Nancy Pelosi husband attack: Who is David DePape, suspected Paul Pelosi assailant?

David DePape, a 42-year-old from Berkeley, California, is accused of breaking into House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's home and beating her husband with a hammer.

David DePage, a 42-year-old with a concerning online presence and ties to a radical nudist activist, is accused of breaking into the San Francisco home of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi Friday morning and attacking her husband with a hammer, according to city police.

Officers arrested the Berkeley man after they responded to a call around 2:30 a.m. and encountered him and the congresswoman’s 82-year-old husband, Paul Pelosi, struggling over a hammer.

"The suspect pulled the hammer away from Mr. Pelosi and violently assaulted him with it," San Francisco Police Chief William Scott said during a news briefing later that morning. "Our officers immediately tackled the suspect, disarmed him, took him into custody, requested emergency backup and rendered medical aid."

Both Pelosi and DePape were taken to the hospital after the incident.

NANCY PELOSI'S HUSBAND PAUL PELOSI ATTACKED BY SUSPECT WHO SHOUTED ‘WHERE IS NANCY?’: SOURCE

The attack left Pelosi hospitalized, but he is expected to make a full recovery after undergoing successful surgery on a fractured skull, according to Drew Hammill, Nancy Pelosi’s spokesman. He also suffered serious injuries on his left arm and both hands.

Hammill said that DePape threatened Paul Pelosi’s life while demanding to see his wife.

The suspect allegedly broke into the house and began shouting "Where is Nancy?" sources told Fox News earlier in the day

"Mr. DePape will be booked at San Francisco County Jail on the following charges of attempted homicide, assault with a deadly weapon, elder abuse, burglary and several other additional felonies," the chief said.

The motive remained under investigation, he added. The FBI and Capitol Police were assisting.

PAUL PELOSI SAN FRANCISCO ATTACK: WHAT TO KNOW ABOUT VIOLENT HOME INVASION

DePape has been described on Twitter alternately as a far-right extremist and a nudist who sold handmade jewelry.

He also had ties to a Berkeley nudist activist named Gypsy Taub, according to California State Sen. Scott Wiener, D-San Francisco.

"She was the ringleader and she was extremely aggressive and creepy," Wiener told Fox News Digital Friday. "And I think he was one of the people in her work."

They weren't "regular" nudity activists either, he said. They were aggressive, and she embraced 9/11 denials and has a criminal past.

According to an Alameda County District Attorney’s Office press release from last summer, a woman named Oxane Taub who shared the address was convicted of more than 20 charges after stalking a 14-year-old boy she had become "fixated on" and attempted to kidnap.

"Over the course of 14 months, she sent him numerous obsessive emails, created blogs directed at him, used his friends to send him messages and eventually tried to abduct him a few blocks from his school in Berkeley," District Attorney Nancy O'Malley's office said at the time. "While the case was pending, Taub also tried to dissuade the victim from testifying."

Separate court filings show a 2017 lawsuit over Wiener's anti-nudity ordinance was filed by a plaintiff named Oxane "Gypsy" Taub.

The FBI arrived at Taub’s address Friday afternoon and asked a young man there about DePape. He told them DePape hadn’t been there in years.

Facebook disabled DePape's profile early Friday and declined to answer questions. At least two online blogs under DePape’s name are stocked with posts from the years of 2007 and 2022 speaking of "censorship," "Big Brother," and pedophiles. One contained calls for violence and antisemitic content. It was not immediately clear that he was responsible for the posts, and San Francisco police did not immediately respond to questions about DePape’s online presence.

Teresa DePape, the wife of the suspect’s adoptive father Gene, told the San Francisco Chronicle that he left Canada after high school, roughly two decades ago, and the family lost touch.

"I never thought of David as a violent person," she told the paper. "I can see David defending himself – why he’s in somebody’ else’s house looking for someone, I don’t know."

CONGRESSIONAL LAWMAKERS AGHAST AFTER PELOSI'S HUSBAND ATTACKED DURING BREAK IN

The Pelosi’s $8.4 million townhouse is located in an upscale area patrolled by the San Francisco Police Department's Northern Station, which saw a 4.3% uptick in total crime for the region year-to-date as of Oct. 23, police records show. Violent crime for the Northern Station was up 5.2% in the same period, compared to the prior year.

Fox News’ Adam Sabes, Stephanie Pagones and David Spunt contributed to this report.

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