Police officers brace for 'triggering' hearing with rioter testifying
Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn, who testified at the first select committee hearing last fall on how he feared for his life and faced racist attacks while defending the Capitol on Jan. 6, told ABC News Congressional Correspondent Rachel Scott ahead of the hearing today that he's expecting the afternoon to be "triggering" -- and that he is "emotionally, preparing for the worst."
With Jan. 6 defendant Stephen Ayres set to testify, Dunn said Ayres "owes everyone in the congressional community who was affected by the day an apology." Adding, "if he stops short of being honest about the violence -- that doesn't do enough for me. If he stops short of apologizing -- that doesn't do enough for me."
Metropolitan Police Department officer Daniel Hodges, who also defended the Capitol and has also been a regular fixture at the public hearings, said it will be notable for Americans to hear what happened straight from someone who breached the building, given that some continue to downplay the violence.
"Having one of the people involved in the attack on Capitol -- in their own words describe their mentality, their intentions and the intentions of the group -- you can't get any closer to the source than that."