Nancy Pelosi says Capitol Police woke her to tell her about attack on husband

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In her first televised interview since a violent attack on her husband, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) broke her silence about how frightened she was to learn of the assault that took place in their San Francisco home.

Pelosi told CNN that she was sleeping in Washington when she heard her doorbell ringing around 5 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 28. She had just flown back from San Francisco the night before, she said, and assumed it was someone who had the wrong apartment.

Then she heard loud banging at her door.

“So I run to the door and I was very scared — I see the Capitol Police, and they said we have to come in to talk to you,” Pelosi said in a preview of a CNN interview that was released Monday afternoon. “And I’m thinking, my children, my grandchildren. I never thought it would be Paul because I knew he wouldn’t be out and about, shall we say.”

What she would learn later was that Paul Pelosi, 82, had been attacked by a hammer-wielding assailant who broke into the couple’s San Francisco home. Paul Pelosi suffered a fractured skull and serious injuries to his right arm and hands, and is continuing to recover from the attack. He was released from a San Francisco-area hospital last week after undergoing surgery on his skull.

But in the early hours of Oct. 28, Nancy Pelosi and the police officers who had awakened her knew little of that. At one point in the clip of the CNN interview, the House speaker had to pause to gather her emotions.

“At that time, we didn’t even know where he was or what his condition was,” she told CNN. “We just knew there was an assault on him, in our home.”

The full interview is scheduled to air on CNN at 8 p.m. Monday.

David DePape, 42, is facing state and federal criminal charges after attacking Paul Pelosi, husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), on Oct. 28. (Video: The Washington Post)

Shortly after the attack, federal authorities filed attempted kidnapping and assault charges against David Wayne DePape, 42, the alleged home invader. According to charging documents, DePape told authorities after his arrest that he had planned to “hold Nancy hostage” and break her kneecaps to send a message to other Democrats.

The Washington Post confirmed that a blog written under DePape’s name was filled with antisemitic writings and baseless claims as well as pro-Trump and anti-Democratic posts. It was registered to a house in Richmond, Calif., where DePape lives, according to neighbors.

Many Democrats have decried the attack as the consequence of Republicans’ inflammatory rhetoric, suggesting that Pelosi’s alleged attacker was influenced by right-wing misinformation and conspiracy theories spread by supporters of former president Donald Trump.

At a campaign event on the evening of Oct. 28, President Biden called on the crowd to “clearly and unambiguously” stand up against political violence.

“What makes us think one party can talk about stolen elections, covid being a hoax, [that it’s] all a bunch of lies, and it not affect people who may not be so well-balanced?” Biden said then. “What makes us think that it’s not going to alter the political climate? Enough is enough is enough.”

Republicans spoke Oct. 30 about the attack of Paul Pelosi, the husband of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). (Video: The Washington Post)

Most Republican leaders have condemned the attack on Paul Pelosi — though many have also been quick to couple those denunciations with assertions of blame on “both sides” for the rise in political violence. Still others in the GOP have turned the brutal attack on the House speaker’s octogenarian husband into a punchline, joking about the incident at campaign events and sharing memes and Halloween costumes that mocked the assault.

Nancy Pelosi, who has vehemently denounced political violence in the past, including the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection at the U.S. Capitol, has not linked politics to the attack on her husband. In statements and a video released by her office, she thanked law enforcement and emergency workers for their swift response and said her husband faced a lengthy recovery.

Devlin Barrett, Eugene Scott and Holly Bailey contributed to this report.

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Source: WP