State capitols boarded up, fenced off, patrolled by troops

A double row of chain-link fencing circles the Arizona State Capitol. Windows on the Illinois and Ohio
statehouses have been boarded up. National Guard troops in camouflage and flak jackets and heavily armed
state troopers were stationed at state capitals across the U.S. in advance of protests planned for
Sunday.
With the FBI warning of potential for violence at all state capitols, the ornate halls of government and
symbols of democracy looked more like heavily guarded U.S. embassies in war-torn countries.
Governors have declared states of emergency, closed capitols to the public and called up troops ahead of
President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration next week.
They are trying to avoid a repeat of the mob rioting that occurred Jan. 6, when supporters of outgoing
President Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol, leaving a Capitol Police officer and four others dead.

Details were vague, but demonstrations were expected at state capitols beginning Sunday and leading up to
Biden taking the oath of the office Wednesday.
Signs of ramped-up security were in abundance from Atlanta to Sacramento, California, throughout the
week.
SWAT officers stood guard at the Georgia State Capitol. A bomb-detecting dog sniffed its way through the
capitol in Jackson, Mississippi. State troopers were poised on the roof of the Ohio Statehouse in
Columbus. Sections of temporary fencing that encircled many state capitols were locked together in
Sacramento with handcuffs.
National Guard troops patrolled the California Capitol and streets of downtown Sacramento on Saturday.