Capitol Police have reversed requests that members of the National Guard guarding the Capitol should rest in the parking garage

After spending days in the cold trying to secure the United States Capitol after the deadly siege two weeks agocivilians of the National Guard were asked to leave the Capitol and move to a nearby parking garage to rest during their shifts. The decision was quickly condemned by lawmakers, including Senate Leader Chuck Schumer, who called the move “outrageous.”

Several pressures to roll it back.

And it was late Thursday night, according to one of the lawmakers, Senator Tammy Duckworth (D-Illinois), who tweeted, “Update: Troops are all out of the garage now. Now I can go to bed.”

The Guard issued a statement saying, “Brigadier General Janeen Birckhead, Commander of the Inauguration Task Force, confirms troops are out of the garage and back into the Capitol as authorized by the USCP (US Capitol Police) Watch Commander and the troops will their breaks near Emancipation Hall are moving forward. ”

At around 3 p.m. Thursday, Capitol Police asked the National Guard to relocate the soldiers who used Capitol corridors and open space to rest during their shifts, National Guard Bureau spokesman Major Matt Murphy told CBS News.

“As Congress is in session and as more pedestrians come and business is being done, the Capitol Police has asked troops to relocate their resting place,” Murphy said. “They were temporarily moved to the Thurgood Marshall Judicial Center garage with heating and toilets.”

About 3,500 National Guard were moved from the Capitol, but not all were in the parking garage at the same time. During their guard duty, members are cycled into the garage to warm up and take a break, and the guards return to a hotel when their shifts are over.

Some security guards have expressed displeasure with the move to a parking garage. Although the garage has heating and lighting, there are limited toilets, cell phones and Internet services and electrical outlets.

Politico reported the move first, and lawmakers lashed out. “This is outrageous, embarrassing and incredibly disrespectful to the men and women who keep the US Capitol safe,” said Senator Kyrsten Sinema (D – Arizona). “We need to fix it and we need answers about how it happened.”

“Unreal. I cannot believe that the same brave soldiers we have been asking for over the past two weeks to protect our Capitol and our Constitution would be ordered unceremoniously to leave the building,” said Senator Tammy Duckworth. ‘I demand answers as soon as possible. They can use my office. ‘

Murphy told CBS News that “they had to go somewhere I understand. There will always be some ruffled feathers, some people are not going to like it. The troops are going on. They are still carrying out their mission duties and that’s what they are up to. to do.”

Both Duckworth and Sinema later tweeted that they were told the guards would be taken from the parking lot, but the decision had not been officially announced.

Capitol Police said in a statement Thursday night that the department “greatly values ​​the United States National Guard’s integral support in helping to secure the Capitol complex prior to and including the inaugural ceremony.” The department said it recently called for security members’ shifts to be shortened to allow for more rest time off campus.

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