'Suicide' frenzy among Capitol riot cops: Officers 'killing selves' jump to FOUR 'Sobering toll' confirmed by Metropolitan Police By Joe Kovacs Published August 3, 2021 at 11:34am
One day after WND reported a third officer who responded to the Capitol riot on Jan. 6 purportedly died by suicide, a fourth police officer is now said to have taken his own life.
WUSA-TV is reporting that Officer Kyle DeFreytag died last month, but the notice that he was the fourth officer from the riot to die by his own hand came only hours after MPD officials on Monday revealed Officer Gunther Hashida, 43, was found dead at his residence last week.
DeFreytag, 26, was assigned in the city's 5th District and was on duty at the Capitol to enforce curfew violations, a statement from the police department said. He had responded to the Capitol events that day and worked a later shift, positioned outside the Capitol.
Metropolitan Police Chief Robert J. Contee III sent a message to the police force notifying personnel of DeFreytag’s death last month, explaining, "I am writing to share tragic news that Officer Kyle DeFreytag of the 5th District was found deceased last evening. This is incredibly hard news for us all, and for those that knew him best."
The CBS affiliate reported the "sobering toll" among officers doubled this week, with the two confirmations.
Last January, U.S. Capitol Police said Officer Howard Leibengood died by suicide, and weeks later, officials revealed MPD Officer Jeffery Smith died by suicide.
The day after the violence, Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick died as a result of multiple strokes.
Completing this poll entitles you to WND news updates free of charge. You may opt out at anytime. You also agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. DeFreytag, 26, had been a Metro officer for five years, the Daily Mail reported.
Officer Hashida, who had been with the Metro for 18 years and leaves behind a wife and three children, was assigned to the Emergency Response Team within the Special Operations Division of Washington, D.C.'s Metropolitan Police Department.
The MPD said Hashida "was found deceased in his residence on Thursday, July 29."
"We are grieving as a Department as our thoughts and prayers are with Officer Hashida’s family and friends," the department said.
It remained unclear how the policeman killed himself or if his response to the Capitol riot was a contributing factor to his demise.
A GoFundMe account described Hashida as a "devoted and loving husband and father," as he left behind a wife, three children and a sister.
The toll is raising concerns.
"You can't tell me that's just a coincidence," said President Trump supporter Lauren Witzke, who made headlines herself in June when Wells Fargo mysteriously canceled her bank account without warning and explanation.
"They are either overwhelmed with guilt or were about to release information about the federal government & intelligence agency's involvement," she added.
"Don't be fooled, something here is very, very wrong."
Smith was a 12-year veteran of the MPD, and Liebengood a 16-year Capitol Police veteran.
Sicknick died in the immediate aftermath of the mayhem. Sicknick suffered two strokes and died of natural causes on the day after the riot, according to Washington D.C.'s chief medical examiner.
Some commenters online are openly questioning the statements that the officers killed themselves, with some saying:
"Suicide or suicided???"
"Or they were actually murdered which is what usually happens when people are going to blow the whistle."
"That is too far out of the statistical [likelihood] to be ignored. These men being suicided have families; families which the coup d'etat participants don't give two squirts about."
"When plunder becomes a way of life for a group of men living together in society, they create for themselves, in the course of time, a legal system that authorizes it and a moral code that glorifies it."- Fredric Bastiat
During times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act.- Orwell