From left: Michael Fanone and Rep. Andrew Clyde.Photo: Tom Williams/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images; Bill Clark/CQ-Roll Call, Inc via Getty Images

Officer Michael Fanone & Rep. Andrew Clyde

A Metropolitan Police officer who was injured during theJan. 6 insurrectionat the U.S. Capitol was shocked and “befuddled” on Wednesday, after a Republican congressman refused to shake his hand during an elevator ride together, his friend tells PEOPLE.

Officer Michael FanonetoldThe Washington Postthat Rep. Andrew Clyde “turned away” from him during an awkward interaction inside an elevator at the Capitol building.

Fanone was “amused and angry all at once,” according to former Rep. Denver Riggleman, who spoke with the officer after the incident.

Riggleman tells PEOPLE he became friends with Fanone after the Jan. 6 attack and spoke with him on the phone after the alleged incident, which made headlines Thursday and drew widespread criticism towards Clyde, 57, for ignoring the officer.

“It’s hard to understand why elected representatives won’t shake the hand of an individual who got dragged, beaten and had a heart attack while there to protect them,” Riggleman says.

D.C. Metropolitan Police officer Mike Fanone.Sarah L. Voisin/The Washington Post via Getty

Mike Fanone

Fanone told thePostthat he introduced himself to Clyde and told him about his injuries after the GOP lawmaker claimed he didn’t know who Fanone was when he extended the handshake.

Clyde was one of 21 Republican lawmakers on Wednesday who voted against awarding Congressional Gold Medals to three officers, including Fanone, who responded to the Jan. 6 attack.

Fanone says he doesn’t doubt Clyde knew who he was when he and U.S. Capitol Police Officer Harry Dunn got inside the elevator with him.

When the Republican lawmaker did not reach out to accept the handshake, Fanone says he asked the congressman: “I’m sorry, you’re not going to shake my hand?”

Fanone says Clyde then responded, saying, “I don’t know who you are,” which prompted the officer to introduce himself in detail.

Fanone says he told Clyde about suffering a concussion and a mild heart attack during the insurrection, but “his response was nothing.”

“He turned away from me, pulled out his cellphone and started thumbing through the apps,” Fanone said.

“It’s horrific,” Riggleman says. Other members of the Republican Party relayed their disgust over the reported incident.

“It really is crazy, but when you knowingly downplay something and then [you’re] placed in the presence of a hero, it certainly can be awkward,” Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a Republican, tells PEOPLE. “This isn’t going away, so maybe just start telling the truth.”

Kinzinger, 43, tweeted Wednesday that Clyde and the other Republican lawmakers' decision to vote against awarding Fanone and the other officers with medals was “shameful and embarrassing.”

Kinzinger said he spoke with Fanone on Wednesday after the alleged handshake snub, as well. Riggleman tells PEOPLE he and Fanone plan to meet up and grab a drink together in Washington, D.C., on Thursday.

“He still laughs,” Riggleman says, “But he went through a very traumatic event.”

source: people.com