Donald Trump.Photo: NBC

A watchdog report released Wednesday sheds new light on an infamous scene in the final months ofDonald Trump’s presidency, when federal officersviolently cleared protestorsfrom a park near the White House before Trump held a photo-op.
For a year, Democratshave calledfor more information on how the June 2020 clash, which involved multiple law enforcement agencies, unfolded and at whose direction.
Because of the number of different officials involved, and the limits of the Interior Department’s jurisdiction, its watchdog report has noted limitations, however. Neither Trump’s attorney general, Bill Barr, nor White House aides were interviewed about what happened.
Other investigations are ongoing.
“This report, which we anticipate is the first of a number of projects examining aspects of the events of June 1, focuses on what occurred from an operational perspective,” Interior Department Inspector General Mark Lee Greenblatt said in a statement.
“If we had found that type of evidence [that Trump directed Park Police], we would not hesitate in presenting that, and saying that was influencing the Park Police’s decision-making to clear the park,” Greenblatt said, according toThe Washington Post, adding: “If we had found that, if we had seen that type of evidence, we would absolutely have reported that, without a doubt
According to the report, Park Police had already been planning toclear Lafayette Squarein order to erect new fencing to increase the security perimeter around the White House.
This plan was in place before Trump, 74, decided to walk through the area for a photo-op outside St. John’s Episcopal Church.
Pending a more expansive review, though, the full scope of how Trump’s decision affected operations that day remains unclear. (The New York Timesreported last yearthat Barr had given an order to break up the crowd.)
Cameras captured what happened next, as a mix of law enforcement officers released pepper pellets and flash-bangs onto the mostly peaceful crowd, who had gathered to protest police brutality and racial injustice in the wake ofGeorge Floyd’s murder in Minneapolis.
Protestors had been gathering outside the White House in the days leading up to the violent clearing last June, amid reports of altercations with officers and some vandalism. (Three days before, Trump was taken into anunderground bunkeras crowds grew outside the White House.)
Before the park was cleared, Trump declared himself “your president of law and order” in a White House speech as the clashes could be heard in the background.
He then walked to St. John’s with members of his administration for the now notorious photo session, as he held a Bible up in front of the damaged church.
Nonetheless, the report notes numerous instances of miscommunication and a lack of coordination between the eight law enforcement agencies and Trump officials.
The report says Attorney General Barr informed the Park Police operations commander that the president was expected to walk through the park just 13 minutes before law enforcement began forcibly clearing the area.
“Are you freaking kidding me?” the commander responded, as news cameras caught him hanging his head and walking away from Barr.
Elsewhere, the report states that Park Police officials were notified in mid or late afternoon that the president would make the trip at some point later that day and that they planned to make way for the fencing after it arrived.`
According to the inspector general report, Secret Service entered the area before the order to disperse had been given and, as they clashed with protesters, they deployed pepper spray.
“Secret Service’s early deployment drew additional protesters to the east end of H Street, increasing tensions between law enforcement and the protesters,” the report states.
United States Park Police pushes back protestors near the White House on June 1, 2020 as demonstrations against George Floyd’s death continue.ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP via Getty

Military police officers are restraining a protestor near the White House on June 1, 2020 as demonstrations against George Floyd’s death continue.ROBERTO SCHMIDT/AFP via Getty

The report says that miscommunication between the eight responding agencies and their inaudible warnings to protesters to leave the area also contributed, in part, to the erratic clearing.
The violence was widely documented on video and in photos.
One Australian news reportersaidshe was left injured after - as international news crews documented - heavily armed officers hit her and her cameraman with a baton and a shield.
“They’re quite violent and they do not care who they’re targeting at the moment,” the reporter, Amelia Brace, said afterward.
“There was no escape at that moment,” she said.
The Park Police report states that “not everyone could hear the warnings” law enforcement gave to protestors to have them leave the park voluntarily.
It adds that Park Police and Secret Service, the two agencies who planned the dispersal, “did not use a shared radio channel to communicate” and that the Park Police commander had been giving directions to officers via word of mouth.
Officers from the Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) also “arrived late and may not have received a full briefing on the rules of engagement,” the report states, adding that several law enforcement officers couldn’t hear the Park Police commander’s dispersal warnings.
“The [Park Police] acting chief of police and the USPP incident commander told us they did not request the BOP’s assistance and did not know who dispatched them to Lafayette Park on June 1,” the report says.
According to the report, “video evidence we reviewed showed at least one BOP officer shooting pepper balls toward H Street,” where law enforcement was working to clear protesters.
“The USPP liaison to the BOP told us he did not know whether the BOP fired pepper balls from the fence line and noted that the scene was ‘chaotic,’ " the report reads.
Police officers wearing riot gear push back demonstrators, shooting tear gas next to St. John’s Episcopal Church near the White House on Monday.JOSE LUIS MAGANA/AFP via Getty

Police officers hold a perimeter near the White House as demonstrators gather to protest the killing of George Floyd on June 1, 2020 in Washington, DC.OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty

Trump released a statement Wednesday praising the inspector general’s report for “Completely and Totally exonerating me in the clearing of Lafayette Park!” - which the report did not do.
Trump and the operation to clear protesters drew widespread condemnation fromreligious figures,U.S. military leadersandpoliticians.
source: people.com