WASHINGTON — Former Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell is mostly recovered from the brutal assaults he endured from Donald Trump’s supporters on Jan. 6, 2021. But not completely. His shoulder still has limited endurance and there are screws and a metal plate holding his right foot together after bone fusion surgery.
Emotional recovery has been more difficult. Gonell struggled when he heard that former Trump visited Capitol Hill last month and received what he called a ''hero's welcome'' from the Republican lawmakers Gonell had protected that day, and when Trump falsely told millions of viewers in last week's debate that many of the violent rioters, his supporters, ''were ushered in by the police.''
Trump's Capitol Hill visit was a ''triggering mechanism for my PTSD,'' says Gonell, who retired from the force in 2022 due to his injuries and has recently participated in several campaign events for President Joe Biden. ''We did what we had to do to keep those elected officials safe, and instead of siding with us, the officers, they have sided with a person who put their lives at risk.''
Three and a half years after the Capitol attack, Trump still falsely claims the 2020 election was stolen. He has promised that if he wins the presidency again he will pardon his supporters who violently beat police and broke into the Capitol to try and overturn the legitimate results. To counter the misinformation, Gonell and two of his fellow officers who were there that day are working with Biden's campaign, attending events in swing states to try and make sure that voters don't forget.
''I'm a living primary source about an important day in American history,'' says Metropolitan Police Officer Daniel Hodges, who became a recognizable face shortly after the attack when a video of him being crushed between two doors went viral. ''So I try to make that count, and make it so that people hear the truth from someone who was there.''
Along with former Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn, Hodges and Gonell are telling audiences about what they went through that day and trying to lay out the contrast between Biden and Trump. It's an unusual transition for law enforcement officers who once protected members of Congress and are used to keeping their political views to themselves.
''I'm really an introvert, and I'm not someone to seek a microphone or an audience,'' says Hodges, who testified along with Gonell and Dunn at the House Jan. 6 panel's first hearing in 2021. ''But I'm in this unique position where people will listen to what I say about an important issue. So I feel a moral obligation to do so.''
At recent events in Wisconsin, Nevada and Arizona, they stood with local officials and said that Trump is a danger to the country after trying to overturn Biden's legitimate election.