Four days after Capitol Policeman Brian D. Sicknick was beaten to death fighting rioters in Congress hallways, President Trump has yet to order the flags to be flown against half the employees in federal buildings, according to several reports.
Trump has also yet to contact the Sicknick family, the New York Times reported.
Vice President Mike Pence, meanwhile, called the family to offer condolences, the Times noted.
Sicknick, 42, was hit in the head by a fire extinguisher while responding to the riots and later died of his injuries, officials said.
Flags on the Capitol building itself were lowered on Friday by a directive from Mayor Nancy Pelosi, but Trump did not issue the same order for federal buildings under his supervision, according to Times reports and MSNBC.
Meanwhile, Trump and Pence haven’t spoken since Wednesday.
Pence is said to be furious because Trump made him the target of Wednesday’s enraged crowd that invaded the Capitol while Pence oversaw the process of certifying Congressional elections.
Sicknick, a native of South River, New Jersey, was the youngest of three brothers and had long dreamed of becoming a police officer, his family said.
He joined the National Guard six months after graduating from Middlesex County Vocational and Technical School in East Brunswick in 1997.