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Rosanne Boyland, Trump supporter who died, followed QAnon conspiracy, family says

KENNESAW, Ga. — Before she died in Wednesday’s siege at the U.S. Capitol, Rosanne Boyland was a recovering drug addict who wanted to become a sobriety counselor. But she also believed, wrongly, that President Donald Trump won the November election, and she’d begun following a dark conspiracy theory that has circulated online, her family said.

“It just spiraled,” her sister, Lonna Cave, said Friday outside her home in suburban Atlanta.

Boyland, 34, was one of three people who died of medical emergencies when a pro-Trump mob, egged on by the president, stormed the Capitol as Congress was certifying President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. A fourth person was fatally shot by police and an officer was also killed.

Brian Sicknick:Capitol Police officer who died after pro-Trump riot was veteran and war critic

Who were they?:Three people died from medical emergencies on Capitol grounds Wednesday

Cave said the family has heard conflicting accounts of what happened to Boyland. A friend who was with her said Boyland was pinned to the ground and trampled during a violent clash between rioters and police. But Capitol police said Boyland, a Kennesaw resident, collapsed in the Capitol Rotunda and could not be saved.

According to the police incident report, officers responding to a call of a medical emergency “were led into the Capitol Rotunda where they observed two members of the United States Capitol Police performing CPR.” Witnesses told the officers that Boyland had “collapse(d)” during the protest demonstrations. Emergency responders did lifesaving efforts on the scene and then transported her to a local hospital, where she was pronounced dead, according to police.

The police report suggests Boyland collapsed around 5 p.m., approximately three hours after rioters first breached police lines on the west side of the Capitol. By that time, crowds were dispersing, and law enforcement was clearing the area.

Cave said her sister had no intention of committing violence when she traveled to Washington. The family had begged her not to go.

“She promised me, ‘I’m going to stand on the sidelines. I’m just going to show my support,’ ” Cave told The Associated Press.

Boyland was arrested multiple times on drug offenses, but had been sober for several years and found new purpose in politics, Nicholas Stamathis, a friend of hers from Kennesaw, told AP.

“She got clean and sober and stopped blaming other people for her problems and got real conservative,” Stamathis said of his friend, whom he called “Rosie.”

She attended meetings of an addiction group in Atlanta and picked up her young nieces every day from school, her sister said.

The deadly insurrection led Boyland’s brother-in-law, Justin Cave, to call for Trump’s removal from office.

“My own personal belief is that I believe that the president’s words and rhetoric incited a riot (Wednesday) that killed four of his biggest fans,” said Cave, a former host of the HGTV show “Ground Breakers.”

The sisters also clashed over Boyland’s political views and the QAnon myth, which includes wild allegations of a child sex ring. Boyland had begun following the conspiracy theory over the past six months, Lonna Cave said.

Boyland explored its baseless accusations that online furniture retailer Wayfair was part of the fictional ring, her sister said, and her faith in conspiracies spiraled from there.

“She would text me some things, and I would be like, ‘Let me fact-check that.’ And I’d sit there and I’d be like, ‘Well, I don’t think that’s actually right,’” Lonna Cave, 39, said. “We got in fights about it, arguments.”

Boyland’s Facebook page featured photos and videos praising Trump and promoting fantasies, including one theory that a shadowy group was using the coronavirus to steal elections. The account posted several times a day and voiced support for Project Veritas, a far-right activist group.

“I am shocked by the mounting evidence of 2020 Election fraud,” the account wrote Jan. 2. Two days earlier, the account shared a tweet from Rudy Guiliani claiming that the election had been stolen from Trump.

The account profile image is a green frog wearing sunglasses. The account shared images of “Pepe Lives Matter” tweets – a frog meme that has proliferated in online venues such as 4chan, 8chan and Reddit.

While they hadn’t seen each other in years, Stamathis said they chatted over Facebook Messenger regularly. A week or two ago, they had traded memes “of liberals losing their mind” online.

“Making fun of liberals together, we bonded over that a lot,” he said.

Boyland’s friend, Justin Winchell, said Boyland was pinned to the ground when bodies of police and protesters pushed against each other. People began falling and then trampling one another, Winchell told WGCL-TV in Atlanta.

“I put my arm underneath her and was pulling her out and then another guy fell on top of her, and another guy was just walking (on top of her),” Winchell said. “There were people stacked two- to three-deep … people just crushed.

The two others who died of medical emergencies are Kevin Greeson, 55, of Athens, Alabama and Benjamin Philips, 50, of Ringtown, Pennsylvania. Ashli Babbitt, 35, of San Diego, was fatally shot by police as she tried to climb through the broken window of a barricaded doorway inside the Capitol.

Capitol Police Officer Brian D. Sicknick was hit in the head with a fire extinguisher, according to law enforcement officials who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the ongoing investigation publicly. He died at a hospital.

Boyland’s final post on Twitter — a retweet of a post from Dan Scavino, the White House social media director — was a picture of thousands of people surrounding the Washington Monument on Wednesday. The photo was taken before Trump, in a speech there, repeated his unfounded claims of election fraud and incited demonstrators to go to the Capitol as lawmakers debated the electoral votes.

Boyland’s family has received multiple threats since her death. They blame Trump for the violence, believing she got caught up in the president’s lies about the election.

“It cost her her life,” Lonna Cave said.

Contributing: Ryan Miller and Grace Hauck, USA TODAY

Dazio reported from Los Angeles and Martin from Marietta, Georgia.

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