The investigation will reconstruct the car chase and shooting, which briefly put the U.S. Capitol on lockdown, and explore how officers dealt with the driver and whether protocols were followed.
Senate Sergeant at Arms Terrance Gainer said he was confident the officers ``did the best they could under the situation.'' Police guarding national landmarks need to make rapid decisions without the luxury of all the facts, he said.
``This is not a routine highway or city traffic stop. It is simply not that,'' Gainer said Saturday. ``The milieu under which we're operating at the United States Capitol and I suspect at the White House and at icons up in New York is an anti-terrorism approach, and that is a difference with a huge, huge distinction.''
Capitol Police Chief Kim Dine maintained that his officers acted ``heroically'' to protect the community.
Still, the family of 34-year-old Miriam Carey called the shooting unjustified, and some deadly force experts agree it merits scrutiny.
``We're still very confused as a family why she's not still alive,'' Amy Carey-Jones said in New York late Friday after traveling to Washington to identify Miriam Carey's body. ``I really feel like it's not justified, not justified.'' Another sister, retired New York City police officer Valarie Carey, said there was ``no need for a gun to be used when there was no gunfire coming from the vehicle.''
Secret Service agents and Capitol Police officers fired shots during the Thursday afternoon encounter, which began when Carey in a black Infiniti with her 1-year-old daughter rammed a White House barricade and was pursued by police toward the Capitol during a high-speed chase. D.C. Police Chief Cathy Lanier said she was confident after the shooting that Carey's actions were ``not an accident,'' but the department's internal affairs division is investigating as part of standard protocol.
Carey struck a Secret Service agent with her car at the White House and reversed her vehicle into a police car, authorities say. A Capitol Police officer was also injured. Both are expected to recover.
Experts in the use of deadly force said there were more questions than answers. Many police departments direct their officers not to fire at moving vehicles even if the driver is using the car as a weapon or permit it under extremely limited circumstances. And experts wondered whether police should have relied on other options such as establishing a roadblock to diffuse the situation.
``I think the question we have to ask is, `What threat did she cause?'' said Geoffrey Alpert, an expert on police use of force at the University of South Carolina. ``What threat was she to the officers, to the public, to the politicians?''
Chuck Drago, a former Oviedo, Fla., police chief who now works as a police consultant, said he was concerned officers approached the vehicle on foot while the conflict was still unfolding. That kind of direct contact can elevate the tension of an already tense scenario and leave an officer feeling anxious and vulnerable, he said.
``Their main concern should have been trying to keep that vehicle from moving, and then exposing themselves only adds to the danger and lessens their options in the long run,'' Drago said.
Authorities were investigating why Miriam Carey, who lived in Connecticut, turned up in Washington on Thursday. A search warrant application for Carey's car seeks bullet fragments, maps or other documents pertaining to the White House, alcohol or drugs, ``and/or evidence of a mechanical malfunction or lack thereof.''
A federal law enforcement official said Friday that her mental health appeared to be deteriorating in the last year and that she was apparently under the delusion the president was communicating with her. The official was briefed on the investigation but not authorized to discuss it publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Her family said she had been suffering from postpartum depression with psychosis but was not dangerous. Carey-Jones said her sister had been on medication for postpartum depression but was being taken off the drugs under medical supervision.
``They told her she could get off medication,'' Carey-Jones said, adding, ``There were no indications she was unstable.''
Valarie Carey questioned the characterizations of her sister's mental health and said Miriam Carey ``did not believe the president or any government official was going to do her harm.''
But interviews with some of those who knew the Stamford, Conn., woman suggested she was coming apart well before she loaded her 1-year-old daughter into the car for the 275-mile drive to Washington on Thursday. She had suffered a head injury in a fall and had been fired as a dental hygienist, her former employer said.
After Carey rammed the barricades at the White House, police chased her down Constitution Avenue to the Capitol, where she was shot. At one point near the Capitol, police say, she stopped her car abruptly, then drove over a median strip and then put the vehicle into reverse and refused to stop. Officers then shot her, police say.
Carey's daughter escaped serious injury and was taken into protective custody. The woman's family has not identified the father of the child. Gainer said he has not seen any indication officers knew the child was in the car when they fired.
Carey's mother, Idella Carey, told ABC News that she began suffering from postpartum depression after giving birth in August 2012 and was hospitalized but had no history of violence.
Experts say symptoms of postpartum depression include lack of interest in the baby; mood swings between sadness and irritability; scary thoughts of something bad happening to the baby; and, in severe cases, suicidal thoughts, but not delusions. In contrast, a condition known as postpartum psychosis can come with hallucinations, paranoia and desires to hurt the child. But it is extremely rare and does not tend to last for a year, experts say.
Carey's death comes less than three weeks after a deadly shooting rampage in Washington that also involved an apparently unstable person.
On Sept. 16, gunman Aaron Alexis shot and killed 12 people at the Washington Navy Yard before being shot by police. Alexis, a defense industry employee and former Navy reservist, said in writings left behind that he was driven to kill by months of bombardment with electromagnetic waves.
``There'll be lessons to be learned from this,'' Gainer said. ``There'll be recommendations to be made about, `Could we have done this, or should we do that?'''
http://accesswdun.com/article/2013/10/266401