Sund’s account forces a painful reexamination of how security decisions were made before and during January 6. He describes a system where he could see the threat forming, formally request National Guard support, and still be powerless without the Capitol Police Board’s approval. That board, tied into congressional leadership, became the bottleneck at the worst possible moment, as officers on the ground faced escalating violence with too little support.
After the chaos, authorizations flowed quickly, and troops flooded the Capitol complex. The contrast is what lingers: why decisive action only came after the damage was done. Sund isn’t offering a simple villain or a convenient scapegoat. Instead, he points to a structure that diffuses accountability so thoroughly that no one clearly “owns” the failure. His story doesn’t erase other mistakes or motives, but it demands that Washington confront the quiet machinery of authority that failed when seconds mattered.