fruit and snacks. Ice-filled coolers are restocked with water bottles.
At 8 a.m. the members collect in a circle below the Mall’s majestic bushes. They sit for a brief prayer, stand for the Pledge of Allegiance and sit again down for a gathering. It ends with a rally cry.
On most days the assembly is adopted by a march across the U.S. Capitol with indicators and flags. They’ve been greeted with a mix of thumbs ups and “freedom fingers” because the group has taken to calling the universally acknowledged center finger salute delivered by individuals who they are saying inform them to “get a job” or “go house.”
They’ve copies of the Structure at hand out to anybody and pamphlets stating their beliefs: “We’re a constitutional Republic We aren’t a Democracy. Governments are Established To not Make us Equal, however to Shield our Liberties. Federal Businesses must be State Managed.”
Their calls for are each insistent and imprecise. When requested for specifics, the members will say that they need representatives to acknowledge that they work for the folks and deal with their grievances.
What the protest boils right down to for many is a perception that the federal authorities ought to have a lot much less authority over state governments on the subject of deciding nearly each concern.
Help for that place right here has been laborious to garner. Most guests have ignored them. The vast majority of the individuals who have stopped to speak with them have been foreigners, Fisher stated. “They wish to know what we’re about,” he stated.
Protests, after all, are as widespread as joggers on the Nationwide Mall. Getting passersby to concentrate could be a problem. On a latest weekday, a small group of younger vacationers stopped a brief distance from the protesters taking photographs with their telephones and inching nearer for higher pictures. However the object of their consideration wasn’t the folks or the flags or the indicators. It was an albino squirrel that sat close by munching on a chunk of bread.
Nonetheless, many of the protesters say they aren’t discouraged and that the expertise has been value it. They’re from factors close to and much. Frederick, Maryland and Dickinson, North Dakota. Tidewater, Virginia and Lake Havasu Metropolis, Arizona. Daytona Seaside, Florida and Lebanon, Ohio. For a lot of, it’s the first time of their lives they’ve taken half in a protest. All of them took completely different paths to get right here, however the vacation spot, each bodily and philosophical, has introduced them collectively in methods they hadn’t anticipated.
“That is household,” says Ohio truck driver and evangelical minister David Riddell, 57, the group’s chief, who stated he by no means joined a protest till he related with the Folks’s Convoy earlier this 12 months. His eyes brim with tears. “Thus far on this motion, I’ve baptized three of them within the Potomac, renewed the vows of one other couple, celebrated the 57th wedding ceremony anniversary with one other one. That is household.”
Within the household, Riddell permits debate and enter on the problems, however he makes the ultimate choices, he stated. He’s additionally a member of the Proud Boys, the far-right extremist group that has numerous its leaders going through federal fees of seditious conspiracy and “opposing the lawful switch of presidential energy by drive” on Jan. 6, 2021.
Riddell says he was not on the Capitol that day and has instructed his followers that in the event that they select violence, then he’ll not participate within the protest.
“Do I agree with what went on January 6? No, completely not. That’s not how we do issues,” stated Riddell, who’s bald and bearded and goes by the nickname Santa. “Do we have now a Second Modification proper to throw off a tyrannical authorities? Sure. That’s what the Structure says. However do we have now an ethical proper to do this right now? The reply to that could be a resounding no. You don’t, since you don’t use violence till it’s the absolute final resort.” Riddell is a hunter and gun proprietor however says he has “completely forbidden” members of his group from bringing weapons into the District.
Like Riddell, many within the 1776 group joined the Folks’s Convoy earlier this 12 months, a caravan of vehicles and vehicles that was organized to protest vaccine and masks mandates throughout the nation and decry what its members stated had been infringements on freedom.
The individuals in that protest expressed a variety of right-wing and libertarian views. Some believed in debunked conspiracy theories and false claims about satanic child-sex-trafficking rings. There have been election deniers. Covid deniers. Actuality deniers. There have been additionally those that simply felt the nation was falling aside and away from what they believed it must be.
Among the convoy’s members needed to drive into Washington, carry it to a standstill and have their grievances heard. They needed to comply with the mannequin pursued by Canadian truckers who drove into Ottawa in February to protest vaccine mandates within the Canadian capital and in addition blocked border crossings.
In March and once more in Might, the individuals within the Folks’s Convoy debated getting into Washington and being met there by tens of hundreds for a large protest.
As an alternative, the convoy circled the Beltway attempting to snarl visitors and make some extent. Riddell would later be arrested for his function in blocking visitors on Interstate 95, however the plans to flood town with autos and protesters by no means panned out. Riddell stated that when he realized the convoy’s leaders didn’t wish to drive into the capital he cut up from the group and others quickly adopted him.
Many within the splinter group say they’re anti-socialist and anti-big authorities and anti something they suppose is anti-American. Their meals and fuel bills are funded, they are saying, by different People who really feel the identical means they do. The group’s brochure solicits donations by Cashapp, Venmo and Zelle. Riddell estimates the group has raised roughly $73,000 since forming.
They don’t imagine mainstream information and get their info from far-right web sites. In addition they comply with one another’s dwell streams (there are many dwell streams). Of their shared mistrust of presidency and politicians and media, they discovered a group of like-minded souls.
In addition they insist they’re nonpartisan.
“This isn’t a left or proper concern,” stated Victoria LaRocca, 35, mentioning that the group doesn’t fly any Trump flags or have indicators supporting any candidates. “It’s a constitutional concern. It’s petitioning.”
Some gave up all the pieces to affix the trigger.
“Many have stop their jobs, misplaced their companies and are able to lose their house to be right here. Some folks have cashed of their 401(ok)s,” stated Koepsell, who speaks softly and stated she joined the group as a result of she felt directed by the Lord to answer disasters and crises. And “America is sort of in a catastrophe proper now.”
“Once I see America I see quite a lot of good,” Koepsell stated. “And I see quite a lot of brokenness. Trillions of {dollars} in debt. Inflation fueled by printing cash. Confusion over who America is. Who America was. … We have to cease being one aspect in opposition to one other. We should be People preventing for our nation.”
If a few of the group’s targets had been philosophical and long-term, a few of their wants had been sensible and fast. When he first led his group into the District, Riddell stated didn’t suppose he ought to want a allow to protest. “The Structure is our allow,” he stated defiantly. However protesters want port-a-potties. And port-a-potties want a allow. “The bogs is what broke me,” Riddell stated laughing.
For showers and to get a break from tenting out of their vehicles, members sometimes headed to their base camp, a truck cease 83 miles away in Bunker Hill, W.Va., the place their provides of meals, water, hygiene merchandise, bathroom paper and snacks are saved.
The protest on the Mall has been largely peaceable however not with out incident. The group’s allow issued by the Nationwide Park Service doesn’t enable them to sleep of their vehicles.
U.S. Park Law enforcement officials noticed violations and contacted the group concerning their noncompliance with guidelines, stated Mike Litterst, spokesman for the Park Service’s Nationwide Mall and Memorial Parks. “Park Police are persevering with to watch the exercise and if violations proceed the group’s allow may very well be revoked,” he stated in an announcement.
There have additionally been ongoing hostilities with members of one other offshoot of the Folks’s Convoy who’ve accused the 1776 Restoration Motion of getting members who’re convicted intercourse offenders. Riddell stated there was a former member of the group who had been convicted of kid molestation in Indiana however that that individual has left. That hasn’t stopped the bickering, on-line and in individual, between the 2 teams.
On Monday, the group’s protest allow expires. By then, the final of the 1776 Restoration Motion protesters may have packed up their indicators and flags and camp chairs and coolers and retreated to Bunker Hill, the place they plan to regroup, reorganize, reread the Structure and put together to return in early September to redress their grievances as soon as extra.
Washington, D.C
Report: The Trumps are in talks to buy back D.C. hotel lease
The Trump Organization is engaged in preliminary discussions to reclaim the lease on its former hotel in Washington, D.C., reports the Wall Street Journal.
The hotel is currently operating as a Waldorf Astoria.
The Wall Street Journal said Trump Organization executive vice president Eric Trump met with an executive from BDT & MSD Partners at Mar-a-Lago earlier this week to discuss purchasing the lease rights to the former Trump International Hotel Washington D.C.
BDT & MSD Partners currently controls the property’s lease, following a 2023 default and subsequent foreclosure by previous leaseholder CGI Merchant Group. The Trump Organization sold the hotel’s lease to CGI in 2022, and the hotel was reflagged as a Waldorf Astoria.
The 263-room hotel, which occupies the Old Post Office building, opened as a Trump hotel in 2016.
During President Donald Trump’s first presidency, the hotel was a prominent gathering spot for Republican lawmakers, lobbyists and others with business involving the administration. The property came under intense scrutiny because of ethical and legal concerns.
The hotel has some of the largest guestrooms in the city. Top-tier accommodations include the 4,000-square-foot Presidential One Bedroom Suite and 6,300-square-foot Waldorf Townhouse Two Bedroom Bi-Level Suite.
The hotel is home to restaurants The Bazaar by Jose Andres and the Michelin-starred Sushi Nakazawa, plus 38,000 square feet of event space and a 10,000-square-foot Waldorf Astoria Spa.
Washington, D.C
Man at the center of Washington DC ‘Pizzagate’ killed during North Carolina traffic stop
‘Pizzagate’ gunman killed by police in North Carolina
Edgar Maddison Welch, the ‘Pizzagate’ suspect who stormed Comet Pizza in D.C. in 2016, was shot and killed by police in North Carolina last week.
Fox – 5 DC
The man who stormed into a Washington D.C. restaurant with loaded weapons during an incident widely known as “Pizzagate” is now dead after North Carolina police shot him during a traffic stop.
Edgar Maddison Welch, 36, was shot just after 10 p.m. last Saturday, Kannapolis Fire and Police wrote in a news release this week.
Welch is the same Salisbury, North Carolina man who in December 2016, showed up to Comet Ping Pong, a pizzeria in Washington DC., with loaded weapons to investigate “unfounded rumors concerning a child sex-trafficking ring” that was allegedly operating out of the restaurant, federal prosecutors said.
He pleaded guilty in March 2017 to a federal charge of interstate transportation of a firearm and ammunition, as well as a District of Columbia charge of assault with a dangerous weapon.
Three months later, he was sentenced to four years in prison.
What is ‘Pizzagate’? What happened at Comet Ping Pong?
Welch’s initial reason for making headlines in 2016 stemmed from rumors of a child sex trafficking ring allegedly operating out of the pizza restaurant he stormed into, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the District of Columbia.
Rumors began circulating online that the restaurant was part of a trafficking ring operated by then-Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton – a fake news campaign targeting Clinton during the general election.
Welch allegedly tried to recruit people to participate in the storming of the restaurant leading up to Dec. 4. He’d texted someone saying he was “raiding a pedo ring” and sacrificing “the lives of a few for the lives of many.”
Prosecutors said Welch traveled from North Carolina to Washington D.C. with three loaded firearms, including a 9mm AR-15 assault rifle loaded with 29 rounds of ammunition, a fully-loaded, six-shot, .38-caliber revolver and a loaded shotgun with additional shotgun shells.
Welch parked his car and around 3 p.m., walked into the restaurant, where multiple employees and customers were present, including children, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the District of Columbia said in a news release.
“He was carrying the AR-15 openly, with one hand on the pistol grip, and the other hand on the hand guard around the barrel, such that anyone with an unobstructed view could see the gun,” the office wrote in the news release.
Once customers and employees saw Welch, they fled the building. Welch was also accused of trying to get into a locked room by forcing the door open, first with a butter knife and then shooting his assault rifle multiple times into the door.
Shortly after he walked into the restaurant, an employee who had no idea what was going on walked in carrying pizza dough, federal prosecutors said. When Welch saw the employee, he turned toward the worker with the assault rifle, which made the employee think he was going to shoot them. The employee then ran out, leaving Welch alone in the restaurant.
Welch spent more than 20 minutes inside the restaurant, then walked out, leaving his firearms inside. Officials then arrested him.
When Welch was sentenced to four years in prison, he was also ordered to serve three years of supervised release, during which he’d have to get a mental health assessment.
He was also ordered to stay away from the Comet Ping Pong restaurant while released and to pay $5,744 in restitution for property damage.
What happened leading up to the Welch’s death?
The deadly traffic stop happened the night of Jan. 4, said Kannapolis Chief of Police Terry L. Spry in a news release.
Around 10 p.m., a Kannapolis Police Officer patrolling North Cannon Boulevard spotted a gray 2001 GMC Yukon. The officer recognized the vehicle because he’d previously arrested someone who frequently drove the vehicle, Welch. He also knew Welch had an outstanding warrant for his arrest, police said.
The officer stopped the vehicle and recognized the front seat passenger as Welch, who had an outstanding arrest warrant for felony probation violation, police said. While the officer was speaking with Welch, two additional officers showed up to help.
As the officer who made the traffic stop approached the passenger side of the vehicle and opened the front passenger door to arrest the individual, the passenger pulled out a handgun and pointed it at the officer.
The initial officer and a second officer who was standing at the rear passenger side of the Yukon ordered the man to drop the gun. After the passenger failed to lower his gun, both officers fired at him, hitting him.
Officials called for medical assistance for Welch who was taken to a hospital for treatment. He was later taken to another hospital, where he died from his injuries two days after the shooting.
None of the officers at the traffic stop were hurt and neither were the driver and back seat passenger in the vehicle with Welch.
The officers involved who fired their weapons were Officer Brooks Jones and Officer Caleb Tate. The third officer at the scene did not fire his weapon, police said.
District Attorney will decide next steps in traffic stop shooting death
An outside law enforcement agency has been requested to investigate the shooting.
“This practice ensures there is no bias during the investigation and the findings of the investigation are presented to the District Attorney without any influence by a member of the department,” the police chief wrote in the news release.
The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation is still investigating the shooting and the two officers who fired their weapons are on administrative leave, which the police said is standard protocol.
Cabarrus County District Attorney Ashlie Shanley will decide what the next steps are, police said.
Contributing: Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY
Saleen Martin is a reporter on USA TODAY’s NOW team. She is from Norfolk, Virginia – the 757. Follow her on Twitter at @SaleenMartin or email her at sdmartin@usatoday.com.
Washington, D.C
NBC Journalist Who Was Beloved in D.C. Dead At 62
Viewers and media industry professionals alike are sharing tributes to Derrick Ward, a longtime Washington, D.C., television journalist who died Tuesday at age 62.
Ward’s death followed complications from a recent cardiac arrest and was confirmed Wednesday by NBC 4 Washington (WRC-TV), where he’d been employed since 2006.
“Derrick has been an inspiration and cherished member of our family and his hometown community,” Ward’s family told the outlet in a statement that was shared during Wednesday’s broadcast. “As a distinguished journalist, Derrick’s storytelling, prolific writing, warmth and humor touched countless lives. Our children and our entire family will miss him dearly.”
As of Thursday afternoon, news of Ward’s passing had drawn an outpouring of condolences online.
“Stunned to hear of his passing. Watched that great man for over two decades tell some riveting stories all with class, respect, and precision,” podcaster Lee Sanders wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “Well diverse and extremely talented man. Thoughts to his friends, family and colleagues. Not a good start to 2025.”
Watch an NBC 4 report on Derrick Ward’s death below.
Fox 5 DC journalist Tom Fitzgerald felt similarly, describing Ward as “one of the most pleasant people I’ve ever spent time with.”
“I’ll miss the graciousness, professionalism, kindness and glowing smile of this true gentleman,” he wrote on X. “Peace to his family, friends & NBC 4 colleagues.”
A Washington, D.C., native, Ward began his journalism career in radio, where he covered the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks and the D.C. sniper shootings of 2003, among other major stories. He then transitioned to television reporting when he landed a gig at WKBW-TV in Buffalo, New York.
Appearing on the “Architecture Is Political” podcast in 2020, Ward recalled how his love of storytelling inspired him to pursue a career in journalism.
“I want to tell the stories of this town that I grew up in,” he said. “I like doing things that can resonate with somebody ― if you can say something or write something somewhere and it just gets someone’s attention or whatever point you’re trying to make gets off and they can say, ‘Hmmm’ or ‘Uh huh.’ It’s the same reason that people do music and other things, I guess, is to look for that resonance.”
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In addition to his professional background, Ward was known as an avid golfer and guitar player. He is survived by his three children: Derrick Jr., Ian and Marisa.
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