Senate trial resumes after dinner break
The impeachment trial continues after the Senate recessed for a dinner break. House impeachment managers will continue to deliver arguments.
Biden remembered those who were killed and called for unity going forward.
Former President Donald Trump's historic second impeachment trial ended with a 57-43 vote to acquit in the Senate. He faced a single charge of incitement of insurrection over his actions leading up to the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol.
The impeachment trial continues after the Senate recessed for a dinner break. House impeachment managers will continue to deliver arguments.
The timestamp on security footage presented by House impeachment managers shows Vice President Mike Pence being evacuated from the Senate chamber at 2:26:02 p.m.
Trump, meanwhile at the White House, posted an attack on Pence to Twitter just two minutes earlier at 2:24 p.m.

"Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our Country and our Constitution, giving States a chance to certify a corrected set of facts, not the fraudulent or inaccurate ones which they were asked to previously certify. USA demands the truth!" Trump tweeted, while the Capitol building was still under attack.
House impeachment managers in arguments on Wednesday sought to lay out a comprehensive timeline of the Capitol attack.

-ABC News' Benjamin Siegel
Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer briefly spoke to reporters during the Senate dinner break following House impeachment managers playing security footage from inside the Capitol and showing Schumer's "near miss" with the mob.
"I don't think many of us feel like eating dinner," Schumer said at first, acknowledging the break. "It was gut wrenching. The bravery of our police officers is incredible. It was compelling. And I just hope that our Republican colleagues have an open mind as they look to seeing what we've seen today."
He called the House managers' case "overwhelmingly compelling" and offered a few words signaling to his own close call.
"As for me, in my situation, I just want to give tremendous credit to the Capitol Police officers who are in my detail. Like the rest of the Capitol Police officers, they are utterly amazing and great, and we love them."
-ABC News' Trish Turner
Republican Sen. Lisa Murkowski of Alaska called the evidence presented by House impeachment managers "damning" and told reporters during the Senate trial's dinner break Wednesday, "I don't see how Donald Trump could be reelected to the presidency again."
"I'm angry. I'm disturbed. I'm sad," said Murkowski, who is in the minority of Senate Republicans. "We lived it once and that was awful. And we're now we're now reliving it within a more comprehensive timeline."
"I know what I was feeling in the Senate chamber when I could hear those voices. I knew what it meant to be running down this hallway with my colleagues. I wasn't fully aware of everything else that was happening in the building and so when you see all the pieces come together, just the total awareness of that the enormity of this, the threat -- not just to us as people, as lawmakers, but the threat to the institution and what Congress represents -- it's disturbing."
"I think that the House managers are making a very strong case for a timeline that laid out very clearly, with the words that were used, when he used them, how he used them to really build the anger, the violence that we saw here," she continued.
Asked if she was concerned with the Senate not acting and barring Trump from running for office again, she said she doesn't see how he could be reelected, citing the House managers' evidence.
"Frankly I don't see how -- I don't see how after the American public sees the full story laid out here," she said. "I just, I don't see how Donald Trump could be reelected to the presidency again."
She also said she's under no pressure from leadership to vote a certain way and feels free to vote her conscience. Murkowski did not vote to convict Trump at his last impeachment trial. She did join five other Republicans Tuesday in voting to affirm the trial was constitutional.
-ABC News' Trish Turner