Investigators found no evidence of undercover FBI employees at the Capitol, but the presence of FBI informants could further fuel right-wing “fedsurrection” conspiracy theories.
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WASHINGTON — The FBI failed to take the “basic step” of canvassing its field offices for intelligence ahead of the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol, according to a long-awaited Justice Department’s inspector general report released Thursday.
FBI Deputy Director Paul Abbate told investigators that the lack of a canvass was a “basic step that was missed” and that he would have expected it to have occurred, the inspector general’s office said.
The inspector general did find that the FBI “recognized the potential for violence” and took “significant and appropriate steps” even though it played “only a supporting role in preparing for and responding to” the events of Jan. 6.
The report also includes details that will almost certainly fuel the “fedsurrection” narrative that has been growing on the right and among Donald Trump supporters: the false notion that the federal government was responsible for instigating the attack.
While the review found “no evidence in the materials we reviewed or the testimony we received showing or suggesting that the FBI had undercover employees in the various protest crowds, or at the Capitol, on January 6,” the inspector general’s office said 26 confidential human sources, or CHSes, were in Washington that day. None of them were “authorized by the FBI to enter the Capitol or a restricted area or to otherwise break the law on January 6, nor was any CHS directed by the FBI to encourage others to commit illegal acts on January 6,” the inspector general said.
Four FBI confidential human sources entered the Capitol, according to the inspector general, one of whom testified at the Proud Boys trial in which several members of the far-right group were found guilty of seditious conspiracy. A total of 13 confidential human sources entered the restricted area around the Capitol, the inspector general’s report said, while the remaining nine never entered the Capitol or restricted areas. Only three of the 26 FBI confidential human sources had specifically “been tasked by FBI field offices to report on specific domestic terrorism case subjects who were possibly attending the events of January 6,” while the 23 others attended “on their own initiative and were not tasked by FBI field offices to attend the events,” the report said.