Gonell also described the use of baseball bats, hockey sticks, a rebar, and a flagpole as weapons that day. He added: "No matter if it is a pen, the way they were using these items, it was to hurt officers."
Ingraham's show honed in on the pen comment alone, displaying a graphic of a trophy with "Best Exaggerated Performance" emblazoned on it.
"The winner is Aquilino Gonell, who thinks the pen is literally mightier than the sword," said Ingraham.
Ingraham also mocked Dunn with a graphic of a trophy that read "Best Political Performance," saying: "The award for blatant use of party politics when facts fail, the Angle award goes to Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn."
Dunn told the hearing that he tries to keep politics out of his job, but he mentioned his own vote when he tried to reason with rioters who said that Joe Biden had stolen the election.
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"I responded, 'Well, I voted for Joe Biden. Does my vote not count? Am I nobody?'" he said. "That prompted a torrent of racial epithets."
Ingraham cut the clip before Dunn's mention of the racial abuse. She also took aim at Fanone, who at one point in his testimony slammed his hand on the podium in frustration - giving him "Best Action Performance," which can be seen here:
On "Tucker Carlson Tonight," Carlson took issue with several testimonies.
At the hearing, Gonell - a former Iraq war veteran - had said in a tearful speech that "on January 6th for the first time, I was more afraid to work at the Capitol than my entire deployment to Iraq."
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Carlson responded, saying: "Actually what happened on January 6, according to the video we do have, does not look a lot like Iraq. It's not Fallujah." He played footage of a relatively quiet segment of the Capitol invasion, with protesters milling peacefully about the rotunda.
Extensive footage exists of much more violent moments.
Fanone also excoriated the "indifference" shown to officers who defended the Capitol that day, adding: "I've been left with the psychological trauma and the emotional anxiety of having survived such a horrific event,"
Carlson outright laughed at this. The moment can be seen here:
Carlson went on to suggest that Fanone should have experienced trauma from the protests in Washington, DC, last year, when St. John's Episcopal Church sustained fire damage and officers were hurt.
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Carlson and some Republican lawmakers have frequently drawn comparisons between violent Black Lives Matter protests and the Capitol riot, suggesting a double standard in how they have been investigated.
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