The 1998 United States Capitol shooting occurred on July 24, 1998, when Russell Eugene Weston Jr. entered the Capitol and fatally shot United States Capitol Police officers Jacob Chestnut and Detective John Gibson.
Gibson died during surgery at MedStar Washington Hospital Center; Chestnut died at George Washington University Hospital. Weston's
exact motives are unknown, but he had expressed strong distrust of the federal
government of the United States; he was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia
six years before the attack. Weston was later charged on July 26 for the murder
of two U.S. Capitol Police officers during the shooting rampage. As of July
2018, Weston remained in a mental institution.
Shooting
On the day of the shooting, Officer Chestnut and an unarmed
civilian security aide were assigned to operate the X-ray machine and
magnetometer at the Document Door entrance located on the East Front of the
Capitol, which was open only to Members of Congress and their staff. Detective
Gibson was assigned to the dignitary protection detail of then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay (R-TX)
and was in his suite of offices near this door. Weston, armed with a .38
caliber Smith & Wesson six-shot revolver, entered the Document Door at 3:40
p.m. At the same time, Officer Chestnut was providing directions to a tourist
and his son. Weston walked through the metal detector, setting off the alarm.
Chestnut requested he go back through the detector. Weston suddenly produced
the gun and without warning, shot Chestnut in the back of the head at
point-blank range. At this time, Officer
Douglas McMillan, normally working outside the Capitol, was nearby
retrieving keys to get a wheelchair for a tourist. Officer McMillan immediately
returned fire as Weston shot Chestnut, causing Weston to shoot toward McMillan,
wounding him. Weston then ran away from McMillan, turning into the first nearby
open door he found. McMillan could not shoot at Weston without risking hitting
the many civilians in the immediate area. According to witnesses, Weston turned
down a short corridor. He pushed through a door that led to a group of offices
used by senior Republican representatives, including then-House Majority Whip Tom DeLay and Representative Dennis Hastert, future Speaker of the House and a
close protégé of then-Speaker Newt Gingrich.
Upon hearing the gunfire, Detective Gibson, who was in plain
clothes, told the office staff to hide under their desks. Weston entered the
office and quickly shot Gibson. Mortally wounded, Gibson returned fire,
shooting Weston four times. Two other officers arrested Weston in the same
office. Senator Bill Frist, a heart
surgeon who had been presiding on the Senate floor just before the shooting,
resuscitated the gunman and accompanied him to D.C. General Hospital.
Angela Dickerson,
a tourist, was grazed on her face and shoulder by shrapnel from a marble wall
as McMillan's rounds impacted the wall while he was attempting to hit the fleeing
Weston. She was treated for her injuries and released.
Aftermath
Officers Chestnut and Gibson were killed in the attack. Both
officers received the tribute of lying in honor in the United States Capitol
rotunda. They were the first police officers, and Chestnut was the first
African American, to receive the honor.
In 1999, Weston was found incompetent to stand trial due to
mental illness; he had a history of schizophrenia and had stopped taking his
medication. A judge of the United States
District Court for the District of Columbia ordered that he be treated with
antipsychotic medication without his consent in 2001, and the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit upheld the
decision. In 2004, the court determined that Weston still was not competent to
be tried, despite ongoing treatment, and suspended but did not dismiss the
criminal charges against him. Weston was known to the United States Secret Service before the incident as a person who
had threatened the President of the
United States.
The shooting led to the creation of the United States Capitol Police Memorial Fund, a nonprofit
organization managed by the Capitol
Police Board that provides funds for the families of Chestnut and Gibson.
In November 2005, the fund was expanded to include the family of Sgt. Christopher Eney, a USCP officer
killed during a training accident in 1984. The shooting was cited as one reason
for the development of the Capitol Visitor Center. The legislation authorizing
the construction of the facility was introduced by Washington, D.C. Delegate
Eleanor Holmes Norton and was entitled the Jacob
Joseph Chestnut–John Michael Gibson United States Capitol Visitor Center Act of
1998. The door where Weston entered was renamed in honor of the two
officers, from the Document Door to
the Chestnut-Gibson Memorial Door.
On March 6, 2008, Weston filed a motion requesting a hearing
on his mental status. The hearing was held on May 6 with Weston appearing via
teleconference from the Federal Medical
Center, Butner with his public defender Jane Pierce, and two witnesses he selected, a psychologist and
vocational rehabilitation specialist. Federal judge Earl Britt denied Weston's request to be released from the federal
facility, arguing that he failed to present enough evidence that he no longer needed
to be committed. During the hearing, defense psychologist Holly Rogers stated that "sometimes
there are individuals who simply do not respond to medication", implying
that Weston was not ready for release. Had Weston been released from the
facility, it would have made it possible for him to be taken to Washington,
D.C., to stand trial for the murders of Gibson and Chestnut.
On July 24, 2008, members of Congress paused for a moment of
silence to mark the shooting's tenth anniversary. On the east lawn of the
Capitol, Democratic and Republican lawmakers planted a tree in memory of Gibson
and Chestnut.
Officers
Officer Jacob Joseph
Chestnut (April 28, 1940 – July 24, 1998) was the first African American to
lie in honor at the Capitol. He retired as a master sergeant from the United States Air Force after 20 years
of service in the Air Force Security
Police. Chestnut's career included two tours in the Vietnam War. Chestnut is buried in Arlington National Cemetery. His funeral included a speech by President Bill Clinton and a fly-over
by military jets in a missing-man formation. A United States Post Office located in Fort Washington, Maryland, has been renamed in his and Detective
John Gibson's honor, as was the building housing the United States Air Force's 20th Security Forces Squadron at Shaw Air Force Base, South Carolina.
Detective John
Michael Gibson (March 29, 1956 – July 24, 1998) was a United States Capitol Police officer assigned to the dignitary
protection detail of Congressman Tom
DeLay. He is buried in Arlington
National Cemetery after lying in honor with Chestnut in the Capitol
rotunda. Gibson had served with the agency for 18 years. He was a native of
Massachusetts who married the niece of Representative
Joe Moakley. He had three children, a 17-year-old daughter and two boys,
ages 15 and 14. Growing up in New England, Gibson was a lifelong Boston Red Sox
fan, and on August 11, 1998, the team held a moment of silence in his honor
before a game with the Kansas City
Royals.
Perpetrator
Russell Eugene Weston
Jr. (born December 28, 1956), also known as Rusty, grew up in Valmeyer,
Illinois, a town of 900 people. Shortly after graduating from Valmeyer High School in 1974, Weston
moved to Rimini, Montana, rarely
returning to Valmeyer. His classmates' only attempt at inviting him to a class
reunion was returned with obscenities written across it. Many of Weston's
Montana neighbors disliked and often ignored him. They considered him to be
unusual and sometimes eccentric. Weston had once thought that his neighbor was
using his television satellite dish to spy on his actions and believed Navy SEALs were hiding in his
cornfield.
Weston was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia six years
before the shooting and spent fifty-three days in a mental hospital after
threatening a Montana resident. He was released after testing as no danger to
himself or anyone else. Two years before the shooting in July 1996, Weston
bought a new suit and set off on a cross-country trip to visit the headquarters
of the Central Intelligence Agency
in McLean, Virginia. He said his
operative name was "The Moon"
and claimed he had important information for the Director of the CIA. He was
taken to a small conference room at the facility and interviewed for 50
minutes, recorded on videotape. He then left the facility.
Eighteen months before the shooting, he moved back to
Valmeyer from Montana. Once home, he was known to compulsively hack at trees
that filled his backyard following the Mississippi River floods of 1993. There
was so much downed timber on his family's homestead that his father had to ask
him to stop cutting down trees. Two days before the Capitol shooting, at his
grandmother's insistence to do something about nearby cats which were becoming
a nuisance, Weston shot and killed 14 cats with a single-barreled shotgun,
leaving several in a bucket and burying the rest.
Following the Capitol shooting, Weston was transferred to a
psychiatric center at Butner Federal
Correctional Institution in Butner,
North Carolina. In an interview with a court-appointed psychiatrist, he
explained that he stormed the Capitol to prevent the United States from being
annihilated by disease and legions of cannibals.
One contentious issue of Weston's incarceration was that of
forced medication. He had refused to take any medications voluntarily, so in
May 2001, a federal judge authorized doctors to treat Weston involuntarily. A
panel from a federal appeals court ruled in July 2001 that Weston could be
forced to take the drugs, which he was then forced to do for 120 days. He
remains in the civil commitment indefinitely.
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