Joseph Fisher is charged with pushing a chair into an officer who, according to the FBI, was chasing another rioter who had pepper sprayed police.
A former Boston Police K-9 officer was arrested on Thursday and charged with attacking a Capitol Police officer with a chair during the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Joseph Fisher was arrested Thursday morning, court records show. He faces several counts, including felony charges of obstruction of law enforcement during civil disorder and assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers.
For part of the day on Jan. 6, Fisher was “wearing a beanie with the logos of several Boston sports teams,” according to his FBI affidavit. A current Boston Police officer who knows Fisher positively identified Fisher after online sleuths helped track him down, according to the FBI. Cell phone records also showed he was inside the Capitol, the bureau said.
One video, cited by the FBI shows Fisher tossing a chair at an officer who was chasing another rioter who had used pepper spray against police inside the Capitol building.
“Investigators verified with the U.S. Capitol Police that the Victim physically assaulted by Fisher is a U.S. Capitol Police officer and obtained the Victim’s identity,” an FBI affidavit stated. “Investigators subsequently interviewed the Victim, who positively identified himself as the officer in the yellow vest, and recalled being hit with a chair. At the time of the interview, the Victim was unable to recall who had hit him with the chair or the specifics of the altercation with Fisher.”
About 1,000 people have been charged in connection with the Capitol attack, and law enforcement officials have said the total number of defendants charged in connection with Jan. 6 could double before the statute of limitations on most of the crimes expires in 2026. The total number of people who committed conduct they could be charged with is over 3,000. The FBI currently has the names of hundreds of individuals who have not yet been charged.