hearings next year. talk to me about how you feel about the committee and the work the committee is doing so far. has it been enough? are they moving at an appropriate pace? i don t think that i think they re doing a great job. i just wish that they maybe made it more open to the public, transparency. i think that s how a lot of conspiracy theories and stuff evolve because of it being, you know, behind closed doors. so then there s all this room for people to make up stories as to what is going on, and so i think that they are doing a good job in holding people accountable, but i think, yeah, it just needs to be a little bit more transparent. you know, as i mentioned, lonna, we have been working on this podcast for the better part of a year. it has just come out. all five of the episodes are available. what has your life been like since the podcast came out and it has received the public
Rosanne Boyland had never voted before 2020, but she fell prey to dark conspiracy theories, family members said. She died on the steps of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, and they are still not sure why.
Four people in total died during the insurrection. Author: Kristen Reed, Jon Shirek Published: 11:50 AM CST January 7, 2021 Updated: 9:08 AM CST January 16, 2021
WASHINGTON, D.C., USA One of the people who died during the insurrection at the U.S. Capitol on January 6 was from metro Atlanta.
The Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police Department on Thursday said Rosanne Boyland, 34, from Kennesaw, Georgia was one of the three people who died from apparent medical emergencies.
In an incident report, the department said first responders were called to the Capitol where they found U.S. Capitol police performing CPR on Boyland at around 5:00 p.m. She reportedly collapsed. The incident report said she was admitted to the hospital but died just after 6:00 p.m.
Two died violently — military veterans who wound up on opposite sides of an insurrection. The others, who suffered medical emergencies, came from different parts of the nation and different backgrounds, but were united in their belief that a presidency on its last legs should be saved.