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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Marina Dunbar

Trump officials reportedly reach $5m settlement in January 6 wrongful death suit

a woman holds a poster with the image of a woman and her name
Micki Witthoeft, mother of Ashli Babbitt, holds a picture of her daughter in Washington DC on 6 January 2023. Photograph: José Luis Magaña/AP

The Trump administration has reportedly reached an agreement to pay nearly $5m to the family of the woman who was fatally shot by police while participating in the 6 January 2021 attack on the US Capitol carried out by the president’s supporters.

Citing multiple sources, the Washington Post reported on Monday that the Trump administration had agreed to pay the family of Ashli Babbitt to settle the wrongful death lawsuit they filed after the attack.

Babbitt was attempting to force her way into the speaker’s lobby when the Trump supporter was shot dead by a Capitol police officer. The payment of about $5m at the center of the settlement is meant to resolve the litigation from Babbitt’s estate, which initially sought $30m in damages.

Attorneys for both Babbitt’s family and the federal government each informed a judge earlier in May that they had agreed to settle the case in principle. The case had been scheduled to be tried in July 2026.

Although a binding agreement had not yet been signed and details of the settlement were not revealed during a court hearing on 2 May, Judge Ana Reyes of the US district court in Washington DC instructed both parties to provide an update by Thursday.

Sources with knowledge of the agreement told the Post that Trump’s justice department would pay just less than $5m, with approximately one-third allocated to the family’s legal team, which includes Judicial Watch, a politically conservative organization, and attorney Richard Driscoll of Alexandria, Virginia. These sources requested anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the ongoing case, the Post reported.

The Democratic House minority leader, Hakeem Jeffries, reacted to the news of the settlement by calling it a “slap in the face” to the American people.

Jeffries said that the settlement was “totally done without any communication to the chief of the Capitol police or his lawyers, and appears solely the result of a political determination that Donald Trump and Republicans are going to try to whitewash what happened on January 6.

“This settlement is just an extension of what they’ve previously done, which is to pardon violent felons who violently attacked the Capitol on January 6, including police officers, and now have all been pardoned and sent back to communities across the country where in some cases they’re re-engaging in criminal activity,” he added.

“Donald Trump and the extreme Maga Republicans are not going to be able to erase what happened on January 6, no matter how hard they try.”

The January 6 Capitol attack that Babbitt chose to partake in was a desperate attempt by a pro-Trump mob to keep him in the White House despite his first presidency ending in defeat to Joe Biden in the 2020 election. The attack has been linked to at least eight other deaths, including the suicides of police officers who were left traumatized after having defended the Capitol that day.

Babbitt’s social media activity showed that she was deeply engaged for months with a conspiracy theory that painted Democratic lawmakers as evil pedophiles with whom Trump was locked in mortal combat. She also believed lies from Trump and his allies that electoral fraudsters had handed Biden the 2020 election.

For weeks before she joined the mob in DC, Babbitt had been retweeting those false claims from Trump himself, as well as the pro-Trump lawyers Lin Wood and Sidney Powell, alleging massive voter fraud before his decisive electoral loss to Biden.

Trump then clinched a second presidency after defeating Kamala Harris in November’s election.

• This article was amended on 20 May 2025 to clarify that Ashli Babbit was seeking to force her way into the speaker’s lobby, not US House speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office.

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