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According to ABC News, McConnell fell while being questioned by two volunteers from Sunrise Movement, an environmental advocacy group. They asked the Kentucky senator about Immigration and Customs Enforcement actions. He did not respond to their question.
The Olympian (TCA) on MSN
After Capitol break-in, experts hope to return WA historic piano to former glory
The 6-foot, 3-inch Blüthner grand piano was made in Leipzig, Germany in 1893. It was previously restored in 2017.
OLYMPIA, Wash. — A man charged with vandalizing the Washington State Capitol is undergoing a mental health evaluation, delaying his most recent court appearance. Prosecutors continued Gunnar Schubert's Friday arraignment to Nov. 4, as he remains in custody facing charges of burglary and malicious mischief.
On Oct. 14, police said they verified that the man's identity matched the voice in the Capitol threat recordings, and he was arrested on Oct. 16 and taken to the Bannock County Sheriff's Office jail for one felony charge of making false explosive reports in public or private locations.
The arraignment of the man accused of breaking into the Washington State Capitol and damaging several state artifacts has been delayed until at least Nov. 4 as the suspect undergoes a 14-day “involuntary treatment/detention” in Grays Harbor County,
Pocatello police received a report Oct. 8 about threatening phone calls to a local property management company
Republican Sen. Mitch McConnell, 83, fell to the ground in a Capitol hallway Thursday afternoon as he made his way to Senate votes.
Several thousand people have gathered at the Capitol and more continue to stream into all gates to the the Capitol grounds. Attendees span from small children on their parents' shoulders to elderly people with mobility issues.