TruthArchive.ai - Tweets Saved By @InvestigateJ6

Saved - December 13, 2025 at 2:07 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I claim that on Jan 6, 2021, DC authorities answered Trump’s 12:16 PM order to “march peacefully” by firing into the crowd for hours, without warning. I believe the Capitol security failure was engineered to entrap hundreds of thousands to install Biden and overthrow Trump. J6 was an attack on America, a final color-revolution plot; four peaceful protesters were killed and thousands injured. I see civil rights victims and DOJ actions as abusive, demanding recompense for J6 patriots.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 1 PM on JANUARY 6 2021, DC authorities responded to PRESIDENT TRUMP's 12:16 PM EXECUTIVE ORDER to "march peacefully to the US CAPITOL" by shooting into the crowd relentlessly without warning or instruction for hours. The security failure at the Capitol was engineered to entrap hundreds of thousands of Americans, to install Joe Biden and overthrow of the elected US President Donald J. Trump. J6 was an attack on America. It was the final plot in the color revolution overthrowing the United States. 4 peaceful protesters were killed by police, thousands were injured. The Biden regime and many currently employed DOJ Assistant US Attorneys spent 4 years trying to destroy civil rights victims who traveled to Washington DC on January 6 2021 to stand up for their country, and for the law, the US CONSTITUTION, and were entrapped and abused. Trump DOJ, especially Civil Rights, silence on this matter is disturbing. Recompense the J6 patriots! 🇺🇸 @realDonaldTrump @AAGDhillon @USAEdMartin @DAGToddBlanche @ChadMizelle47 @AGPamBondi @FBIDDBongino @FBIDirectorKash @Sec_Noem @SecDef @CIADirector @DNIGabbard @joekent16jan19 @PressSec @MargoMartin47 @StevenCheung47 @StephenM @Scavino47 @SusieWiles @RealPNavarro @Pfeiffer47 @KushDesai47 @Taylor47 @Kaelan47 @TaylorRogers47 @LizHuston47 @AnnaKelly47 @HFields47 @TriciaOhio @JakeSchneider47 @CivilRights @WhiteHouse @RapidResponse47 @DODResponse @GOPoversight @Weaponization @DOGE_DOJ @DOGE_DHS @JusticeOIG @DHSgov see: @InvestigateJ6 highlights! + rumble videos & http://InvestigateJ6.org 🇺🇸

Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript covers the January 6, 2021 events at the Capitol, detailing the sequence from the march to the Capitol to the initially escalating and then intensified police response. - At the outset, a speaker calls on Congress to confront an “egregious assault on our democracy,” and asserts that the crowd will walk down to the Capitol to demand that Congress “only count the electors who have been lawfully slated.” A promise is made that participants will march to the Capitol “peacefully and patriotically” to have their voices heard. - Around 12:30 PM, a large group is seen heading toward the Capitol from eastbound Pennsylvania Avenue. A speaker notes that President Trump “won’t be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another forty minutes.” There is mention that Mike Pence “has to agree to send it back.” - By 12:45 PM, footage shows a wall of people arriving about a block west of the Capitol, gathering at Peace Circle where Pennsylvania Avenue ends and becomes Pennsylvania Walkway, leading to the West Side of the Capitol. A security camera view from the exterior dome shows the crowd rapidly filling the area in front of the West Plaza, with those entering Capitol grounds potentially seeing no prior warnings or barriers. - Inside the Capitol, Vice President Mike Pence enters the House chamber to convene the joint session to certify electoral votes, while President Donald Trump continues speaking at the Ellipse, seemingly unaware of the crowd at the Capitol. Outside, DC Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less-lethal team into position. - A sequence of tactical movements follows: a request for less-lethal teams to move up from the Upper West Terrace and an elevated position being prepared. The team is described as “not compliant.” Less-lethal munitions are discussed, with multiple warnings reportedly given, though some warnings are not captured on video. - President Trump finishes his speech at the Ellipse around 01:12 PM. A split-screen view shows simultaneous events in real time. - A separate exchange references the objection from Arizona, with “Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator?” answered “Yes. It is.” Representatives Gosar and Senator Ted Cruz then make a challenge on the floor of the House. - At 01:13 PM, MPD officer Daniel Thou arrives at the southwest plaza with a body camera showing him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. By 01:15 PM, Thou crosses the line, engages with demonstrators, discharges two rounds from his taser (ECD), and then urges others to “start shooting what they have into the crowd.” - The less-lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time at 01:17 PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers arrives on the East Side of the Capitol, bringing explosive ammunition rounds that will be distributed to West Plaza officers. Officer Tara Tindle crouches on the ground, readying CS gas rounds. A scene commander authorizes explosive deployment into the crowd. - By 01:30 PM, officers push the crowd back and establish a police line on the Southwest side, which is held for about an hour. Officers deploy “Steamboat” rounds and other munitions as the crowd is contained. - Around 01:32 PM, an officer laments that throwing grenades into the crowd will make things worse, but moments later another officer seems to change course and reaches for additional munitions. Discussions about using triple chasers and the risks of fire are noted, with one officer being reprimanded for earlier smoke deployment. - A captain directs Officer Thao to hold off discharging CS gas, while Thao acquires a Stinger round and a baton round to fire into the crowd. At 02:18 PM, a tense officer-to-officer exchange reveals acknowledgment that innocent people are being affected, with one officer stating, “Nothing's gonna help… we're taking out one and ten of them are getting way easier,” and that the crowd is being multiplied by being hit.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down. We're gonna walk down to the capital. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol Building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 1: At 12:30PM, the US Capitol Police report, a very large group heading to the Capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue. Speaker 2: Those look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading east. Speaker 1: President Trump won't be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another forty minutes. Speaker 0: Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 1: At 12:45PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the capital. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle, where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway. A path that leads directly to the West Side of the capital. Looking over the West Side of the capital from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the West Plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol Grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. Inside the capital, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the capital. Back outside on the West Plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 2: Unit six, I need less lethal teams. They can come up from Speaker 3: the Upper West Terrace. They're taking an elevated position. They are not compliant, climbing the staff way. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 1: One minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 01:06PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Speaker 3: I need more of the infested legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still noncompliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, chemical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 1: Although chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least three clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system, as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 01:12PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the capital in real time. Speaker 0: So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is a time. Thank you very much. Speaker 1: Ballot from Arizona. Speaker 2: Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Speaker 0: Yes. It is. Speaker 1: As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thou arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. At 01:13PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 2: Hey. Hey, capital. Hey. We need blasts. What do we got? I'm hanging. We gotta get something, man. Come on. Gotta go. Speaker 1: At 01:15PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges two rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the West Terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. Speaker 2: We need that. Let's go. Let's shoot him. Thao. Shut him. Shut the Let's Speaker 3: take him out. Speaker 1: The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 01:17PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the East Side of the capital. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on the West Plaza. Officer Tara Tindle is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Scene commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Around 01:30PM on the Southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Speaker 2: Steamboat deployed. Steamboat deployed. 700 Speaker 3: Steamboat deployed. 38 for ice cream. Speaker 1: At 01:32PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just going to make things worse. Speaker 2: It's just gonna make it worse. Hey, stop. Hold. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 1: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 2: I'm coming out with smoke. I got the burner by the way. Speaker 1: A burner or a hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 2: I need triple chasers. Speaker 1: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Speaker 2: Got a triple chaser on hold. Yeah. I know, but this is triple chaser. You're escalating. I know, but this is splitting. I mean, if you got better. Another Speaker 1: captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 1: Back on the West Plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. I need a round. Speaker 0: UPS. Yes. Speaker 1: Thirty seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 02:18PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 2: Nothing's gonna help. We're we're we're Right. We're We're not upset. We'll get hit with a lot of pain to fly. And and not only that, we're taking out one and ten of them are getting way easier. It's it's We're multiplying them by hitting them.
Home Watch: investigatej6.org
Saved - December 13, 2025 at 1:58 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

J6: A True Timeline The True Timeline of January 6th is Here! WATCH FREE: New Years Day 2024 https://open.ink/collections/j6 #J6TrueTimeline

Video Transcript AI Summary
The transcript presents a detailed narrative and timeline of January 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol, emphasizing the sequence of events, key actors, and the evolving security dynamic as the day unfolded. - Preceding the day, hundreds of peaceful rallies followed the November 2020 election. Polls showed concern about election irregularities in key states; none of these rallies were violent. On January 6, crowds gathered around multiple areas in Washington, DC, with the Ellipse hosting President Trump’s speech, and other groups assembling on the West and East sides of the Capitol and nearby locations. The mood of the crowd at morning events is described as joyful and hopeful, viewing it as the last chance to see the president’s national address. - Around 11:41 AM, Ryan Samsell (spelled Samsal in some segments) crosses an intersection with officers; Michael Sherwin, the acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, is seen crossing the same intersection and would later lead investigations of Samsel and others. Four minutes later, officers respond to a report of a gun and question a person with a knife; he is released after it is determined there is no firearm. - Trump’s speech timeline: at about 15 minutes into his remarks, Trump mentions that after the speech they will walk to the Capitol. He says, “we’re gonna walk down to the capital,” and reiterates a call to count only lawfully slated electors. He suggests marching “peacefully and patriotically.” Fifteen minutes into his remarks, a group including Proud Boys is seen heading toward the Capitol, flanked by DC Metropolitan Police. - The crowd moves: about 12:04 PM, demonstrators including Proud Boys walk west on Constitution Avenue toward 1st Street, flanked by police. A lunch stop occurs around 12:30 PM as the group, previously flanked, appears to pause near the Department of Labor. - By 12:35-12:36 PM, Pence’s motorcade arrives at the Capitol, in advance of the 1 PM certification. A crowd already forms at barricades on the East Plaza as Pence arrives. Shortly after, Trump’s remarks are referenced in real time as the Ellipse speech concludes. - The first major breach occurs as barricades are breached: Samsell (Samsel) is seen near a barricade; Ray Epps is observed directing demonstrators toward the Capitol. A barrier is pushed into the police line, knocking a police officer (Caroline Edwards) to the ground, initiating the first violent skirmish. - By 12:58 PM, a West Lawn fence is down; five Capitol Police officers guard the area behind barricades, while a Black ski-masked individual removes a barrier and leads crowds toward the West Lawn. Samsell and Epps are repeatedly seen near barricades as the crowd pushes forward. - A man named Benjamin Phillips collapses on the West Plaza around 12:59 PM; responders assist him, and he dies later that day. Inside the Capitol, Vice President Pence is in the House chamber for the electoral vote certification. - The Capitol Police deploy less-lethal munitions beginning around 1:06 PM. At 1:12 PM, Trump finishes his Ellipse remarks; a split-screen real-time view shows concurrent events around the Capitol. At 1:13 PM, Officer Thao requests more munitions and later fires a Taser (ECD). The first use of a chemical agent is reported, and the crowd’s advance continues toward the interior. - By 1:21 PM, the first explosive munition is discharged; rubber bullets, tear gas, and incendiaries hit the crowd in rapid succession for about an hour. At 1:28 PM, a man collapses; CPR is attempted. A person named Roseanne Boylan later dies from injuries sustained in the crush. - The West Plaza portion of the Capitol sees a collapse of the police line; by 1:38–1:41 PM, Trump tweets urging peace; Ray Epps is frequently seen near the front lines as demonstrators enter the West Plaza area and push past police barriers. - Around 1:50 PM, CS gas is deployed in the Northwest side, causing police to retreat; demonstrators advance toward the Capitol interior. A key development: the West Terrace tunnel becomes a focal point as police retreat behind double doors, shortening the line and creating a bottleneck for the crowd. - By 2:16–2:18 PM, doors to the Capitol open from the inside, and MPD reinforcements begin to arrive. The Senate and House debate on the Arizona electoral objection continues as demonstrators move through the building, including into the Senate chamber where desks and the dais are examined. - At 2:24 PM, Trump tweets that Pence lacked the courage to do what should have been done to protect the country, which later drew attention from investigators. A misfire of CS gas by a DC officer leads to a dispersal collapse of the West Plaza line, and the crowd surges into the Capitol interior. - In the Capitol Rotunda and Senate chamber, demonstrators roam and occupy spaces; Jacob Chanceley is seen in the Senate chamber, and threats to security escalate as officers and demonstrators contend in multiple locations. - At 3:19 PM, police expel demonstrators from the tunnel; a US Capitol Police officer is dragged into the crowd but returns to the line. By 4:17 PM, Trump posts a one-minute video urging peaceful departure; Twitter adds a warning label and later removes the video. - At 5 PM, curfew is announced; tear gas is used to drive remaining demonstrators from upper levels; National Guard troops begin to arrive. At 8 PM, the Capitol is declared secure, and the session resumes later that night with the Arizona vote certification. - The narration closes with a reflection on the day’s legacy, noting that fourteen days later, Joe Biden would be inaugurated, and asking whether the public’s understanding of January 6 has progressed toward a fuller timeline and context.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 01/06/2021. Washington DC. The US Capitol Building. An event that has been reported on more than any other in modern history. Despite excessive coverage, articles, books, documentaries, and congressional inquiries, Many details about the timeline of events that day remain unknown to the public. Understanding what actually happened on January 6 without bias and with as much context as possible is extremely difficult. News organizations and mass media have controlled the story of that day. Big tech and social media companies have censored, shadow banned, and de platformed eyewitness accounts, which further skews and misrepresents the truth from that day. Many of us still do not know the names of those who were killed at the capital and the causes of their deaths. This video seeks to create a thorough and truthful timeline of the events of is the motivation for this timeline. Prior to 01/06/2021, there had been a hundreds of peaceful rallies following the November twenty twenty election. Polls showed that many Americans were concerned with election irregularities in key states that ended up deciding the presidential election for Joe Biden. None of these rallies ever turned violent. The morning of January 6 started no different than any of those other rallies. American citizens showing up together to express their first amendment protected right to petition their government with a meaningful concern. The mood of the crowd appeared to be joyful and hopeful. It would be the last chance to see the president give a large speech to the nation. To properly understand the events that would soon unfold, it's important to acknowledge that there were many areas of interest that day where crowds were congregating. Those attending president Trump's speech assembled at the Ellipse, a 52 acre park located directly south of the White House and approximately one mile from the capital. Space was limited there and the crowd was so big that a sea of people extended all the way to the Washington Monument. Elsewhere in Washington DC, crowds would assemble in the morning at both the West and the East side of the capital. Still others would loiter in the vicinity to await the next event that would take place that day, of which there were multiple permit holders in the area. At 11:41AM, Ryan Samsall, a man who will later be pivotal in the first breach of the capital, crosses the street past multiple uniformed officers. Seconds later, the acting US attorney for the District Of Columbia, Michael Sherwin, wearing plain clothes, is seen crossing the same intersection. Sherwin would go on to lead the investigations of Samsel and hundreds of others. Four minutes later, the same officer whose body cam recorded that interaction is moving through the crowd responding to a call of a person with a gun. The crowd is compliant as the officers move through the space. They reach their intended target, and after a few minutes of questioning, let the man go. He had no firearm and was only carrying a knife. Speaker 1: Someone saw that handle and Speaker 2: thought it was a handgun. Speaker 1: Oh, yeah. This is my car. Okay? There's no way. Any questions or issues? Speaker 3: Not show the magnitude of this crowd. Even I when I turned on today, I looked and I saw thousands of people here, but you don't see hundreds of thousands of people behind you because they don't wanna show that. Speaker 0: The president gave a speech that morning that was very similar in tone and in style to the many campaign speeches and post election speeches he had given to audiences around the country. Speaker 1: I'm listening to the speech in my ear, thanks to Scott. Speaker 0: At the exact time that Trump begins his speech, a livestreamer is at Peace Circle at the precise location that the first Capitol barricade breach will occur fifty three minutes later. You can see the metal bike rack fencing separating the street from the sidewalks in front of the Capitol Building. These area closed signs were posted in compliance with a restriction that went into effect 09/07/2020 due to the construction of the inauguration stage. At 12:04PM, a group of demonstrators, including members of the Proud Boys, are seen walking west on Constitution Avenue toward 1st Street while being flanked by police officers from the DC Metropolitan Police Department. Speaker 4: And flanked by Speaker 3: the DC pinot. 63,000,000. Speaker 0: Fifteen minutes into his remarks, president Trump mentions for the first time that after his speech, the crowd will be walking to the capital. For context, let's hear the president's full remarks during this portion of his speech. Speaker 3: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down. We're gonna walk down anyone you want, but I think right here, we're gonna walk down to the capital. And we're gonna cheer on our brave senators and congressmen and women. And we're probably not gonna be cheering so much for some of them Because you'll never take back our country with weakness. You have to show strength and you have to be strong. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol Building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 0: Six minutes following these remarks, the group of proud boys and demonstrators seen previously being flanked by the DCMPD have stopped for lunch at a row of food trucks in front of the US Department of Labor on Constitution Avenue. Eddie Bloch, seen here in a scooter, tells a live streamer the immediate plans of the group. Speaker 4: Where where Speaker 5: are we headed? Speaker 6: Do we know? We're heading back to the route. Okay. Speaker 1: Was there was there nothing going on at the capital? Speaker 6: Not really. Not really. So We're just kinda marching around, letting people know we're here. Speaker 1: Okay. Good time. Yeah. Alright. Speaker 0: Six minutes after this interaction at 12:30PM, the US Capitol Police report a very large group heading to the Capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue at approximately 7th Street. Speaker 1: Cruiser 50, it does look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading east. Speaker 0: At the same time, police body cam records police intervening between Trump supporters and a counter protester. The police encourage the crowd to keep marching toward the capital. Speaker 1: Come on, guys. Let's keep the march going. Let's keep it going. Let's keep it going. President Speaker 0: Trump won't be finished speaking at the ellipse for another forty minutes. During this time, a man named Ray Epps was filmed on the streets directing the crowd to the Capitol Building. Speaker 1: As soon as president Trump is finished speaking, we are going to the Capitol in that direction. That's where our true problems lie. President Trump is done speaking. We are going to the capital. That's where our problem we are going to the capital where our problems are. It's that direction. Speaker 0: He was filmed the night prior, urging the crowd to go inside the capital. Speaker 7: I'm gonna put it out Speaker 1: that I'm probably gonna go to jail for it. Okay? Tomorrow, we need to go into the capital. Into the capital. Peacefully. The Speaker 0: crowd surrounding him instantly calls him out as a fed. At 12:35PM, Mike Pence's motorcade is seen heading to the capital, turning left on Constitution Avenue from Louisiana Avenue. Speaker 1: Arms don't stop. Anybody stay back. Stay back, please. Arms, let's go. Stay back. Speaker 0: A minute later, at 12:36, vice president Mike Pence arrives at The US capital. The vice president's motorcade has just arrived at the capital in advance of the joint session. The certification is to begin in twenty four minutes at 1PM eastern. As Mike Pence arrives, a crowd is already assembled at the barricades in front of the East Plaza of the capital. Mike Mike Pence. At this exact moment, president Trump is mentioning Mike Pence's upcoming certification at his speech on the Ellipse over a mile away. Speaker 3: But now they see all this stuff. It's all come to light. It doesn't happen that fast. And they wanna recertify their votes. They wanna recertify. But the only way that can happen is if Mike Pence agrees to send it back. Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 0: A minute later at 12:45PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the capital. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle, where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway, a path that leads directly to the West side of the capital. There are two sets of metal barricades here, behind which only five Capitol Police officers can be seen guarding this entrance, while every member of Congress convenes in the building behind them. Just south of this path, a man in a black ski mask removes a barrier and waves the crowd onto the West Lawn of the capital, while members in the crowd shout at him. With this view, you can see the moment that the first set of bike racks come down and the crowd begins to quickly advance on the second set of gates. Ryan Samsel, who we saw earlier in a white hoodie and red baseball cap, approaches the police line. This would become the first major breach of the Capitol Grounds and skirmish with Capitol Police. We will show this crucial interaction in its entirety and use multiple angles to see what happens at this all important flash point. Ray Epps, who we just saw calling for demonstrators to enter the capital, can be seen approaching the front of the barricades and speaking to Ryan Samsel. Moments later, the barricade is pushed directly into the police line. After the gate is forcefully pushed forward, US Capitol Police officer Caroline Edwards is knocked to the ground. Ryan Sampson immediately runs to her aid to help her get back on her feet. The first violent skirmish of the day between demonstrators and police had begun. President Trump remains speaking on the ellipse. Speaker 3: In Clark County, Nevada, the accuracy settings on signature verification regimes were purposely lowered before they were used to count over 130,000 ballots. If you signed your name as Santa Claus, it would go through. Speaker 0: Just to the south at the 1st Street Southwest in the Maryland Avenue Circle, demonstrators knocked down a second gate. Crowds are now advancing on the West Front of the capital from two locations. With multiple lightly manned police barricades down, the enlivened crowd makes their way quickly to the next barrier, the metal gates in front of the West Plaza of the capital. Samsall can be seen tapping the shoulder of officer Edwards and saying something to her. Looking over the West Side of the capital from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the West Plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol Grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. At 12:58PM, the lightweight fencing on the West Lawn is pulled down completely by a single person. It is on this fence that signs with the words area closed are affixed. Thousands of people who will walk up to the capital after 1PM will never see these signs. Zooming in closer to the northwest corner of the plaza, we once again see Ray Epps at the head of the crowd in front of the next set of police barricades. So far, we've seen him the previous day calling for the crowd to enter the capital. We saw him that morning directing people to the capital. We saw him at the first gate reach, and now here he is at the second major gate reach, and it won't be the last we see of him. Directly in front of him is where the crowd reaches the metal gates and enters onto the West Plaza of the capital. At 12:59PM, a man on the Northwest sidewalk collapses. Speaker 6: Can you please have someone respond to my location? AT and The bottom of the west front was an individual that's down here unconscious and not brief. Speaker 0: The man's name is Benjamin Phillips. He is a computer programmer from Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania who traveled to DC to support president Trump. A crowd of people, including police officers, form around him to assist with life saving measures. While Benjamin Phillips fights for his life outside, inside the capital, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the capital. Speaker 3: Clear evidence that tens of thousands of votes were switched from president Trump to former vice president Biden. Speaker 5: Madam speaker, members of congress, pursuant to the constitution and the laws of The United States, the senate and house of representatives meeting in joint session to verify the certificates and count the votes of the electors of the several states for president and vice president of The United States. Speaker 0: Back outside on the West Plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Wal do orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 1: Unit six, I need less lethal teams. They could come up from the upper west stairs and take an elevated position. They're not compliant, climbing the staff lane. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 0: One minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 01:06PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Speaker 1: Unit six, I got a crowd fighting with officer, pushing, throwing projectiles. I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need the less than lethal team positioned above me to identify the agitators and start deploying. Launch. Launch. Launch. Speaker 0: Launch. US Capitol Police inspector Lloyd is seen signaling officers above on the terrace to open fire on the crowd. Joshua Matthew Black, a 46 year old man from Alabama, is shot with a round that tears open and lodges in his cheek. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Speaker 1: I was at the front line trying to keep the peace between the patriots and the people that were hired by the government. And I I caught a shot in the face, and then that's about it. Speaker 0: Deputy chief Waldo orders a second deployment of munitions. Speaker 1: Six high copy. I need more lead less than lethal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still non compliant. We've continued to give I've continued to give multiple warnings about chemical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 0: Although chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least three clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system, as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse, and a clear safe route for dispersal. Just feet away, Benjamin Phillips fights for his life. He has been down on the ground and not breathing for thirteen minutes. Speaker 1: 01:30. Where's the ambulance for this guy on the Lower West? Speaker 0: President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 01:12PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the capital in real time. Speaker 3: So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is incredible. Speaker 1: Thank you very Speaker 8: ballot from Arizona. Speaker 5: Is the and signed by a Speaker 1: senator? Yes, it is. Speaker 0: As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thou arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. From a different officer's body cam, the familiar face of Ray Epps can be seen in the area that the police are trying to control. Back in the real time multi view, we can see Trump waving to the crowd after his one hour and eleven minute speech, the last speech he will give in front of a crowd as president of The United States. Gosar and Cruz are having their objections to the electoral vote of Arizona read on the house floor. Ray Epps is at the front of the police line speaking to officers. Speaker 1: Appreciate you. At Speaker 0: 01:13PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 1: Capital. Hey. We need blast positions. What do we got? I'm panicking. We gotta get something, man. Come on. We gotta go. At Speaker 0: 01:15PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges two rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. Speaker 1: True ECD to blunt. True Speaker 0: He then witnesses what he calls an APO or an assault on a police officer. Speaker 1: APO, felony. With Speaker 0: 30 officers between him and the crowd, it's unclear what assault he thought he saw in that moment. A few 100 feet away, back on the northwest sidewalk, Benjamin Phillips has been loaded onto a makeshift stretcher and is being carried north to a waiting ambulance. Speaker 1: Hello, sir. They are bringing the patient up to the ambulance right now. They are refusing to come down. Speaker 0: Tragically, Phillips would be pronounced dead at the hospital later that day. Benjamin Phillips leaves behind two teenage children. Back inside the Capitol Building at 01:17PM, vice president Mike Pence and senators return to the senate chamber to debate the electoral vote challenge put forth by representative Paul Gosar. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the West Terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. Speaker 1: Damn it. We need that. Let's go. Just shoot it. Go. Shoot. Shoot the. Speaker 0: The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. Three minutes later, at 01:21PM, the first explosive munition of the day is discharged. The demonstrators at the West Plaza of the capital will be hit by an unrelenting barrage of grenades, incendiaries, rubber bullets, and gas for the next hour. At 01:28PM, a man has collapsed on the West Plaza and is attended to by people in the crowd. Speaker 1: They can't get anybody in here Speaker 7: and the cops are throwing flashbangs into the crowd. Speaker 0: He is unresponsive for several minutes. Fearing the risk of trampling, they carry him to a different location, where they continue to try to resuscitate him. Speaker 1: He's been He's having Speaker 7: a heart attack. He's been on the for six minutes. They carried him. They've been doing CPR. I think that man probably died. Speaker 4: I hope they saved his life. Speaker 0: Kevin Greeson leaves behind a wife and five children. Around 01:30PM, on the southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Just inside the capital, representative Zoe Lofgren, Democrat from California, is responding to the challenge of the electoral count. Speaker 9: The votes are simply to be counted as certified and transmitted by the states. Speaker 0: At 01:32PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just going to make things worse. Speaker 6: We're just gonna make it worse. Worse. Speaker 1: Hey. Stop. Hold. Hold fire. Hold fire. Give me hold. Hold. Hold fire. Speaker 0: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 1: I'm coming out with smoke. That's a burner, by the way. A Speaker 0: burner or hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 1: They come back with it? Hey. Do they throw it faster? I'm guessing. Speaker 0: The smoke grenade is tossed back behind the police line by someone in the crowd. Speaker 1: Eric. Eric, Speaker 6: do we have any scout rounds? Speaker 0: Officer Thao goes back for more rounds. This time, it's a CS gas canister. Speaker 3: I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: A triple chaser consists of three separate canisters pressed together with separating charges between each. When deployed, the canisters separate and land approximately 20 feet apart, allowing increased area coverage. After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Speaker 1: I got a triple chaser on hold. Yeah. Put it right back. I know. But this is triple chaser. You're just a real smoker. I know. But this is splitting. I mean, got that. I know. But Speaker 0: captain tells officer Thou to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 1: Take your step back. Take your step back. Speaker 0: At around this same time, Ray Epps is once again caught from multiple cameras being at the front line of the demonstrators near police barricades. No other person has been seen at this many flashpoints this many times. He walks freely up and down the police barricades multiple times, communicating with other demonstrators in a similar fashion to when we saw him whisper in Ryan Samsall's ear earlier before the first breach. At 01:38PM, Donald Trump sends his first tweet after walking off the stage twenty four minutes earlier. It reads, please support our capital police and law enforcement. They are truly on the side of our country. Stay peaceful. Around 01:40PM, Ray Epps is one of the members of the crowd who helps lift up a large Trump sign and push it into the line of police officers on the West Plaza of the capital. At 01:41PM, body cam footage from officer Anthony Aliotto records a discussion about Eight minutes later, at 01:49PM, a riot is officially declared at the US capital. Speaker 1: We're gonna try and get compliant, but this is now effectively a riot. Speaker 6: Forty nine hours declaring it a riot. Speaker 0: The fears of officer Aliyoto are soon realized when at 01:50PM, officers use CS gas on the Northwest side of the plaza and effectively gas themselves with aid from the wind. You can see multiple officers struggling from the effects of the CS gas. Speaker 1: Tina, be careful. It's blowing right back. I know. It's in my eye. You alright? Yeah. Speaker 6: Don't rub it. You know that. You're gonna suck. Keep blinking. Speaker 0: Over on the East side of the capital, the gates have successfully held the crowd back for over an hour from when the West side was first breached. At 01:59PM, that all changes. The demonstrators overpower the police and begin to make their way toward the east steps. Speaker 10: Police are squabbling with protesters. Oh, there we go. And they just reached the capital again. Speaker 0: Back on the Northwest side of the capital, a man named Derek Vargo is ascending to the West terrace on the outside railing of the stairway. He is sprayed in the eyes with an inflammatory agent. Vargo reacts by heading back down the way he came when he is shoved off the wall by officer Bryant Williams, leading to a 25 foot drop. Some call this an attempted murder. Vargo is carried away on a makeshift stretcher by officers and bystanders. Vargo suffered a fractured ankle and extensive midfoot injuries that would require surgeries to repair. He lives with constant foot pain, pain in the middle of his spine, and suffers from post traumatic stress disorder that causes him flashbacks and nightmares of being pushed off the railing. At 02:03PM, the first dispersal order is heard coming from a mobile LRAD, or long range acoustic device. Speaker 1: 221307. You are scammed? All people must be. Speaker 0: DC law requires police to give three separate warning with the LRAD system and an opportunity to disperse before using violence or munitions to clear a protest crowd. At 02:06PM, police retreat up the east steps of the capital. Demonstrators soon follow and ascend the steps. We hear the LRAD again at 02:07PM. Speaker 1: They are to comply Speaker 0: with this order. They subject you to arrest. It's unlikely that demonstrators heard either of these warnings given the situation on the plaza, which calls into question the earlier stated DC law that requires these announcements to be clearly audible and to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse. Back on the East Side of the capital at 02:09PM, Hunter Emke is seen kicking in and punching multiple windows. He is quickly tackled and detained by police. At 02:10PM, demonstrators reach the West Terrace and push through police barricades. They will quickly move to what will become the first points of entry to the interior of the capital. A man throws a two by four through a glass pane, the first such broken window on the West Side of the capital. Shortly thereafter, Dominic Pizzola pushes the window in using a police riot shield. Protesters will soon enter the building through these breach points. At 02:12, Ray Epps sends a text message to his nephew, telling him that he orchestrated the protest at the capital and that he helped get people there. The video evidence we have seen thus far would back up his claim. At 02:13PM, president Trump tweets, I am asking for everyone at The US Capital to remain peaceful. No violence. Remember, we are the party of law and order. Respect the law and our great men and women in blue. Thank you. Speaker 1: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 0: Back on the West Plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter, 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. This crowd management round contains approximately 18 rubber balls. Speaker 1: Hey, I need a round. You have CS? Speaker 0: Thirty seconds later, he's given a baton round, a round that contains three forty millimeter rubber projectiles. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 02:18PM, after a few minutes of confusion inside the room, the house calls a recess during its debate over an objection to the electoral votes from Arizona. Speaker 2: Without objection, the chair declares the house in recess pursuant to clause 12 b of rule one. Speaker 0: At 02:16PM, the parliamentarian doors are opened from the inside, providing another access point for demonstrators to enter the building. Down on the West Plaza, officer Thou refers to police activity as quote, shooting zombies. Speaker 1: Alright. We're completely around. At Speaker 0: 02:18PM, after a few minutes of confusion inside the room, the house calls a recess during its debate over an objection to the electoral votes from Arizona. Speaker 2: Without objection, the chair declares the house in recess pursuant to clause 12 b of rule one. Speaker 0: At 02:18PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 1: And not only that, we're taking out one and ten of them are getting way easier. It's it's we're multiplying them by hitting them. Speaker 0: At 02:24PM, John Earl Sullivan is recording as he is one of the first of the demonstrators to enter the Capital Rotunda. Speaker 1: 2021 y'all. This is insanity. Holy What is this? What is life? Speaker 0: At the same time, a few blocks away, MPD officers are discussing new plans to enter the capital to support US Capitol Police. Speaker 1: They're gonna burn that building down. Speaker 8: That's fine. And we'll figure it out. Alright. Speaker 1: They better reach out to the military right now is what they better do. Get the National Guard suit up, get them down here. Speaker 8: Do you know where we're suiting up, we're going in? We are? Yes. When? Damn. Did you hear that? Speaker 0: Still at 02:24PM, Mike Pence is moved from the senate chamber to his office across the hall. The senate remains in session as senator for Kentucky Mitch McConnell speaks on the floor. Also, at 02:24PM, president Trump tweets, 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. This would be a significant tweet to the January 6 committee, for they claimed that it was the motivation for a surge into the capital complex. Speaker 11: Our investigation found that immediately after the president's 02:24PM tweet, the crowds both outside the capital and inside the capital surged. Speaker 0: What the January 6 committee failed to mention was that it officers misusing munitions and CS gas at that same time that led to a surge. Speaker 1: Hey, Rich. Yeah. Put it on the scaffolding. DC Speaker 0: MPD officer Cowrie, at the urging of officer Thou, misfires a CS gas canister that eventually forces police to fall back and lose their position. As officers on the West Plaza, unequipped with gas masks, struggle breathing, the plume of CS gas can be seen from the overhead camera on the lower right corner of your screen. It blows over the entire area of the West Plaza that the police had secured for nearly an hour. Within three minutes of the officer CS gas misfire, the police line on the West Plaza entirely collapses. Back on the East Side at 02:24PM, demonstrators are able to force open doors from the inside. These are the Columbus doors, which lead a short way to the rotunda of the capital. Back outside on the West Plaza, an elderly woman is violently pushed by police down a set of concrete stairs three times, which incites the crowd around her. Speaker 8: Hey. Did you hear that? We're trying to make it to the Hanover Gardens. We're going Speaker 1: in. Alright. So we down in long guns? What do we Yes. Speaker 8: Straight up. Any any munitions you have, CDU. Speaker 0: At 02:28PM, in an interesting exchange, a press photographer on scene at the East entrance of the capital taps a demonstrator on his hip and shoulder to move him out of the way so he can presumably get a better shot of the action. Back out on the south side of the West Plaza, a demonstrator is taken down by six police officers. He receives multiple punches while in a face down prone position. At 02:30PM, a security camera at the crypt lobby shows demonstrators gaining access to the capital via overhead lift doors. At this same time, the house is called into final recess. Speaker 2: Without objection, the house is gonna go back into recess. Speaker 0: At 02:31PM, Washington DC mayor Muriel Bowser orders a curfew from 6PM that evening to 6AM the following morning. At 02:33PM, a frustrated police officer can be heard venting about being, in his words, set up. Speaker 1: They set up the fuck up. That's what they did. They set up for They set up 64. Yeah. Absolutely. And then they asked y'all to come in two hours later. They set us up. I'm gonna be as real as I can be. We are going to get overrun on the steps of the capital right now. We're getting fucking hammers. Okay? If you guys go down there, the bank appliance is working very minimally. There's 10,000 to one. We're gonna lose the fucking steps, and we're getting people hurt like a mother. Speaker 0: Demonstrators are seen entering from the West Side of the capital, while police officers watch them walk through the doors. Just feet away at 02:35PM, minutes after losing the West Plaza, officer Aliotto throws a gas canister from the West Terrace into the crowd that has amassed on the West Plaza. This, along with other gas canisters sent into the crowds, gets thrown back at the officers. Most of these officers still do not have gas masks. At the same time on the West Terrace, officers are repeating the same mistakes they made one level lower on the West Plaza. An errant CS gas round is again fired into their held position on the West Terrace. The spreading gas will eventually effectuate a retreat back into the capital through a narrow tunnel. This mistake would prove to be incredibly significant for the events that are yet to come. The retreat into the capital through the West Terrace Tunnel would create the conditions for the next standoff between demonstrators and police that would take place over the following hours. Instead of showing force outside of the tunnel, the police make the questionable decision of barricading themselves behind locked double doors, giving up the tactical position, and retreating to a defensive posture. At 02:39PM, Metropolitan Police Department reinforcements arrive at the capital, entering through the east carriage door. At the same time, police officers discussed being unprepared for what they encountered. Speaker 1: I didn't know we were coming up for this. I wanna make sure we all had our mask. Speaker 3: I didn't realize how bad I Speaker 1: they set us up to fail. They did. There was no way we were winning that. And you've now you got at least four platoons that are just gassed out. Yeah. Literally. Because us, 54 doesn't have masks. Yeah. Oh, remember, we're supposed to be rapid response just to buy time for the hard platitudes to come. They didn't come. They didn't ask for them. This is bullshit. Who cares about the street? Like, prioritize. Get yes. Secure the capital. At Speaker 0: 02:42PM, journalist Taylor Hanson is walking behind Ashley Babbitt, an air force veteran from California, as she turns a corner and approaches the speaker's lobby, guarded by three police officers. MPD officer Luke Foskett approaches a window and looks out upon the crowd on the western side of the Capitol Building. Speaker 1: You're live. Right? Yeah. Yeah. Speaker 0: Moments later, members of the house seek shelter in the gallery while officers barricade entry into the chamber. It is at this moment that the only firearm to be discharged inside the capital that day can be loudly heard. The story of that gunshot is quite possibly the most tragic story of that Speaker 1: day. There's a gun. There's a gun. There's a gun. There's gun. He's got a gun. He's got a Speaker 0: The shot heard was a single round fired by lieutenant Michael Bird. It strikes Ashley Babbitt in the neck. And she falls back into the upper landing of the stairwell. Speaker 1: She's done. She's dead. She's dead. She's dead. I caught her. She's dead, you piece of shit. One shot in the capital. Report of a shooting in the capital. Trying to ascertain information now. Speaker 0: At 02:46PM, approximately the same time as Ashley Babbitt is shot by Capitol Police officer Byrd, a series of smoke and signal flares are activated at various locations around the Capitol. Flare. There's some kind of a flare in the sky there. As the smoke clears, we again spot Ray Epps leaving the area and flanked by several individuals before leaving the Capitol Grounds for the day. Meanwhile, demonstrators continue to enter the Capitol Building. The first demonstrator enters the Senate Chamber. Speaker 6: Unit 7, Speaker 1: we got protesters that are outside of the Senate chamber. Speaker 0: Over the course of the next thirty minutes, the Senate Chamber will become a significant location of the day. Along with the Capital Rotunda, the Capital Corridors, and the West Terrace Tunnel. Prior to this point in the day, many demonstrators were free to roam the hallways and chambers of the building, meeting little resistance from Capitol Police. Speaker 7: The police here are willing to work with us and cooperate peacefully like our First Amendment allows. Gather more Americans under the condition that they will come and gather peacefully to discuss what needs to be done to save our country. Speaker 0: Capital police officer Robichaud asks a small group of demonstrators to remain peaceful. Speaker 7: Show us no attack, no assault, remain calm. We're not doing this all. We're We're going to be heard. I will Everybody, this must Speaker 1: be peaceful. This has to be peaceful. Times, we have the right to peacefully assemble. Speaker 0: Robichaud then proceeds to escort at least one demonstrator, Jacob Chanceley, throughout various locations in the capital. At 02:46PM, additional demonstrators continue to enter the senate Chamber. Security footage shows no capital police presence in the senate Chamber at this time. At this point in the day, many of the demonstrators on the outside have no idea that Capitol has even been breached. Let's go back to the multi view to see what's going on around the Capitol Grounds. On the Southeast Side, a group of MPD officers arrived to assist Capitol Police with clearing out the inside of the Capitol. Speaker 1: One twenty two ground. We're sending MPD through the South door of the Capitol. There's about 25 units in hard gear. Speaker 0: Back on the West Plaza, an enormous American flag has been draped over the scaffolding. On the East Side of the capital, demonstrators have overtaken the stairs and continue to gather on the lawn. Back in the rotunda at 02:48PM, we see demonstrators peacefully roaming around and taking photographs. The only law enforcement officers visible are standing in the doorway. As demonstrators continue to roam the hallways, one officer has a concerning realization. Speaker 1: They make it up here. They can go right to the 2nd Floor. They just don't realize it. Speaker 0: Back at the West Terrace Tunnel, a demonstrator activates a fire extinguisher into the tunnel towards dozens of law enforcement officers. Speaker 1: Motor 13, we need munitions and 50 officers on the rotunda steps, at top the of the step. We need munitions to clear these steps. Speaker 4: You wanna push forward? Speaker 1: Push them back? No. Right now. No. Wait. Okay. Because we gotta get numbers. Speaker 2: Yeah. Speaker 6: I'm seeing stars right now. Speaker 0: Inside the senate chamber, demonstrators are rummaging through desks looking for intel. Speaker 1: Objection to the Arizona. Speaker 0: More demonstrators arriving on the outside and more officers arriving on the inside. Speaker 1: Hold it. Hold it, baby. Stop. Stop. It's the only way we're gonna hold this door. Speaker 0: At 02:55PM, law enforcement begins to move demonstrators out of the capital from various locations. Speaker 1: We are American. I pray for everyone of you, for your safety. You need to give communism what you need to do. You need to give communism to protect these people. We're patriots. Sir. How much it cost for you to betray your duty and your people? Speaker 0: But they continue to struggle to control the Rotunda and West Plaza Tunnel. Richard Barnett, the demonstrator who posed for this photo in house speaker Nancy Pelosi's office, attempts to persuade an officer to let him back in to retrieve his flag. Speaker 6: Four eighteen Franks are informational. I have a group of about 20 to 30 officers that are cordoned off on the south side of the reconnaissance stairs. We're just gonna hold the line over here, so we get some kind of control on this crowd. There's no enforcement we can take at this time. Speaker 8: Hey, man. Glad to see you guys. You guys are patriots. Speaker 1: Look at Speaker 8: this guy. He's got covered in blood. God bless you. Speaker 4: You good, sir? Speaker 1: Do you need medical attention? Speaker 3: I'm good. Thank you. Alright. Speaker 0: Jacob Chanceley takes a seat at the senate dais. He decides to leave a note for vice president Pence. Speaker 6: Now that you've done that, Speaker 4: can I get you guys to walk out of Speaker 8: this room, please? Yeah. Speaker 5: Yes, sir. Speaker 3: There's 4,000,000 people coming in. Speaker 4: So it's a of control. Speaker 7: We love you guys. We love the cops. It's only Speaker 8: a matter of time. Speaker 1: Opportunity. Thank you, heavenly father. Amen. Sir, I have 75 people inside the Senate Chambers just for information. They are going through desks and on top of podium. Speaker 0: Back at the rotunda, dozens of MPD officers prepare to clear out all of the demonstrators. Speaker 1: One zero five, I'm currently at the main door to the Senate Chamber. Speaker 0: Back at the scuffle at the West Terrace Tunnel, the situation is rapidly deteriorating. Leading up to the tunnel are a series of steps the demonstrators are having trouble navigating. It is a very tense and dangerous situation in this area. For over an hour, the police have been inside the building behind the inner doors while demonstrators have occupied the tunnel. Speaker 6: 405 John is advising they need additional acid. Speaker 0: At 03:19PM, the police successfully expel the demonstrators from the Speaker 1: tunnel. I'm trying. Get Speaker 0: down. During the skirmish, a US Capitol police officer is dragged into the crowd of demonstrators. He is later returned to the police line and heads back to safety inside the tunnel. The demonstrators manage to hold their ground and begin to push the police back into the tunnel. This sets the stage for the final tragic conflict. Demonstrators and police are engaged in physical altercations. Sprayed chemical agents are lingering in the narrow hallway. Speaker 3: I know your pain. I know you're hurt. We had an election that was stolen from us. Speaker 0: At 04:17PM, president Trump posts a one minute video to his Twitter account, urging demonstrators to stay peaceful and go home. Speaker 3: We have to have peace. We have to have law and order Speaker 0: Twitter quickly attached a warning label on the video which read, this claim of election fraud is disputed, and this tweet can't be replied to, retweeted, or liked due to a risk of violence. This limited the reach of the message. Minutes later, Twitter would remove the entire video message from its platform. Speaker 3: I know how you feel, but go home and go home in peace. Speaker 0: As the demonstrators are pushed back by police, they fall on top of each other. Some are pressed against the ground, unable to move. A woman named Roseanne Boylan, a Trump supporter from Georgia, finds her herself pinned under the deluge of bodies. The Trump situation is critical. Speaker 1: Collapsed Speaker 4: inside that that corridor from an asphyxiation. She couldn't breathe. Brought her out onto the main steps outside of that. Several people started doing CPR on her. I tried to get her carotid pulse for several minutes and even I cut part of her jeans away so that I could try to feel her femoral pulse and I couldn't feel a femoral pulse at all. By the time that they decided to pick the person up and give them to the police officer, she had blue lips and blood was coming out of her nose. Speaker 1: Man, where the DC fire needs to go for that CPR that's going on. Speaker 4: Didn't seem hopeful at all. I don't I don't think that person will be revived. Speaker 0: Officers transport Boylan inside the tunnel and begin CPR. Speaker 6: Could you please send the ambulance that is coming for the code down at Lower West Terrace to the house door for entry? Speaker 1: Protestant? Yeah. She got I mean, she got stuck under there. She fell down and That trampled? Yeah. Speaker 0: Boylan is transported inside for one last revival attempt. Speaker 6: CDU 70 to destroying the media equipment over here at the egg. Copy. Roadcasters are destroying media equipment at the Senate AG. At Speaker 0: 5PM, as the citywide 6PM curfew looms, police are making progress securing the capital and a steady stream of demonstrators leave the capital grounds. At 05:10PM, police use tear gas to drive the remaining demonstrators from the Capitol's upper levels. Over the PA system, an announcement is made that all individuals are required to leave Capitol Hill or be subject to arrest. At 05:40PM, National Guard troops begin to arrive at the Capitol to secure the premises. One minute after the curfew goes into effect, Donald Trump sends out a final message to his supporters that day. At 8PM, the Capitol is declared secure. Speaker 5: Today was a dark day in the history of The United States Capitol. Speaker 0: Shortly after at 08:06PM, the senate resumes debate over the certification of Arizona's vote in the senate chamber. The house would reconvene about an hour later. The election results will be certified. And fourteen days later, Joe Biden will walk down the same tunnel and stairs where the police and demonstrators fought for hours and where Roseanne Boylan took her last breath to be inaugurated as the forty sixth president of The United States. 01/06/2021. A day of hope and patriotism that turned into a day of chaos and tragedy. For the past three the shadow of January 6 looms large in our politics, in our culture, and in our national conversation. Are we any closer to understanding the events of that day? Are we still in the timeline of January 6?
J6 Thousands of crowdsourced video files. Hundreds of hours of CCTV footage. Dozens of police officer body cams. One True Timeline. open.ink
Saved - December 12, 2025 at 8:37 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Two participants describe Roseanne Boyland’s death differently. McBrideLawNYC cites a video of a protester giving chest compressions and blames MPD excessive force and OC spray, noting some good men jailed for trying to help. InvestigateJ6 responds that she collapsed after a chest-high-velocity pepperball shot, was beaten by officer Lila Morris while down, CPR was denied, and protesters dragged her body to render aid.

@McBrideLawNYC - Joseph D. McBride, Esq.

This video shows a J6 Protestor doing chest compressions on Roseanne Boyland when she died. Roseanne Boyland died because of the MPDC’s excessive use of force & reckless deployment of OC spray. Many good men are languishing in prison for trying to save Roseanne Boyland’s life. https://t.co/Np1zlaHgDY

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@McBrideLawNYC Rosanne Boyland collapsed after being shot in the chest by a pepperball traveling 300 feet per second. She was then beaten multiple times by MPD’s Lila Morris while downed, and denied CPR. J6 protesters had to drag her body away from violent police attacking them to render aid.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

🚨 EVIDENCE EMERGES that the murder of ROSANNE BOYLAND was PREMEDITATED. HER KILLER, MPD Officer LILA MORRIS was heard the morning of JAN 6 telling fellow officers that she planned to “FUCK UP” WHITE TRUMP SUPPORTERS AT THE CAPITOL! https://t.co/ZioFcswqbM

Saved - December 11, 2025 at 10:17 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@McBrideLawNYC @brillianttrave1 @mytruthoneday The J6 murder of Rosanne Boyland on the steps of the US Capitol: https://t.co/MPRzFq9VHm

Saved - August 18, 2025 at 9:22 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Why would USCP be interested in hiding the J6 footage from the world? Is it because Chief Waldow’s orders to unleash ‘Less Lethal’ munitions on protestors were fraudulent and in violation of DC § 5-331.07 ‘First Amendment Assembles’ statute? #J6CoverUp #J6WithoutWarning https://t.co/riDPL6AMkJ

@julie_kelly2 - Julie Kelly 🇺🇸

The pledge by GOP to release all the Jan 6 videos has been broken. I believed my involvement to make footage available was a temporary fix until staff could protect innocents from DOJ and thugs like Sedition Hunters. Now I see GOP has capitulated to DOJ and Capitol police.

Saved - August 13, 2025 at 4:52 PM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@ChiefSund Why didn’t you control the situation on the Capitol’s West Plaza? President Trump asked the crowd to march to the Capitol at 12:16pm. An hour later your cops and DC cops are shooting into the crowd with no oversight.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

DC commander Glover orders his officers to begin throwing grenades deep into the J6 crowd with no warnings given. https://t.co/dvSkDiRRk6

Video Transcript AI Summary
A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the East Side of the capital. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on the West Plaza. Officer Tara Tindle is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Unseen commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Steamboat. Steamboat deployed. At 01:32PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just going to make things worse. It's just gonna make it worse. Hey. Stop. Hold. Hold on. Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 01:17PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the East Side of the capital. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on the West Plaza. Officer Tara Tindle is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Unseen commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Speaker 1: Steamboat. Steamboat deployed. Speaker 0: At 01:32PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just going to make things worse. Speaker 1: It's just gonna make it worse. Hey. Stop. Hold. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 0: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 1: I'm coming out with smoke. I need triple chasers. After Speaker 0: not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. I Another captain tells officer Thou to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 1: What else you got? Tributations? No. They're shooting into their own people. He's supposed to be supporting Blue Lives Matter. We represent Blue Lives, and this is what they do to us. If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. Speaker 2: They started firing at us Speaker 1: before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray.
Saved - August 13, 2025 at 8:12 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
The conversation centers on the events of January 6, 2021, where it is claimed that DC authorities responded to President Trump's executive order by shooting into the crowd without warning. The participants argue that the security failure was intentional to undermine Trump and support Biden's election. They express concern over the treatment of individuals involved in the protests, alleging civil rights violations by the DOJ and FBI. The discussion also questions the actions of former Trump administration officials regarding legal accountability for those affected.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 1 PM on JANUARY 6 2021, DC authorities responded to PRESIDENT TRUMP's 12:16 PM EXECUTIVE ORDER to "march peacefully to the US CAPITOL" by shooting into the crowd relentlessly without warning or instruction for hours. The security failure at the Capitol was engineered to entrap hundreds of thousands of Americans, to install Joe Biden and overthrow of the elected US President Donald J. Trump. J6 was an attack on America. It was the final plot in the color revolution overthrowing the United States. 4 peaceful protesters were killed by police, thousands were injured. The Biden regime and many currently employed DOJ Assistant US Attorneys spent 4 years trying to destroy civil rights victims who traveled to Washington DC on January 6 2021 to stand up for their country, and for the law, the US CONSTITUTION, and were entrapped and abused. Trump DOJ, especially Civil Rights, silence on this matter is disturbing. Recompense the J6 patriots! 🇺🇸 @realDonaldTrump @AAGDhillon @USAEdMartin @DAGToddBlanche @ChadMizelle47 @AGPamBondi @FBIDDBongino @FBIDirectorKash @Sec_Noem @SecDef @CIADirector @DNIGabbard @joekent16jan19 @PressSec @MargoMartin47 @StevenCheung47 @StephenM @Scavino47 @SusieWiles @RealPNavarro @Pfeiffer47 @KushDesai47 @Taylor47 @Kaelan47 @TaylorRogers47 @LizHuston47 @AnnaKelly47 @HFields47 @TriciaOhio @JakeSchneider47 @CivilRights @WhiteHouse @RapidResponse47 @DODResponse @GOPoversight @Weaponization @DOGE_DOJ @DOGE_DHS @JusticeOIG @DHSgov see: @InvestigateJ6 highlights! + rumble videos & http://InvestigateJ6.org 🇺🇸

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 urged Congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. "We're gonna walk down to the capital." A crowd appears near the Capitol as video shows "a wall of people" approaching. Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. DC law on crowd dispersal requires "three clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse" and to "provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal." Officer Thao crosses the line and engages demonstrators, discharging two rounds from his taser, "also known as an ECD," then says "start shooting what they have into the crowd." The less lethal team fires again; explosives rounds and CS gas rounds are deployed. At 02:18PM, an officer says, "Nothing's gonna help."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down. We're gonna walk down to the capital. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the Capitol Building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 1: At 12:30PM, the US Capitol Police report, a very large group heading to the Capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue. Speaker 2: Those look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading east. Speaker 1: President Trump won't be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another forty minutes. Speaker 0: Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 1: At 12:45PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the capital. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle, where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway. A path that leads directly to the West Side of the capital. Looking over the West Side of the capital from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the West Plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol Grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. Inside the capital, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the capital. Back outside on the West Plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 2: Unit six, I need less lethal teams. They can come up from Speaker 3: the Upper West Terrace. They're taking an elevated position. They are not compliant, climbing the staff way. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 1: One minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 01:06PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Speaker 3: I need more of the infested legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still noncompliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, chemical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 1: Although chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least three clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system, as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 01:12PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the capital in real time. Speaker 0: So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is a time. Thank you very much. Speaker 1: Ballot from Arizona. Speaker 2: Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Speaker 0: Yes. It is. Speaker 1: As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thou arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. At 01:13PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 2: Hey. Hey, capital. Hey. We need blasts. What do we got? I'm hanging. We gotta get something, man. Come on. Gotta go. Speaker 1: At 01:15PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges two rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the West Terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. Speaker 2: We need that. Let's go. Let's shoot him. Thao. Shut him. Shut the Let's Speaker 3: take him out. Speaker 1: The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 01:17PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the East Side of the capital. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on the West Plaza. Officer Tara Tindle is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Scene commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Around 01:30PM on the Southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Speaker 2: Steamboat deployed. Steamboat deployed. 700 Speaker 3: Steamboat deployed. 38 for ice cream. Speaker 1: At 01:32PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just going to make things worse. Speaker 2: It's just gonna make it worse. Hey, stop. Hold. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 1: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 2: I'm coming out with smoke. I got the burner by the way. Speaker 1: A burner or a hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 2: I need triple chasers. Speaker 1: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Speaker 2: Got a triple chaser on hold. Yeah. I know, but this is triple chaser. You're escalating. I know, but this is splitting. I mean, if you got better. Another Speaker 1: captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 1: Back on the West Plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. I need a round. Speaker 0: UPS. Yes. Speaker 1: Thirty seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 02:18PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 2: Nothing's gonna help. We're we're we're Right. We're We're not upset. We'll get hit with a lot of pain to fly. And and not only that, we're taking out one and ten of them are getting way easier. It's it's We're multiplying them by hitting them.
Home Watch: investigatej6.org

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

“I PARDONED J6 PEOPLE WHO WERE ASSAULTED BY OUR GOVERNMENT.” “THEY DIDN’T ASSAULT. THEY WERE ASSAULTED.” - PRESIDENT DONALD J. TRUMP 2025 Why is the 47 Trump admin DOJ opposed to the President and siding with Biden on J6? If they are working on J6 behind the scenes, why are they opposing legal liability in federal court, and stonewalling the attorneys and investigators, like Austin Carr esq., Carolyn Stewart esq., and StopHate? … There’s no investigation without comms with the experts. Why are all the vindictive cruel Weismann-esque corrupt AUSAs and FBI agents that drove civil rights victims to suicide and caused miscarriages and psychological harm with raids, unconstitutional charges, denial of civil rights, and terrorism enhancements still employed? Pam’s DOJ = Biden’s DOJ rebranded. Only differing on antisemitism and illegals. @realDonaldTrump @AAGDhillon @USAEdMartin @DAGToddBlanche @ChadMizelle47 @AGPamBondi @FBIDDBongino @FBIDirectorKash @Sec_Noem @SecDef @CIADirector @DNIGabbard @joekent16jan19 @PressSec @MargoMartin47 @StevenCheung47 @StephenM @Scavino47 @SusieWiles @RealPNavarro @Pfeiffer47 @KushDesai47 @Taylor47 @Kaelan47 @TaylorRogers47 @LizHuston47 @AnnaKelly47 @HFields47 @TriciaOhio @JakeSchneider47 @CivilRights @WhiteHouse @RapidResponse47 @DODResponse @GOPoversight @Weaponization @DOGE_DOJ @DOGE_DHS @JusticeOIG @DHSgov

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 questions the president's actions: "You're gonna honor first responders today, but you pardon hundreds of people who assaulted first responders. Why did you do that?" He also says, "Yeah. But you pardoned people who assaulted first responders." Speaker 1 replies: "No. I pardoned people that were assaulted themselves. They were assaulted by our government. I fired I pardoned j six people who were assaulted by our government. That's who assaulted, and they were treated unfairly." He continues: "There's never been a group of people in this country outside of maybe one instance that I can think of, but I won't get into it, that were treated more horribly than the people of J Six. So, no. I didn't assault. They didn't assault. They were assaulted." "And what I did was a great thing for humanity. They were treated very, very unfairly. There's never been an incident like it."
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: You're gonna honor first responders today, but you pardon hundreds of people who assaulted first responders. Why did you do that? Who? I'm I'm sorry. You are going to meet with first responders today. Yeah. But you pardoned people who assaulted first responders. Speaker 1: No. I pardoned people that were assaulted themselves. They were assaulted by our government. I fired I pardoned j six people who were assaulted by our government. That's who assaulted, and they were treated unfairly. There's never been a group of people in this country outside of maybe one instance that I can think of, but I won't get into it, that were treated more horribly than the people of J Six. So, no. I didn't assault. They didn't assault. They were assaulted. And what I did was a great thing for humanity. They were treated very, very unfairly. There's never been an incident like it. Speaker 0: Mister president?
Saved - February 18, 2025 at 2:20 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@RyanHar31145784 @Freedom_Alley3 “It’s their fault” 🤔 https://t.co/S486VaCLyX

Video Transcript AI Summary
Protesters are coming to Capitol Hill to oppose the Kavanaugh nomination. Authorities are giving them citations, similar to tickets. They must pay bail, which is about $50, to be released. I've been told by the protester's lawyers that these charges will not remain on their criminal records.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: As these protesters come to Capitol Hill to say no to the Kavanaugh nomination. The way this works is the authorities essentially give them a citation. It's sort of like a ticket. They have to pay bail. It's about $50, and then, they're released. And I'm told by the lawyers for the protesters that those charges did not remain on their criminal records.
Saved - February 18, 2025 at 1:59 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I believe J6 never happened. Fellow Capitol PD officers claim Dunn is lying about the events. The truth is, he lost control and threatened peaceful MAGA protestors, which I see as a reflection of his bias as a BLM activist.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

J6 100% never happened https://t.co/oSm6wMR52Q

Video Transcript AI Summary
I was working as a Capitol Police officer when a woman in a pink MAGA shirt singled me out, yelling that I voted for Joe Biden and used a racial slur. The surrounding crowd of about 20 people joined in, yelling slurs at me. It was the first time I had ever been called that word while wearing my Capitol Police uniform.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: One woman in a pink MAGA shirt yelled, you hear that, guys? This nigga voted for Joe Biden. Then the crowd, perhaps around 20 people, joined in screaming, boo, fucking nigger. No one had ever ever called me a nigger while wearing the uniform of a Capitol Police officer.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Dunn’s own fellow Capitol PD officers allege that he’s lying. “It never happened” The reality is, @libradunn lost his shit and threatened to shoot peaceful MAGA protestors because he’s a racist BLM activist. @TPC4USA …pragmaticconstitutionalist.locals.com/post/3544429/c… https://t.co/kATM9GHiUk

Saved - February 17, 2025 at 3:22 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I shared my observations about the actions of Capitol and DC police towards January 6 protesters while President Trump was still speaking. I emphasized that police violated established laws regarding dispersal warnings, which have been required since 1977. Legal precedents indicate that it is unlawful to use force on a crowd without prior warnings, and the DC First Amendment Assemblies Act mandates clear communication. The law protects peaceful individuals within a group from mass arrest without adequate notice or opportunity to comply.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

This is what Capitol and DC police were doing to 1A J6 protesters outside the US Capitol while President Trump was still speaking on stage at the Ellipse: #InvestigateJ6 @realDonaldTrump @JDVance @AGPamBondi @Kash_Patel @StephenM @StevenCheung @karolineleavitt @KaelanDorr @DanScavino

Video Transcript AI Summary
From a security camera, the crowd quickly filled the West Plaza as Vice President Pence entered the House chamber. President Trump addressed a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the situation at the Capitol. Deputy Chief Waldo ordered the less lethal team to position and launch munitions against the crowd, who were pushing and climbing. Despite warnings supposedly given, no video evidence confirms them, violating DC law on crowd dispersal. As Trump finished his speech, challenges arose in the House. MPD officer Thao used inflammatory agents, then called for more munitions and began deploying tasers into the crowd. Explosive rounds arrived and officers started to fire them into the crowd. Later, officers discussed concerns about hitting innocent people. Trump's tweet about Pence was followed by a surge in crowds. The police line collapsed after a CS gas misfire, allowing demonstrators to enter the Capitol.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Looking over the West Side of The Capitol from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the West Plaza. Inside the Capitol, Vice President Mike Pence is entering the House chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the Capitol. Back outside on the West Plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 1: Unit six, I need less lethal team. They could come up from the upper west stairs and take an elevated position. They're not compliant, climbing, stapling. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 0: One minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 01:06PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Speaker 1: Unit six, I got a crowd fighting with officer pushing, going for deck tiles. I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need to let the legal team position above me to identify the agitator to start deploying. Launch. Launch. Launch. Speaker 0: US Capitol Police inspector Lloyd is seen signaling officers above on the terrace to open fire on the crowd. Joshua Matthew Black, a 46 year old man from Alabama, is shot with a round that tears open and lodges in his cheek. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Deputy chief Waldo orders a second deployment of munitions. Speaker 1: I need more of the inspection legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still, non compliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, typical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 0: Although Chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least three clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system, as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 01:12PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the Capitol in real time. Speaker 2: So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is incredible. Thank you very much. Speaker 3: Dallas from Arizona. Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Yes. It is. Speaker 0: As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thao arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. Back where we can see simultaneous angles, we can see Trump waving to the crowd after his one hour and eleven minute speech. The last speech he will give in front of a crowd as president of The United States. At 01:13PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 3: Hey, captain. Hey, we need glasses. What do we got? We gotta get something. Come on. We gotta get it. Speaker 0: At 01:15PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges two rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the West Terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 01:17PM, a second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the East Side of the capital. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on the West Plaza. Officer Tara Tindall is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Around 01:30PM on the Southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. At 01:32PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just going to make things worse. Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 3: I'll come out with smoke. I got the burner around what I want. Speaker 0: A burner or a hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 3: I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Speaker 3: I got a triple chaser. Yeah. I know. But this is triple chaser. I know, but just I mean, I can't say Speaker 0: Another captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 3: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 0: Back on the West Plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter, 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 3: Hey. I need a round. Just the s. Speaker 0: Thirty seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 02:18PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 3: At Speaker 0: 02:24PM, president Trump tweets, Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our constitution. Speaker 3: Our Speaker 4: investigation found that immediately after the president's two twenty four PM tweet, the crowds both outside the Capitol and inside the Capitol surged. Speaker 0: What the January 6 committee failed to mention was that it was officers misusing munitions and CS gas at that same time that led to a surge. Speaker 3: Hey, Rich. Yeah. Speaker 0: At the urging of officer Thao, a DC MPD officer attempts to fire a CS gas canister into the crowd. A short time later, after being gassed out, the police are forced to fall back and they soon lose their position. The wire. As officers on the West Plaza, unequipped with gas masks, struggle breathing, the plume of CS gas can be seen from the overhead camera on the lower right corner of your screen. It blows over the entire area of the West Plaza that the police had secured for nearly an hour. Within three minutes of the officer CS gas misfire, the police line on the West Plaza entirely collapses. Speaker 3: We got tear gas when we were in the middle of a prayer. We were kneeling down a break. If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray. They set up the up. That's what they did. Speaker 1: They set Speaker 3: up they set up 64. Absolutely. And then they answer the coming two hours, like, they set us up. They need everybody right away. By the way, they set up a pizza. I'm a business. Realize I'm a business. We are going to get overrun on the steps of capital right now. We're taking a business. Okay? If you guys go down there, the tank appliances working very minimally. There's 10,000 to one. They're gonna lose the steps, and we're getting people hurt like a Speaker 0: Demonstrators are seen entering from the West Side Of The Capitol while police officers watch them walk through the doors. Speaker 3: At least three mortally wounded, if not three dead today. Two Two older men by the ambulance and this girl's Speaker 5: The movie lays out the day's events moment by moment. It shows you what actually happened at the Capitol, and it should be the most famous film in The United States. Speaker 2: The only way that can happen is if Mike Pence agrees to send it back.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Police violated the law on J6 @AGPamBondi

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Dispersal warnings have been required of DC police forces to disperse a protest going back to as early as 1977, and have been reinforced by the DC Circuit Court numerous times: Law and precedent hold that is unlawful to open fire on a crowd, even if some individuals are committing violence, without first warning everybody to come into compliance or disperse: Not only are dispersal warnings required by the DC Court, but the DC FAAA requires the use of an LRAD amplification system at minimum, mandating that warnings are not sufficient unless they are clearly audible: see: DC First Amendment Assemblies Act; Dellums v. Powell, 566 F.2d 167, 184 (D.C. Cir. 1977); Chang v. United States, 738 F. Supp. 2d 83 (D.C. Cir. 2010); Barham v. Ramsey, 434 F.3d 565 (D.C. Cir. 2006); Goodwin v. Dist. of Columbia 579 F. Supp. 3d 159 (D.D.C. 2022). "Dellums [566 F.2d 167] establishes a "bright line rule" that "where a group contains persons who have not been violent or obstructive, police may not mass arrest the demonstration as a group without fair warning or notice and the opportunity to come into compliance and disperse."

Saved - January 22, 2025 at 12:19 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
A year ago, I filed a class action lawsuit against DC and Capitol Police for their brutality against J6 West Plaza protesters. The case is pending a ruling on class certification. If you're a J6er who fits the proposed class definition, stay tuned for your chance to join.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

One year ago, @InvestigateJ6 filed a class action lawsuit against DC & Capitol Police for their brutality against J6 West Plaza protesters, violating their rights. The case is currently pending and awaiting a ruling on class certification. Here is the proposed class definition: If you are a J6er who fits this definition, you will have the opportunity to join this action. Please stand by! Fischer et al. v. DC et al. 1:24-cv-00044 See all of the evidence at http://InvestigateJ6.org

Home Watch: investigatej6.org

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@JackPosobiec The first J6 class action has already been filed. More to come. https://t.co/DT29Gn8kRE

Saved - January 21, 2025 at 11:16 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@charliekirk11 NEW J6 TIMELINE FOOTAGE RELEASED:

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

BREAKING: NEW JAN 6 FOOTAGE RELEASED FROM THE PRODUCERS OF J6: A TRUE TIMELINE! FOOTAGE SHOWS THE FIRST MOMENTS OF J6 IN PRECISE DETAIL TIMESTAMPED MINUTE BY MINUTE: FROM THE TRUMP ELLIPSE SPEECH TO CROWDS ROAMING THE HALLS OF THE CAPITOL WITH ALL NEW MUST SEE 2025 J6 FOOTAGE!

Video Transcript AI Summary
President Trump announces that after his speech, the crowd will march to the Capitol to demand Congress count only lawful electors. At 12:30 PM, Capitol Police report a large group heading toward the Capitol. By 12:45 PM, demonstrators gather at Peace Circle, where a man removes a barrier, leading to the first breach of the Capitol grounds. As the crowd grows, Vice President Pence enters the Capitol for the electoral vote certification. At 1:06 PM, police begin deploying less lethal munitions against the crowd. Tensions escalate, and by 2:24 PM, Trump tweets criticizing Pence, prompting a surge in the crowd. Misuse of munitions by police leads to chaos, and the police line collapses as demonstrators enter the Capitol.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 15 minutes into his remarks, president Trump mentions for the first time that after his speech, the crowd will be walking to the Capitol. Speaker 1: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down we're gonna walk down to the capital. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 0: At 12:30 PM, the US Capitol Police report, a very large group heading to the capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue. Speaker 2: Those are Speaker 3: 50. Those look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading east. Speaker 0: President Trump won't be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another 40 minutes. At 12:36, vice president Mike Pence arrives at the US Capitol. Vice president's motorcade has just arrived at the Capitol in advance of the joint session. The certification is to begin in 24 minutes at 1 PM EST. As Mike Pence arrives, a crowd is already assembled at the barricades in front of the east plaza of the capitol. Speaker 1: Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 0: At 12:45 PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the Capitol. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway, a path that leads directly to the west side of the capitol. Back outside where the crowd has gathered at Peace Circle, there are 2 sets of metal barricades here behind which only 5 capitol police officers can be seen guarding this entrance while every member of congress convenes in the building behind them. Just south of this path, a man in a black ski mask removes a barrier and waves the crowd onto the west lawn of the capitol while members in the crowd shout at him. With this view, you can see the moment that the first set of bike racks come down and the crowd begins to quickly advance on the second set of gates. This would become the first major breach of the capitol grounds and skirmish with capitol police. Moments later, the barricade is pushed directly into the police line. Looking over the west side of the capitol from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the west plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. Inside the Capitol, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the Capitol. Back outside on the west plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I need less lethal teams that could come up from the upper west stairs and take an elevated position. They're not compliant, climbing, sapling. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 0: 1 minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 1:0:6 PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I got a crowd fighting with officer pushing, going for textiles. I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need to let the lethal team position above me to identify the agitator to start deploying. Bunch. Bunch. Bunch. Speaker 0: US Capitol Police inspector Lloyd is seen signaling officers above on the terrace to open fire on the crowd. Joshua Matthew Black, a 46 year old man from Alabama, is shot with a round that tears open and lodges in his cheek. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Deputy chief Waldo orders a second deployment of munitions. Speaker 3: I need more of the assessor legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still, non compliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, typical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 0: Although Chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least 3 clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 1:12 PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the Speaker 1: capitol in real time. So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is incredible. Thank you very much. Speaker 2: Dallas from Arizona. Speaker 1: Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Speaker 0: It is. As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thau arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. From a different officer's body cam, the familiar face of Ray Epps can be seen in the area that the police are trying to control. Back where we can see simultaneous angles, we can see Trump waving to the crowd after his 1 hour and 11 minute speech, the last speech he will give in front of a crowd as president of the United States. Ray Epps is at the front of the police line speaking to officers. Speaker 2: Appreciate that. Speaker 0: At 1:13 PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 2: Hey, captain. Hey. We need blaster this. What do we got? I can't get We gotta get something, man. Come on. We got it back. Speaker 0: At 1:15 PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges 2 rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the west terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 1:17 PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the east side of the capitol. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on west plaza. Officer Tara Tindall is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Speaker 2: Standby. Standby. Standby. Deploy. Speaker 0: Around 1:30 PM on the southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Speaker 2: Stay modified. Stay modified. Speaker 3: Stay on the floor. 33 k at Bri Street. Speaker 0: At 1:32 PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just gonna make things worse. Speaker 2: This is gonna make it worse. And it's not. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 0: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 2: I'm coming out with smoke. I got the burner no matter what I want. Speaker 0: A burner or hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 2: I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Another captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 0: Back on the west plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter, 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 2: Alright. I need a round. Good CF. Speaker 0: 30 seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 2:18 PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 2: And and not only that, we're taking out 1 and 10 of them are getting rain here. It's it's we're multiplying them by hitting them. Speaker 0: At 2:24 PM, president Trump tweets, Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our constitution. Speaker 4: Our investigation found that immediately after the president's 2:24 PM tweet, the crowds both outside the capital and inside the capital surged. Speaker 0: What the January 6th committee failed to mention was that it was officers misusing munitions and CS gas at that same time that led to a surge. Speaker 2: Hey, Rich. Yeah. Speaker 0: At the urging of officer Thao, a DC MPD officer attempts to fire a CS gas canister into the crowd. A short time later, after being gassed out, the police are forced to fall back and they soon lose their position. As officers on the west plaza, unequipped with gas masks, struggle breathing, the plume of CS gas can be seen from the overhead camera on the lower right corner of your screen. It blows over the entire area of the west plaza that the police had secured for nearly an hour. Within 3 minutes of the officer CS gas misfire, the police line on the west plaza entirely collapses. Speaker 2: We got tear gas when we were in the middle of a prayer. We were kneeling down a break. If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't happen. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray. Speaker 0: I set up up. That's what Speaker 2: they did. They set up they set up 64. Absolutely. And then they asked that to come in 2 hours later. They set us up. They need everybody right away. No. By the way, they set up a. I'm a bitch. Realize how it could be. We are going to get over the road on the steps of capital right now. We're taking. Okay? If you guys go down there, the tank appliances working very minimally. There's 10,000 to 1. You're gonna lose the steps, and we're getting people hurt like a Speaker 0: Demonstrators are seen entering from the west side of the capital while police officers watch them walk through the doors. Speaker 2: At least 3 mortally wounded, if not 3 dead today. 2 older men by the ambulance and this girl shoving in. No. Excuse me. Hello?
Saved - January 21, 2025 at 6:51 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
In late 2020, two DC lawyers claimed that the police's actions to clear the park outside the White House during the George Floyd protests were illegal. Jonathan Turley testified before Congress about this, stating that police were required to give multiple warnings before using force. Despite this, the use of force against January 6 protesters has not been adequately examined by Turley or others, including attorneys JD Vance and Harmeet Dhillon. I question why Congress hasn't called for an investigation into the January 6 events based on Turley's testimony.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

In late 2020, two expert DC lawyers came out and said that DC and Park police force used to clear the park outside the White House after George Floyd rioters sieged the White House was illegal. @JonathanTurley testified before Congress 29 days later: @ThePCJF did NPR 3 months later and filed suit: They said the police were required to give multiple audible warnings using an LRAD-100x before firing munitions to disperse. Following the guidance laid out by Turley in his written and oral testimony, use of force used against J6ers was against the law. Yet not Turley nor anyone else, including attorneys JD Vance and Harmeet Dhillon, has examined the incontrovertible evidence or has spoken out about it. Why won't Congress call Turley in and investigate the J6 attacks seen in this thread? Read Turley's entire incredibly relevant testimony here: congress.gov/116/meeting/ho… NPR: npr.org/2020/09/11/911… @JDVance @pnjaban @PamBondi

Video Transcript AI Summary
In June, federal police used tear gas to clear Lafayette Square for President Trump's photo op, violating a court-ordered settlement requiring clear warnings before using force. Peaceful protesters were present when police advanced shortly before a curfew, but the warnings were reportedly hard to hear. Acting park police chief Gregory Monahan claimed three warnings were given using a long-range acoustic device. However, Major Adam DeMarco of the DC National Guard, present during the incident, testified that the warnings were barely audible and delivered via a megaphone. Legal representatives of the original lawsuit believe the settlement terms were violated and plan to file a new lawsuit. In other news, Girl Scout Cookies will discontinue two flavors: Toast Yay's and Girl Scout S'mores, while Thin Mints remain safe. The cookie program generates about $1 billion in revenue for the organization.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: It was a summer photo op that has continued to reverberate. In June, let's remember, federal police used smoke and tear gas to clear a crowded park near the White House for the president. That move violated part of a court ordered settlement according to lawyers who helped write it. The settlement says federal officers had to warn protesters in a very specific way before using aggressive tactics. Dina Temple Reston from NPR's investigations team has more. Speaker 1: There were peaceful protesters in Lafayette Square near the White House on June 1st, marching, chanting, and then this happened. At about 6:30, half an hour before a city wide curfew was supposed to go into effect, police advanced and with seemingly little warning fired tear gas and smoke canisters into the crowd. This was just before president Trump walked across Lafayette Square to pose for a photograph in front of Saint John's Episcopal Church. The problem with how this unfolded is that if police wanted to clear the area, they had to warn the protesters first, and they had to do so loudly so people who didn't wanna be arrested could get away. The rules of engagement on DC streets were part of a settlement agreement reached in 2015. It ended a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of people who were caught up in the mass arrests in DC in 2002. Mara Verhailen Hilliard founded the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund, which represented some of the hundreds of people arrested back then. Speaker 2: They were held for 24, 27 hours or more. People were hogtied in stress and duress positions, wrist to ankle. Speaker 1: A US federal judge approved a settlement agreement that spelled out in detail exactly how police in DC needed to warn before moving in. Speaker 2: These procedures are very particular. They include, and that's why we wrote them this way, not just that they have to give notice and opportunity. They have to have officers at the farthest reaches of a demonstration who are certifying that they've heard that notice. Speaker 1: But instructions from the police in Lafayette Square on June 1st were hard to hear. The house committee on natural resources had a hearing in July to understand what happened in Lafayette Square that night. Speaker 3: Was the protocol followed to give 3 warnings? Speaker 1: Acting chief of the park police, Gregory Monahan, was one of the people who testified. Speaker 4: Yes, sir. The protocol was followed. There were 3 warnings given, and they were given utilizing a a long range acoustic device. It's called an LRAD, and that's what it stands for. That was the device used. Speaker 1: The LRAD is a kind of sound cannon that emits a piercing noise. A US park police spokesman told NPR that chief Monahan stands by his testimony, but a whistleblower has come forward saying the opposite. Speaker 5: On June 1st, I served as a liaison between the District of Columbia National Guard and the park police at Lafayette Square. Speaker 1: That's Adam DeMarco. He's a major in the DC National Guard. He told the house committee that he was 30 yards away from the officer giving the warnings, and he could barely hear him. And that announcement, he testified, didn't come from an LRAD. Speaker 5: The warnings were conveyed using a megaphone near the statue of president Andrew Jackson. From where I was standing, approximately 20 yards from the demonstrators, the announcements were barely audible, and I saw no indication that the demonstrators were cognizant of the warnings to disperse. Speaker 1: DeMarco is now a military whistleblower. His attorney, David Lofman, says his client was uniquely positioned to see the events unfold. Verhaden Hilliard, the lawyer who filed that original lawsuit, thinks its terms were violated on June 1st. She expects to file a new or related lawsuit that says so. Dina Tempel Rastin, NPR News. Speaker 6: Here is a heads up to Girl Scout Cookie fans. 2 cookie flavors will be discontinued after this year, but do not fret. Your Thin Mints are safe. NPR's Neda Ullaby has more. Speaker 7: You are forgiven if you've never heard of the 2 cookies that got laid off. One is called toast yay's. It's based on the cinnamon mapleiness of French toast and came out in 2021. The other is girl scout s'mores, evoking the classic campfire treat. Speaker 3: What is the cream in there? Speaker 7: Is that toothpaste? The s'mores were roasted last year in Dustin Nickerson's podcast called don't make me come back there. The comedian and his sidekicks compared the girl scout s'mores cream filling to that stuff between your tiles, caulk. Speaker 3: Yeah. That tastes like an adhesive. That is not good. Speaker 7: The girl scout s'mores debuted in 2017. They're among dozens of cookies that have been added and discontinued since Girl Scouts first started selling them to raise money more than a 100 years ago. Remember Scott Tease or Savannah Smiles? Wendy Lu is chief revenue officer for Girl Scouts of the USA. She's in charge of the cookie program. Speaker 8: So we do review our lineup on our regular basis. We definitely wanna make sure we're maximizing the sales opportunity for our girls. Speaker 7: Around 700,000 Girl Scouts around the country sell about 200,000,000 boxes of cookies each year, Lou says. And how much does that make for the Girl Scouts of the USA? Speaker 8: Roughly about a $1,000,000,000 in revenue for the organization. Speaker 7: That means at least some Toast Yay's and Girl Scouts s'mores help local Girl Scouts to camp, craft, volunteer, and to live by the Girl Scout law. Neda Ulibi, NPR News. Speaker 3: The National Weather Service says Los Angeles and Ventura Counties are under high wildfire risk through Wednesday. That's because the dry, gusty winds that have fueled the fires are expected to pick back up and could exacerbate the already devastating fires. One of the hardest hit areas is a neighborhood called Altadena. Many of those people have learned that the homes they left behind were burned to the ground. Joan Nguyen is one of them. When I spoke to her, she began by describing what her neighborhood looked like when she returned briefly after evacuating. Speaker 4: Oh, gosh. It just was unrecognizable. I mean, it just looked like nuclear warfare, really. I mean, it was buildings burned down, things that were unrecognizable, and it just felt just so sad to
Video Transcript AI Summary
I was involved in the World Bank protest litigation, which shaped current guidelines for mass demonstrations. My focus today is on the legal standards regarding the use of force during protests, particularly in light of the events at Lafayette Park. Courts assess the reasonableness of force used by officers, often deferring to their judgment in tense situations. The legality of clearing the park will likely be upheld, but the means used must be scrutinized. Warnings given to protesters are crucial; if they were clear and sufficient, compliance is expected. The LRAD system used for announcements is effective, but external noise can affect its reach. Ultimately, the context of the situation and the officers' responses will determine the legality of their actions.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: For roughly 14 years, I was one of the lead counsels in the World Bank protest litigation that produced the guidelines and case law currently applied in mass demonstration events like the one in Lafayette Park. Much of that litigation centered on the mass arrest of 100 of individuals in Pershing Park, which is not far from Lafayette Park in 2002. I appear today in the hopes of offering some legal perspective on the governing standards that apply in these cases and also the facts that a court would likely look at, in reviewing, these allegations, which are quite serious. In appearing, I should disclose that I have previously discussed this matter. I criticized the level of force used to remove the protesters, from the area and called for a congressional investigation, into the operation. I also stated, that night that I thought the attack on the Australian journalist appeared entirely unjustified and unlawful. I continue to hold those opinions as I discussed in my written testimony. My written testimony looks at the motivation, the authority, and the means used in the operation. In terms of the order itself, just because I, there was damage and there was violence the day before does not mean that an order is per se, lawful or that it was done in a lawful way. Was there enough time that it could put that it wasn't necessary to use the level of force that it did? On the level of force is my my testimony goes through in detail, courts have largely deferred to an objective reasonable officer in determining what force should be used. This comes out of, the Graham case. It's called the Graham analysis. I I point out that a number of district courts have ruled recently against the use of tear gas and pepper spray. As I say in my testimony, that distinction between tear gas and pepper spray is really not that essential I because courts tend to group them together. The important question is, was there a reasonable use of those devices? My summary, ultimately concludes that the order to clear the park, is probably going to be held as lawful, that the, the government does have the right to clear the park. Whether the means used to clear the park were lawful is something that this committee and other committees may be able to shed some light on. Many courts would express concern over the rapid escalation of force, particularly in a protest involving police abuse allegations. Professor Turley, what are the responsibilities of peaceful protesters when a protest turns violent? Thank you, congressman. The the way that the courts have addressed this is that they recognize that these protests are in fact, the the display of a First Amendment right of free speech. However, the courts have said that areas can be cleared for unpermitted demonstrations if warnings are given and they are not heated as long as the demonstrators have an avenue by which to exit. I think that Congress needs to ask a number of questions. I've listed 10 that are standard questions that are used in protest cases, including the the essential evidence that we often look to, things like running resumes to determine what orders were given and when. I encourage congress to do that. The question was, can they push forward that perimeter in order to establish a fence line? In my view, a court is likely to find that order to be lawful because of the degree of of property damage, the injuries to the officers. That order is likely to be upheld. The question is the means used. Was this done properly? All departments that I know of, certainly ones I've encountered, are are supposed to be trained in de escalation. Okay. And that's where it goes to that means. I mean, the area that I think it would be useful for the committee to make an inquiry on really was captured in the video when you see the line move rapidly forward. Speaker 1: Right. Speaker 0: If I was counsel, I would look at that as to why the line moved. And, also, at what point were was the last warning given before the line moved forward? Where courts tend to define what constitutes peaceful is often as a result of determining qualified immunity, decisions. That is, was the officer correct in the use of the level of force in the case? And the courts have said that they deferred officers because of what they, the court referred to as making split second judgments that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving. That's how the Supreme Court referred to it, I believe, in Graham. I so what the courts look at is whether protesters ignored orders to disperse and whether they were obstructive or violent. And this gets to that critical period, which I think this committee is gonna have to look at, of that period after the warnings were given, before the line moved forward, what were those officers facing? And that's what a court will do, and a court is going to demand very clear evidence on both sides to determine whether that could be defined as a peaceful situation where this is not warranted or and and the police escalated it or whether they were responding to a a threat to their safety or the safety of others. But in terms of this incident, I gave 10 questions that would be a useful start for this committee. It would get you the base information you need, including, actual contemporary calls made by officers, the so called running resume evidence. In a protest case, that's the first thing we ask for, is the running resume. Also, you have objective sources in the claims of injuries to law enforcement officers, injuries to protesters. Those things can be acquired. The other thing that I encourage you to to get at very quickly is non US park police agencies and their roles. I can tell you in terms of evidence, that's the stuff I'm most concerned with. It is the stuff that's most difficult to get, and you may be able to get a lead on that by asking for what are called MOUs. And MOUs, these memorandums of understanding, are often cut with non federal agencies or non park police, personnel. Those may give you an indication of who was involved, at that scene. What happened the day before justified the order to clear the park and establish the fencing, including the wider perimeter. But then the court, I think, would focus on what was actually happening at that moment as to whether the level of force deployed, was lawful and reasonable. The court, in looking at the the means used to push back the line will look specifically at the level of violence at that time. And so I think the court's gonna consider both. I the the whole context, in in other words, of the of the level. Speaker 1: Mike, Mike, the LRAD is used by the park service is a 100 x model. Hopefully, it means something to you. It doesn't mean anything to me. But it means it's 20 to 30 decibels louder than typical bullhorn or vehicle based PA system. So the model that was used has the maximum range of about 2,000 feet with a peak output of a 140 decibels. To compare that, a jet engine produces a 140 decibels at a 100 at a 100 feet, produces a 140 decibels. So that's the size of it. Department informed the committee staff that the script read as follows. This is Major Mark Adamczyk with the United States Park Police. For safety and security reasons, Lafayette Park and H Street are closed to pedestrians. You are ordered to depart the area immediately. This is your first warning. And they said that there were 2 more warnings like this one given. The last one, the last one said this was a final warning. According to legal standards that you've been talking about, is that warning sufficient to satisfy the warning requirements of law before disperse dispersing demonstrators like they did on June 1st? Speaker 0: It is sufficient. And in fact, in my testimony, I suggested that the LRAD may have been used. I noted in the testimony that Park Police has the LRAD system. It is a huge improvement over, prior years where they would use the PA systems off of patrol cars. This has a a a much broader range by magnitude of dozens, in terms of the the penetration of that system. It doesn't mean that you can't have canceling noise in a protest, particularly if you've got objects around you, but that is the gold standard for, for amplification, in these types of situations. Speaker 1: So it is much easier to hear than simply a bullhorn would have been. And then one of Speaker 0: the Yeah. That is the recommended that's recommended, system for many civil libertarians. It is a system that has a very, significant penetration range. Now that doesn't mean, once again, that it it you don't have circumstances where I entirely understand where people might not have heard it. You can have people around you. They could be screaming in your ear. Those are canceling noises, but this really is the gold standard in terms of the use of application. Speaker 1: Alright. And got 30 seconds for this one. If someone heard a statement from a policeman saying move, move, is that the kind of legal qualification that would be used? Speaker 0: When an officer tells you to move back sickly after these warnings, you are expected to comply. Speaker 1: Alright. So if if somebody in their written testimony would just say they heard the officer say move move, that would be the legal justification to have and the the expectation of lawful citizen, they would then move. Speaker 0: Yes. They they you are expected to to follow the orders of the officers, particularly after the issuance of those warnings. If if this was done to intimidate people, you know, this would be a serious problem. The Supreme Court said in Bose that protests are classically political speech, and that's why the courts have been so protective.
Saved - January 21, 2025 at 6:51 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I noted that during the 2020 DC Floyd riots and the 2017 J20 Trump Inauguration riots, all rioters were released without pretrial detention, even those charged with assaulting police. On January 6, 2017, protesters disrupted the Capitol during the certification of the 2016 election, and throughout Trump's presidency, the Capitol faced multiple invasions. Unlike the J6 defendants, these protesters faced local charges in DC Superior Court. The Floyd riots lasted five nights, causing significant property damage and injuries to over 100 federal agents, leading to a curfew and a lawsuit settlement.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

In both the 2020 DC Floyd riots and the 2017 J20 Trump Inauguration riots, all rioters were let go without pretrial detainment or prison including those charged with assaulting police. On J6 2017, protesters invaded the Capitol and interrupted VP Biden during the certification of the 2016 election. During Trump's presidency, the US Capitol was invaded at least 9 times. These protesters were charged under local DC statutes in DC Superior court, and not with federal charges in DC District court as the J6ers were. The Floyd riots went on for 5 nights and shut down DC: Property damage. 100+ federal agents injured. Firebombs thrown at the White House. Overnight curfew enacted by Mayor Bowser. DC settled lawsuit with protesters improperly dispersed. Goodwin v. D.C., 579 F. Supp. 3d 159 uncoverdc.com/2024/01/11/a-t… https://t.co/d7v0cFfehB

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@jim_noblet @Amys3rdAccount @JDVance All two hundred thirty five ANTIFA rioters who committed crimes and assaulted police on J20 had their cases dismissed. None of them were sentenced to pretrial detainment or suffered solitary confinement. All would have had a jury of their peers (95% voting against Trump).

Saved - January 21, 2025 at 6:50 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@julie_kelly2 @brikeilarcnn Hey @brikeilarcnn Graves is lying to you and the rest of the country about Jan 6:

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

DC commander Glover orders his officers to begin throwing grenades deep into the J6 crowd with no warnings given. https://t.co/dvSkDiRRk6

Video Transcript AI Summary
At 1:17 PM, a second wave of DC Metropolitan police officers arrives at the Capitol, bringing explosive ammunition. Officer Tara Tindall prepares CS gas rounds, while scene commander Robert Glover authorizes the deployment of explosives into the crowd. An officer expresses concern that throwing grenades will worsen the situation but later seeks munitions to use. Officer Thao is reprimanded for using smoke and is instructed to hold off on discharging CS gas. Another officer comments on the chaos, stating they were shot at without provocation, claiming it was a peaceful protest before the police started using concussion grenades and pepper spray.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 1 17 PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan police officers show up on the east side of the capital. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on the west plaza. Officer Tara Tindall is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. But scene commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. At 1:32 PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just going to make things worse. Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 1: I'm coming out with smoke. I got some burn about where he wants me. Okay. Single. Single. I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Speaker 1: I got a triple chaser on hold. Yeah. He went back. I know. But just a triple taser. Speaker 2: I know. Speaker 1: But just split the I mean, I got better. Speaker 0: Another captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 1: 89100. Point 3 up here. You're 43 Speaker 2: on the northbound I3. 31, I need you here, please. Speaker 1: They're shooting into their own people. He's supposed to be supporting Blue Lives Matter. We represent Blue Lives, and this is what they do to us. If they never thrown the concussion grenades, if they never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray.
Saved - January 21, 2025 at 6:46 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@JonathanTurley Jonathan Turley’s lack of recognition of the January 6 police attack on 1A protesters without dispersal warnings is unnerving. It takes an utter disregard for the constitution to ignore what happened to J6 protesters at the hands of the USCP and DC MPD on the Capitol’s West Plaza

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

In late 2020, two expert DC lawyers came out and said that DC and Park police force used to clear the park outside the White House after George Floyd rioters sieged the White House was illegal. @JonathanTurley testified before Congress 29 days later: @ThePCJF did NPR 3 months later and filed suit: They said the police were required to give multiple audible warnings using an LRAD-100x before firing munitions to disperse. Following the guidance laid out by Turley in his written and oral testimony, use of force used against J6ers was against the law. Yet not Turley nor anyone else, including attorneys JD Vance and Harmeet Dhillon, has examined the incontrovertible evidence or has spoken out about it. Why won't Congress call Turley in and investigate the J6 attacks seen in this thread? Read Turley's entire incredibly relevant testimony here: congress.gov/116/meeting/ho… NPR: npr.org/2020/09/11/911… @JDVance @pnjaban @PamBondi

Video Transcript AI Summary
In June, federal police used tear gas to clear Lafayette Square for President Trump's photo op, violating a court-ordered settlement requiring clear warnings before such actions. Peaceful protesters were present when police advanced shortly before a curfew, but the warnings given were hard to hear. The acting chief of park police claimed three warnings were issued using a long-range acoustic device, but a whistleblower from the DC National Guard testified that the warnings were barely audible and not from that device. The lawyer representing the original lawsuit believes the settlement terms were violated and plans to file a new lawsuit. In other news, two Girl Scout cookie flavors, Toast Yay's and Girl Scout S'mores, will be discontinued, while sales continue to support local troops. Meanwhile, Los Angeles faces high wildfire risks, with devastating impacts already seen in neighborhoods like Altadena.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: It was a summer photo op that has continued to reverberate. In June, let's remember, federal police used smoke and tear gas to clear a crowded park near the White House for the president. That move violated part of a court ordered settlement according to lawyers who helped write it. The settlement says federal officers had to warn protesters in a very specific way before using aggressive tactics. Dina Temple Reston from NPR's investigations team has more. Speaker 1: There were peaceful protesters in Lafayette Square near the White House on June 1st, marching, chanting, and then this happened. At about 6:30, half an hour before a city wide curfew was supposed to go into effect, police advanced and with seemingly little warning fired tear gas and smoke canisters into the crowd. This was just before president Trump walked across Lafayette Square to pose for a photograph in front of Saint John's Episcopal Church. The problem with how this unfolded is that if police wanted to clear the area, they had to warn the protesters first, and they had to do so loudly so people who didn't wanna be arrested could get away. The rules of engagement on DC streets were part of a settlement agreement reached in 2015. It ended a class action lawsuit filed on behalf of people who were caught up in the mass arrests in DC in 2002. Mara Verhailen Hilliard founded the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund, which represented some of the hundreds of people arrested back then. Speaker 2: They were held for 24, 27 hours or more. People were hogtied in stress and duress positions, wrist to ankle. Speaker 1: A US federal judge approved a settlement agreement that spelled out in detail exactly how police in DC needed to warn before moving in. Speaker 2: These procedures are very particular. They include, and that's why we wrote them this way, not just that they have to give notice and opportunity. They have to have officers at the farthest reaches of a demonstration who are certifying that they've heard that notice. Speaker 1: But instructions from the police in Lafayette Square on June 1st were hard to hear. The house committee on natural resources had a hearing in July to understand what happened in Lafayette Square that night. Speaker 3: Was the protocol followed to give 3 warnings? Speaker 1: Acting chief of the park police, Gregory Monahan, was one of the people who testified. Speaker 4: Yes, sir. The protocol was followed. There were 3 warnings given, and they were given utilizing a a long range acoustic device. It's called an LRAD, and that's what it stands for. That was the device used. Speaker 1: The LRAD is a kind of sound cannon that emits a piercing noise. A US park police spokesman told NPR that chief Monahan stands by his testimony, but a whistleblower has come forward saying the opposite. Speaker 5: On June 1st, I served as a liaison between the District of Columbia National Guard and the park police at Lafayette Square. Speaker 1: That's Adam DeMarco. He's a major in the DC National Guard. He told the house committee that he was 30 yards away from the officer giving the warnings, and he could barely hear him. And that announcement, he testified, didn't come from an LRAD. Speaker 5: The warnings were conveyed using a megaphone near the statue of president Andrew Jackson. From where I was standing, approximately 20 yards from the demonstrators, the announcements were barely audible, and I saw no indication that the demonstrators were cognizant of the warnings to disperse. Speaker 1: DeMarco is now a military whistleblower. His attorney, David Lofman, says his client was uniquely positioned to see the events unfold. Verhaden Hilliard, the lawyer who filed that original lawsuit, thinks its terms were violated on June 1st. She expects to file a new or related lawsuit that says so. Dina Tempel Rastin, NPR News. Speaker 6: Here is a heads up to Girl Scout Cookie fans. 2 cookie flavors will be discontinued after this year, but do not fret. Your Thin Mints are safe. NPR's Neda Ullaby has more. Speaker 7: You are forgiven if you've never heard of the 2 cookies that got laid off. One is called toast yay's. It's based on the cinnamon mapleiness of French toast and came out in 2021. The other is girl scout s'mores, evoking the classic campfire treat. Speaker 3: What is the cream in there? Speaker 7: Is that toothpaste? The s'mores were roasted last year in Dustin Nickerson's podcast called don't make me come back there. The comedian and his sidekicks compared the girl scout s'mores cream filling to that stuff between your tiles, caulk. Speaker 3: Yeah. That tastes like an adhesive. That is not good. Speaker 7: The girl scout s'mores debuted in 2017. They're among dozens of cookies that have been added and discontinued since Girl Scouts first started selling them to raise money more than a 100 years ago. Remember Scott Tease or Savannah Smiles? Wendy Lu is chief revenue officer for Girl Scouts of the USA. She's in charge of the cookie program. Speaker 8: So we do review our lineup on our regular basis. We definitely wanna make sure we're maximizing the sales opportunity for our girls. Speaker 7: Around 700,000 Girl Scouts around the country sell about 200,000,000 boxes of cookies each year, Lou says. And how much does that make for the Girl Scouts of the USA? Speaker 8: Roughly about a $1,000,000,000 in revenue for the organization. Speaker 7: That means at least some Toast Yay's and Girl Scouts s'mores help local Girl Scouts to camp, craft, volunteer, and to live by the Girl Scout law. Neda Ulibi, NPR News. Speaker 3: The National Weather Service says Los Angeles and Ventura Counties are under high wildfire risk through Wednesday. That's because the dry, gusty winds that have fueled the fires are expected to pick back up and could exacerbate the already devastating fires. One of the hardest hit areas is a neighborhood called Altadena. Many of those people have learned that the homes they left behind were burned to the ground. Joan Nguyen is one of them. When I spoke to her, she began by describing what her neighborhood looked like when she returned briefly after evacuating. Speaker 4: Oh, gosh. It just was unrecognizable. I mean, it just looked like nuclear warfare, really. I mean, it was buildings burned down, things that were unrecognizable, and it just felt just so sad to
Video Transcript AI Summary
I served as lead counsel in the World Bank protest litigation for 14 years, focusing on mass arrests and the legal standards for police actions during protests. My testimony critiques the force used to clear protesters and emphasizes that just because prior violence occurred does not justify excessive force. Courts generally defer to officers' judgments in tense situations, but the legality of the means used to clear the park is crucial. I recommend Congress investigate the timeline of warnings given to protesters and gather evidence on injuries and police actions. The LRAD system used for warnings is effective, but compliance is expected after clear orders are issued. If officers command movement after warnings, citizens are legally obligated to comply, unless intimidation is evident.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: For roughly 14 years, I was one of the lead counsels in the World Bank protest litigation that produced the guidelines and case law currently applied in mass demonstration events like the one in Lafayette Park. Much of that litigation centered on the mass arrest of 100 of individuals in Pershing Park, which is not far from Lafayette Park in 2002. I appear today in the hopes of offering some legal perspective on the governing standards that apply in these cases and also the facts that a court would likely look at, in reviewing, these allegations, which are quite serious. In appearing, I should disclose that I have previously discussed this matter. I criticized the level of force used to remove the protesters, from the area and called for a congressional investigation, into the operation. I also stated, that night that I thought the attack on the Australian journalist appeared entirely unjustified and unlawful. I continue to hold those opinions as I discussed in my written testimony. My written testimony looks at the motivation, the authority, and the means used in the operation. In terms of the order itself, just because I, there was damage and there was violence the day before does not mean that an order is per se, lawful or that it was done in a lawful way. Was there enough time that it could put that it wasn't necessary to use the level of force that it did? On the level of force is my my testimony goes through in detail, courts have largely deferred to an objective reasonable officer in determining what force should be used. This comes out of, the Graham case. It's called the Graham analysis. I I point out that a number of district courts have ruled recently against the use of tear gas and pepper spray. As I say in my testimony, that distinction between tear gas and pepper spray is really not that essential I because courts tend to group them together. The important question is, was there a reasonable use of those devices? My summary, ultimately concludes that the order to clear the park, is probably going to be held as lawful, that the, the government does have the right to clear the park. Whether the means used to clear the park were lawful is something that this committee and other committees may be able to shed some light on. Many courts would express concern over the rapid escalation of force, particularly in a protest involving police abuse allegations. Professor Turley, what are the responsibilities of peaceful protesters when a protest turns violent? Thank you, congressman. The the way that the courts have addressed this is that they recognize that these protests are in fact, the the display of a First Amendment right of free speech. However, the courts have said that areas can be cleared for unpermitted demonstrations if warnings are given and they are not heated as long as the demonstrators have an avenue by which to exit. I think that Congress needs to ask a number of questions. I've listed 10 that are standard questions that are used in protest cases, including the the essential evidence that we often look to, things like running resumes to determine what orders were given and when. I encourage congress to do that. The question was, can they push forward that perimeter in order to establish a fence line? In my view, a court is likely to find that order to be lawful because of the degree of of property damage, the injuries to the officers. That order is likely to be upheld. The question is the means used. Was this done properly? All departments that I know of, certainly ones I've encountered, are are supposed to be trained in de escalation. Okay. And that's where it goes to that means. I mean, the area that I think it would be useful for the committee to make an inquiry on really was captured in the video when you see the line move rapidly forward. Speaker 1: Right. Speaker 0: If I was counsel, I would look at that as to why the line moved. And, also, at what point were was the last warning given before the line moved forward? Where courts tend to define what constitutes peaceful is often as a result of determining qualified immunity, decisions. That is, was the officer correct in the use of the level of force in the case? And the courts have said that they deferred officers because of what they, the court referred to as making split second judgments that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving. That's how the Supreme Court referred to it, I believe, in Graham. I so what the courts look at is whether protesters ignored orders to disperse and whether they were obstructive or violent. And this gets to that critical period, which I think this committee is gonna have to look at, of that period after the warnings were given, before the line moved forward, what were those officers facing? And that's what a court will do, and a court is going to demand very clear evidence on both sides to determine whether that could be defined as a peaceful situation where this is not warranted or and and the police escalated it or whether they were responding to a a threat to their safety or the safety of others. But in terms of this incident, I gave 10 questions that would be a useful start for this committee. It would get you the base information you need, including, actual contemporary calls made by officers, the so called running resume evidence. In a protest case, that's the first thing we ask for, is the running resume. Also, you have objective sources in the claims of injuries to law enforcement officers, injuries to protesters. Those things can be acquired. The other thing that I encourage you to to get at very quickly is non US park police agencies and their roles. I can tell you in terms of evidence, that's the stuff I'm most concerned with. It is the stuff that's most difficult to get, and you may be able to get a lead on that by asking for what are called MOUs. And MOUs, these memorandums of understanding, are often cut with non federal agencies or non park police, personnel. Those may give you an indication of who was involved, at that scene. What happened the day before justified the order to clear the park and establish the fencing, including the wider perimeter. But then the court, I think, would focus on what was actually happening at that moment as to whether the level of force deployed, was lawful and reasonable. The court, in looking at the the means used to push back the line will look specifically at the level of violence at that time. And so I think the court's gonna consider both. I the the whole context, in in other words, of the of the level. Speaker 1: Mike, Mike, the LRAD is used by the park service is a 100 x model. Hopefully, it means something to you. It doesn't mean anything to me. But it means it's 20 to 30 decibels louder than typical bullhorn or vehicle based PA system. So the model that was used has the maximum range of about 2,000 feet with a peak output of a 140 decibels. To compare that, a jet engine produces a 140 decibels at a 100 at a 100 feet, produces a 140 decibels. So that's the size of it. Department informed the committee staff that the script read as follows. This is Major Mark Adamczyk with the United States Park Police. For safety and security reasons, Lafayette Park and H Street are closed to pedestrians. You are ordered to depart the area immediately. This is your first warning. And they said that there were 2 more warnings like this one given. The last one, the last one said this was a final warning. According to legal standards that you've been talking about, is that warning sufficient to satisfy the warning requirements of law before disperse dispersing demonstrators like they did on June 1st? Speaker 0: It is sufficient. And in fact, in my testimony, I suggested that the LRAD may have been used. I noted in the testimony that Park Police has the LRAD system. It is a huge improvement over, prior years where they would use the PA systems off of patrol cars. This has a a a much broader range by magnitude of dozens, in terms of the the penetration of that system. It doesn't mean that you can't have canceling noise in a protest, particularly if you've got objects around you, but that is the gold standard for, for amplification, in these types of situations. Speaker 1: So it is much easier to hear than simply a bullhorn would have been. And then one of Speaker 0: the Yeah. That is the recommended that's recommended, system for many civil libertarians. It is a system that has a very, significant penetration range. Now that doesn't mean, once again, that it it you don't have circumstances where I entirely understand where people might not have heard it. You can have people around you. They could be screaming in your ear. Those are canceling noises, but this really is the gold standard in terms of the use of application. Speaker 1: Alright. And got 30 seconds for this one. If someone heard a statement from a policeman saying move, move, is that the kind of legal qualification that would be used? Speaker 0: When an officer tells you to move back sickly after these warnings, you are expected to comply. Speaker 1: Alright. So if if somebody in their written testimony would just say they heard the officer say move move, that would be the legal justification to have and the the expectation of lawful citizen, they would then move. Speaker 0: Yes. They they you are expected to to follow the orders of the officers, particularly after the issuance of those warnings. If if this was done to intimidate people, you know, this would be a serious problem. The Supreme Court said in Bose that protests are classically political speech, and that's why the courts have been so protective.
Saved - January 21, 2025 at 6:45 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@hodgetwins The first class action has been filed for everyone in this picture:

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

One year ago, @InvestigateJ6 filed a class action lawsuit against DC & Capitol Police for their brutality against J6 West Plaza protesters, violating their rights. The case is currently pending and awaiting a ruling on class certification. Here is the proposed class definition: If you are a J6er who fits this definition, you will have the opportunity to join this action. Please stand by! Fischer et al. v. DC et al. 1:24-cv-00044 See all of the evidence at http://InvestigateJ6.org

Home Watch: investigatej6.org
Saved - January 21, 2025 at 6:40 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@IanCarrollShow Thanks Ian. Can you analyze the TRUE J6 TIMELINE for the world? EVERYTHING THEY TOLD YOU ABOUT J6 WAS A LIE!

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

BREAKING: NEW JAN 6 FOOTAGE RELEASED FROM THE PRODUCERS OF J6: A TRUE TIMELINE! FOOTAGE SHOWS THE FIRST MOMENTS OF J6 IN PRECISE DETAIL TIMESTAMPED MINUTE BY MINUTE: FROM THE TRUMP ELLIPSE SPEECH TO CROWDS ROAMING THE HALLS OF THE CAPITOL WITH ALL NEW MUST SEE 2025 J6 FOOTAGE!

Video Transcript AI Summary
President Trump announces to the crowd that they will walk to the Capitol to demand Congress count only lawful electors. As the crowd heads toward the Capitol, Vice President Mike Pence arrives for the electoral vote certification. A large group gathers at the Capitol, breaching barricades and clashing with police. Inside, Pence convenes the session while Trump continues his speech. Tensions escalate as police deploy less lethal munitions against the crowd, leading to injuries. Amidst the chaos, Trump tweets criticizing Pence, prompting a surge in the crowd. Misuse of gas and munitions by police causes them to lose control of the situation, allowing demonstrators to enter the Capitol. The scene becomes increasingly chaotic, with reports of injuries and fatalities among both police and protesters.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 15 minutes into his remarks, president Trump mentions for the first time that after his speech, the crowd will be walking to the Capitol. Speaker 1: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down we're gonna walk down to the capital. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 0: At 12:30 PM, the US Capitol Police report, a very large group heading to the capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue. Speaker 2: Those are Speaker 3: 50. Those look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading east. Speaker 0: President Trump won't be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another 40 minutes. At 12:36, vice president Mike Pence arrives at the US Capitol. Vice president's motorcade has just arrived at the Capitol in advance of the joint session. The certification is to begin in 24 minutes at 1 PM EST. As Mike Pence arrives, a crowd is already assembled at the barricades in front of the east plaza of the capitol. Speaker 1: Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 0: At 12:45 PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the Capitol. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway, a path that leads directly to the west side of the capitol. Back outside where the crowd has gathered at Peace Circle, there are 2 sets of metal barricades here behind which only 5 capitol police officers can be seen guarding this entrance while every member of congress convenes in the building behind them. Just south of this path, a man in a black ski mask removes a barrier and waves the crowd onto the west lawn of the capitol while members in the crowd shout at him. With this view, you can see the moment that the first set of bike racks come down and the crowd begins to quickly advance on the second set of gates. This would become the first major breach of the capitol grounds and skirmish with capitol police. Moments later, the barricade is pushed directly into the police line. Looking over the west side of the capitol from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the west plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. Inside the Capitol, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the Capitol. Back outside on the west plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I need less lethal teams that could come up from the upper west stairs and take an elevated position. They're not compliant, climbing, sapling. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 0: 1 minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 1:0:6 PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I got a crowd fighting with officer pushing, going for textiles. I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need to let the lethal team position above me to identify the agitator to start deploying. Bunch. Bunch. Bunch. Speaker 0: US Capitol Police inspector Lloyd is seen signaling officers above on the terrace to open fire on the crowd. Joshua Matthew Black, a 46 year old man from Alabama, is shot with a round that tears open and lodges in his cheek. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Deputy chief Waldo orders a second deployment of munitions. Speaker 3: I need more of the assessor legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still, non compliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, typical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 0: Although Chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least 3 clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 1:12 PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the Speaker 1: capitol in real time. So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is incredible. Thank you very much. Speaker 2: Dallas from Arizona. Speaker 1: Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Speaker 0: It is. As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thau arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. From a different officer's body cam, the familiar face of Ray Epps can be seen in the area that the police are trying to control. Back where we can see simultaneous angles, we can see Trump waving to the crowd after his 1 hour and 11 minute speech, the last speech he will give in front of a crowd as president of the United States. Ray Epps is at the front of the police line speaking to officers. Speaker 2: Appreciate that. Speaker 0: At 1:13 PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 2: Hey, captain. Hey. We need blaster this. What do we got? I can't get We gotta get something, man. Come on. We got it back. Speaker 0: At 1:15 PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges 2 rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the west terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 1:17 PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the east side of the capitol. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on west plaza. Officer Tara Tindall is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Speaker 2: Standby. Standby. Standby. Deploy. Speaker 0: Around 1:30 PM on the southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Speaker 2: Stay modified. Stay modified. Speaker 3: Stay on the floor. 33 k at Bri Street. Speaker 0: At 1:32 PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just gonna make things worse. Speaker 2: This is gonna make it worse. And it's not. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 0: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 2: I'm coming out with smoke. I got the burner no matter what I want. Speaker 0: A burner or hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 2: I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Another captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 0: Back on the west plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter, 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 2: Alright. I need a round. Good CF. Speaker 0: 30 seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 2:18 PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 2: And and not only that, we're taking out 1 and 10 of them are getting rain here. It's it's we're multiplying them by hitting them. Speaker 0: At 2:24 PM, president Trump tweets, Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our constitution. Speaker 4: Our investigation found that immediately after the president's 2:24 PM tweet, the crowds both outside the capital and inside the capital surged. Speaker 0: What the January 6th committee failed to mention was that it was officers misusing munitions and CS gas at that same time that led to a surge. Speaker 2: Hey, Rich. Yeah. Speaker 0: At the urging of officer Thao, a DC MPD officer attempts to fire a CS gas canister into the crowd. A short time later, after being gassed out, the police are forced to fall back and they soon lose their position. As officers on the west plaza, unequipped with gas masks, struggle breathing, the plume of CS gas can be seen from the overhead camera on the lower right corner of your screen. It blows over the entire area of the west plaza that the police had secured for nearly an hour. Within 3 minutes of the officer CS gas misfire, the police line on the west plaza entirely collapses. Speaker 2: We got tear gas when we were in the middle of a prayer. We were kneeling down a break. If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't happen. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray. Speaker 0: I set up up. That's what Speaker 2: they did. They set up they set up 64. Absolutely. And then they asked that to come in 2 hours later. They set us up. They need everybody right away. No. By the way, they set up a. I'm a bitch. Realize how it could be. We are going to get over the road on the steps of capital right now. We're taking. Okay? If you guys go down there, the tank appliances working very minimally. There's 10,000 to 1. You're gonna lose the steps, and we're getting people hurt like a Speaker 0: Demonstrators are seen entering from the west side of the capital while police officers watch them walk through the doors. Speaker 2: At least 3 mortally wounded, if not 3 dead today. 2 older men by the ambulance and this girl shoving in. No. Excuse me. Hello?
Saved - January 21, 2025 at 6:37 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
A new video detailing the events of January 6 has been released, showcasing the timeline from Trump's speech to the crowd's movement in the Capitol. One participant noted that Ray Epps appeared early in the footage but was not mentioned until later. In response, the original poster encouraged viewers to watch the full film, explaining that the clip shared was only a brief excerpt with additional footage included.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

BREAKING: NEW JAN 6 FOOTAGE RELEASED FROM THE PRODUCERS OF J6: A TRUE TIMELINE! FOOTAGE SHOWS THE FIRST MOMENTS OF J6 IN PRECISE DETAIL TIMESTAMPED MINUTE BY MINUTE: FROM THE TRUMP ELLIPSE SPEECH TO CROWDS ROAMING THE HALLS OF THE CAPITOL WITH ALL NEW MUST SEE 2025 J6 FOOTAGE!

Video Transcript AI Summary
President Trump, during his speech, announces a march to the Capitol to demand Congress count only lawful electors. As the crowd heads to the Capitol, Vice President Mike Pence arrives for the electoral vote certification. A large group gathers at the Capitol, breaching barricades and clashing with police. Tensions escalate as police deploy less lethal munitions, but warnings about their use are not clearly communicated. As Trump finishes his speech, violence erupts, and police struggle to maintain control. A tweet from Trump at 2:24 PM coincides with a surge in the crowd, leading to further chaos. Misuse of gas and munitions by police contributes to the breakdown of their line, allowing demonstrators to enter the Capitol.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 15 minutes into his remarks, president Trump mentions for the first time that after his speech, the crowd will be walking to the Capitol. Speaker 1: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down we're gonna walk down to the capital. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 0: At 12:30 PM, the US Capitol Police report, a very large group heading to the capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue. Speaker 2: Those are Speaker 3: 50. Those look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading east. Speaker 0: President Trump won't be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another 40 minutes. At 12:36, vice president Mike Pence arrives at the US Capitol. Vice president's motorcade has just arrived at the Capitol in advance of the joint session. The certification is to begin in 24 minutes at 1 PM EST. As Mike Pence arrives, a crowd is already assembled at the barricades in front of the east plaza of the capitol. Speaker 1: Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 0: At 12:45 PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the Capitol. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway, a path that leads directly to the west side of the capitol. Back outside where the crowd has gathered at Peace Circle, there are 2 sets of metal barricades here behind which only 5 capitol police officers can be seen guarding this entrance while every member of congress convenes in the building behind them. Just south of this path, a man in a black ski mask removes a barrier and waves the crowd onto the west lawn of the capitol while members in the crowd shout at him. With this view, you can see the moment that the first set of bike racks come down and the crowd begins to quickly advance on the second set of gates. This would become the first major breach of the capitol grounds and skirmish with capitol police. Moments later, the barricade is pushed directly into the police line. Looking over the west side of the capitol from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the west plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. Inside the Capitol, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the Capitol. Back outside on the west plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I need less lethal teams that could come up from the upper west stairs and take an elevated position. They're not compliant, climbing, sapling. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 0: 1 minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 1:0:6 PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I got a crowd fighting with officer pushing, going for textiles. I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need to let the lethal team position above me to identify the agitator to start deploying. Bunch. Bunch. Bunch. Speaker 0: US Capitol Police inspector Lloyd is seen signaling officers above on the terrace to open fire on the crowd. Joshua Matthew Black, a 46 year old man from Alabama, is shot with a round that tears open and lodges in his cheek. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Deputy chief Waldo orders a second deployment of munitions. Speaker 3: I need more of the assessor legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still, non compliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, typical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 0: Although Chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least 3 clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 1:12 PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the Speaker 1: capitol in real time. So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is incredible. Thank you very much. Speaker 2: Dallas from Arizona. Speaker 1: Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Speaker 0: It is. As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thau arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. From a different officer's body cam, the familiar face of Ray Epps can be seen in the area that the police are trying to control. Back where we can see simultaneous angles, we can see Trump waving to the crowd after his 1 hour and 11 minute speech, the last speech he will give in front of a crowd as president of the United States. Ray Epps is at the front of the police line speaking to officers. Speaker 2: Appreciate that. Speaker 0: At 1:13 PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 2: Hey, captain. Hey. We need blaster this. What do we got? I can't get We gotta get something, man. Come on. We got it back. Speaker 0: At 1:15 PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges 2 rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the west terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 1:17 PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the east side of the capitol. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on west plaza. Officer Tara Tindall is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Speaker 2: Standby. Standby. Standby. Deploy. Speaker 0: Around 1:30 PM on the southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Speaker 2: Stay modified. Stay modified. Speaker 3: Stay on the floor. 33 k at Bri Street. Speaker 0: At 1:32 PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just gonna make things worse. Speaker 2: This is gonna make it worse. And it's not. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 0: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 2: I'm coming out with smoke. I got the burner no matter what I want. Speaker 0: A burner or hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 2: I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Another captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 0: Back on the west plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter, 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 2: Alright. I need a round. Good CF. Speaker 0: 30 seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 2:18 PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 2: And and not only that, we're taking out 1 and 10 of them are getting rain here. It's it's we're multiplying them by hitting them. Speaker 0: At 2:24 PM, president Trump tweets, Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our constitution. Speaker 4: Our investigation found that immediately after the president's 2:24 PM tweet, the crowds both outside the capital and inside the capital surged. Speaker 0: What the January 6th committee failed to mention was that it was officers misusing munitions and CS gas at that same time that led to a surge. Speaker 2: Hey, Rich. Yeah. Speaker 0: At the urging of officer Thao, a DC MPD officer attempts to fire a CS gas canister into the crowd. A short time later, after being gassed out, the police are forced to fall back and they soon lose their position. As officers on the west plaza, unequipped with gas masks, struggle breathing, the plume of CS gas can be seen from the overhead camera on the lower right corner of your screen. It blows over the entire area of the west plaza that the police had secured for nearly an hour. Within 3 minutes of the officer CS gas misfire, the police line on the west plaza entirely collapses. Speaker 2: We got tear gas when we were in the middle of a prayer. We were kneeling down a break. If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't happen. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray. Speaker 0: I set up up. That's what Speaker 2: they did. They set up they set up 64. Absolutely. And then they asked that to come in 2 hours later. They set us up. They need everybody right away. No. By the way, they set up a. I'm a bitch. Realize how it could be. We are going to get over the road on the steps of capital right now. We're taking. Okay? If you guys go down there, the tank appliances working very minimally. There's 10,000 to 1. You're gonna lose the steps, and we're getting people hurt like a Speaker 0: Demonstrators are seen entering from the west side of the capital while police officers watch them walk through the doors. Speaker 2: At least 3 mortally wounded, if not 3 dead today. 2 older men by the ambulance and this girl shoving in. No. Excuse me. Hello?

@Amy31129057 - QuestionIt

@InvestigateJ6 Ray Epps was early in the video at 2:38, yet no mention of him until the 7:01 minute mark..... ??

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@Amy31129057 Watch the full film. This is a short clip with additional new footage added.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Tucker wants every American to watch this film and learn the truth about January 6. J6: A TRUE TIMELINE @J6TrueTimeline 🇺🇸 watch the footage at open.ink/collections/J6 https://t.co/tsGI4JimT6

Video Transcript AI Summary
The movie details the events of the day at the Capitol, presenting a clear account of what transpired. It should be widely recognized in the United States. For it to gain that recognition, Mike Pence needs to agree to send it back. The situation was orchestrated to lead to failure, but we did not succumb to that outcome. Winning was not an option.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: The movie lays out the day's events moment by moment. It shows you what actually happened at the Capitol, and it should be the most famous film in the United States. The only way that can happen is if Mike Pence agrees to send it back. They set us up to fail. They didn't. There was no way we were winning that.
Saved - January 21, 2025 at 2:16 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

BREAKING: NEW JAN 6 FOOTAGE RELEASED FROM THE PRODUCERS OF J6: A TRUE TIMELINE! FOOTAGE SHOWS THE FIRST MOMENTS OF J6 IN PRECISE DETAIL TIMESTAMPED MINUTE BY MINUTE: FROM THE TRUMP ELLIPSE SPEECH TO CROWDS ROAMING THE HALLS OF THE CAPITOL WITH ALL NEW MUST SEE 2025 J6 FOOTAGE!

Video Transcript AI Summary
President Trump, during his speech, announces that the crowd will march to the Capitol to demand Congress count only lawful electors. As the crowd heads east, Vice President Mike Pence arrives at the Capitol for the electoral vote certification. A large group gathers at the Capitol, breaching barricades and clashing with police. Tensions rise as police deploy less lethal munitions against the crowd, which includes warnings that are not captured on video. As Trump finishes his speech, chaos ensues with police struggling to maintain control. A surge in the crowd follows a tweet from Trump criticizing Pence, leading to further confrontations. Misuse of crowd control munitions by police contributes to the situation escalating, resulting in demonstrators entering the Capitol as police lines collapse.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 15 minutes into his remarks, president Trump mentions for the first time that after his speech, the crowd will be walking to the Capitol. Speaker 1: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down we're gonna walk down to the capital. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 0: At 12:30 PM, the US Capitol Police report, a very large group heading to the capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue. Speaker 2: Those are Speaker 3: 50. Those look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading east. Speaker 0: President Trump won't be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another 40 minutes. At 12:36, vice president Mike Pence arrives at the US Capitol. Vice president's motorcade has just arrived at the Capitol in advance of the joint session. The certification is to begin in 24 minutes at 1 PM EST. As Mike Pence arrives, a crowd is already assembled at the barricades in front of the east plaza of the capitol. Speaker 1: Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 0: At 12:45 PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the Capitol. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway, a path that leads directly to the west side of the capitol. Back outside where the crowd has gathered at Peace Circle, there are 2 sets of metal barricades here behind which only 5 capitol police officers can be seen guarding this entrance while every member of congress convenes in the building behind them. Just south of this path, a man in a black ski mask removes a barrier and waves the crowd onto the west lawn of the capitol while members in the crowd shout at him. With this view, you can see the moment that the first set of bike racks come down and the crowd begins to quickly advance on the second set of gates. This would become the first major breach of the capitol grounds and skirmish with capitol police. Moments later, the barricade is pushed directly into the police line. Looking over the west side of the capitol from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the west plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. Inside the Capitol, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the Capitol. Back outside on the west plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I need less lethal teams that could come up from the upper west stairs and take an elevated position. They're not compliant, climbing, sapling. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 0: 1 minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 1:0:6 PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I got a crowd fighting with officer pushing, going for textiles. I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need to let the lethal team position above me to identify the agitator to start deploying. Bunch. Bunch. Bunch. Speaker 0: US Capitol Police inspector Lloyd is seen signaling officers above on the terrace to open fire on the crowd. Joshua Matthew Black, a 46 year old man from Alabama, is shot with a round that tears open and lodges in his cheek. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Deputy chief Waldo orders a second deployment of munitions. Speaker 3: I need more of the assessor legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still, non compliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, typical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 0: Although Chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least 3 clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 1:12 PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the Speaker 1: capitol in real time. So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is incredible. Thank you very much. Speaker 2: Dallas from Arizona. Speaker 1: Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Speaker 0: It is. As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thau arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. From a different officer's body cam, the familiar face of Ray Epps can be seen in the area that the police are trying to control. Back where we can see simultaneous angles, we can see Trump waving to the crowd after his 1 hour and 11 minute speech, the last speech he will give in front of a crowd as president of the United States. Ray Epps is at the front of the police line speaking to officers. Speaker 2: Appreciate that. Speaker 0: At 1:13 PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 2: Hey, captain. Hey. We need blaster this. What do we got? I can't get We gotta get something, man. Come on. We got it back. Speaker 0: At 1:15 PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges 2 rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the west terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 1:17 PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the east side of the capitol. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on west plaza. Officer Tara Tindall is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Speaker 2: Standby. Standby. Standby. Deploy. Speaker 0: Around 1:30 PM on the southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Speaker 2: Stay modified. Stay modified. Speaker 3: Stay on the floor. 33 k at Bri Street. Speaker 0: At 1:32 PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just gonna make things worse. Speaker 2: This is gonna make it worse. And it's not. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 0: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 2: I'm coming out with smoke. I got the burner no matter what I want. Speaker 0: A burner or hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 2: I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Another captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 0: Back on the west plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter, 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 2: Alright. I need a round. Good CF. Speaker 0: 30 seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 2:18 PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 2: And and not only that, we're taking out 1 and 10 of them are getting rain here. It's it's we're multiplying them by hitting them. Speaker 0: At 2:24 PM, president Trump tweets, Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our constitution. Speaker 4: Our investigation found that immediately after the president's 2:24 PM tweet, the crowds both outside the capital and inside the capital surged. Speaker 0: What the January 6th committee failed to mention was that it was officers misusing munitions and CS gas at that same time that led to a surge. Speaker 2: Hey, Rich. Yeah. Speaker 0: At the urging of officer Thao, a DC MPD officer attempts to fire a CS gas canister into the crowd. A short time later, after being gassed out, the police are forced to fall back and they soon lose their position. As officers on the west plaza, unequipped with gas masks, struggle breathing, the plume of CS gas can be seen from the overhead camera on the lower right corner of your screen. It blows over the entire area of the west plaza that the police had secured for nearly an hour. Within 3 minutes of the officer CS gas misfire, the police line on the west plaza entirely collapses. Speaker 2: We got tear gas when we were in the middle of a prayer. We were kneeling down a break. If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't happen. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray. Speaker 0: I set up up. That's what Speaker 2: they did. They set up they set up 64. Absolutely. And then they asked that to come in 2 hours later. They set us up. They need everybody right away. No. By the way, they set up a. I'm a bitch. Realize how it could be. We are going to get over the road on the steps of capital right now. We're taking. Okay? If you guys go down there, the tank appliances working very minimally. There's 10,000 to 1. You're gonna lose the steps, and we're getting people hurt like a Speaker 0: Demonstrators are seen entering from the west side of the capital while police officers watch them walk through the doors. Speaker 2: At least 3 mortally wounded, if not 3 dead today. 2 older men by the ambulance and this girl shoving in. No. Excuse me. Hello?
Saved - January 19, 2025 at 3:10 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
I just watched a clip featuring brand new J6 footage from 2025, detailing the critical events of the January 6 election protest minute by minute. It starts at the Ellipse at 12:16 PM and ends with protesters roaming the Capitol halls en masse at 2:35 PM.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

This clip with BRAND NEW J6 FOOTAGE RELEASED IN 2025 shows the MOST CRITICAL EVENTS of the J6 election protest MINUTE BY MINUTE! 16 MINUTE SUMMARY OF J6: STARTING AT THE ELLIPSE AT 12:16PM, ENDING WITH ELECTION PROTESTERS ROAMING THE HALLS OF THE US CAPITOL EN MASSE AT 2:35PM. 17/x continue for more new J6 🎥

Video Transcript AI Summary
President Trump announces that after his speech, the crowd will march to the Capitol to demand Congress count only lawful electors. At 12:30 PM, a large group heads toward the Capitol. By 12:45 PM, demonstrators breach barricades, leading to the first significant confrontation with Capitol police. As Vice President Pence convenes the joint session inside, Trump continues speaking outside. Tensions escalate, and police deploy less lethal munitions against the crowd. By 1:30 PM, police struggle to maintain control, and a surge occurs after Trump tweets at 2:24 PM, criticizing Pence. Misuse of crowd control munitions contributes to the chaos, leading to a collapse of police lines and demonstrators entering the Capitol. Demonstrators are seen entering the Capitol as police struggle to regain control.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 15 minutes into his remarks, president Trump mentions for the first time that after his speech, the crowd will be walking to the Capitol. Speaker 1: Now it is up to congress to confront this egregious assault on our democracy. And after this, we're gonna walk down, and I'll be there with you. We're gonna walk down we're gonna walk down to the capital. We have come to demand that congress do the right thing and only count the electors who have been lawfully slated, lawfully slated. I know that everyone here will soon be marching over to the capitol building to peacefully and patriotically make your voices heard. Speaker 0: At 12:30 PM, the US Capitol Police report, a very large group heading to the capitol from eastbound on Pennsylvania Avenue. Speaker 2: Those are Speaker 3: 50. Those look like we're gonna have an ad hoc march stepping off here. There's a crowd surge heading Speaker 0: east. President Trump won't be finished speaking at the Ellipse for another 40 minutes. At 12:36, vice president Mike Pence arrives at the US Capitol. Vice president's motorcade has just arrived at the Capitol in advance of the joint session. The certification is to begin in 24 minutes at 1 PM EST. As Mike Pence arrives, a crowd is already assembled at the barricades in front of the east plaza of the capitol. Speaker 1: Mike Pence has to agree to send it back. Speaker 0: At 12:45 PM, a DC police camera captures what looks like a wall of people suddenly arriving about a block west of the Capitol. Video footage captured moments later shows demonstrators gathering at Peace Circle where Pennsylvania Avenue terminates as a street and turns into Pennsylvania Walkway, a path that leads directly to the west side of the capitol. Back outside where the crowd has gathered at Peace Circle, there are 2 sets of metal barricades here behind which only 5 capitol police officers can be seen guarding this entrance while every member of congress convenes in the building behind them. Just south of this path, a man in a black ski mask removes a barrier and waves the crowd onto the west lawn of the capitol while members in the crowd shout at him. With this view, you can see the moment that the first set of bike racks come down and the crowd begins to quickly advance on the second set of gates. This would become the first major breach of the capitol grounds and skirmish with capitol police. Moments later, the barricade is pushed directly into the police line. Looking over the west side of the capitol from a security camera on the exterior dome, we can see how quickly the crowd is able to fill the area in front of the west plaza. From this point forward, those in the crowd entering onto Capitol grounds may have seen no indications or warnings that they were in an area that was previously guarded by police and secured by barriers. Inside the Capitol, vice president Mike Pence is entering the house chamber to convene the joint session to certify the electoral votes. President Donald Trump is still speaking to a large crowd at the Ellipse, unaware of the crowd that is already amassed at the Capitol. Back outside on the west plaza, United States Capitol Police Deputy Chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to get into position. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I need less lethal teams that could come up from the upper west stairs and take an elevated position. They're not compliant, climbing, sapling. Let me know when the less lethal teams are in place. Speaker 0: 1 minute later, the less lethal team moves into place. At 1:0:6 PM, deputy chief Waldo orders the less lethal team to launch. Speaker 3: Unit 6, I got a crowd fighting with officer pushing, going for textiles. I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need to let the lethal team position above me to identify the agitator to start deploying. Launch. Launch. Launch. Speaker 0: US Capitol Police inspector Lloyd is seen signaling officers above on the terrace to open fire on the crowd. Joshua Matthew Black, a 46 year old man from Alabama, is shot with a round that tears open and lodges in his cheek. Safety procedures for using these rounds state not to fire at someone at eye level. Deputy chief Waldo orders a second deployment of munitions. Speaker 3: I need more of the assessor legal teams over here. The indirect firing is not working. They are still, non compliant. We've continued to give, I've continued to give multiple warnings about, typical munitions being released. They are not dispersing. Speaker 0: Although Chief Waldo has broadcast over the radio twice that he has given warnings, no video that day captures these warnings. DC law on crowd dispersal procedures states that before any munitions are used against a crowd, officers must issue at least 3 clearly audible and understandable orders to disperse using an amplification system as well as to provide participants reasonable and adequate time to disperse and a clear safe route for dispersal. President Trump is finishing his speech at the Ellipse at 1:12 PM. In a rarely seen split screen view, let's simultaneously see different events happening around the Speaker 1: capitol in real time. So let's walk down Pennsylvania Avenue. I wanna thank you all. God bless you, and God bless America. Thank you all for being here. This is incredible. Thank you very much. Speaker 2: Dallas from Arizona. Speaker 1: Is the objection in writing and signed by a senator? Speaker 0: It is. As representative Paul Gosar and senator Ted Cruz make a challenge on the floor of the house, MPD officer Daniel Thau arrives at the southwest section of the plaza. His body cam shows him and nearby officers spraying demonstrators with an inflammatory agent. From a different officer's body cam, the familiar face of Ray Epps can be seen in the area that the police are trying to control. Back where we can see simultaneous angles, we can see Trump waving to the crowd after his 1 hour and 11 minute speech, the last speech he will give in front of a crowd as president of the United States. Ray Epps is at the front of the police line speaking to officers. Speaker 2: Appreciate that. Speaker 0: At 1:13 PM, officer Thao is frantically calling for more munitions. Speaker 2: Hey, captain. Hey. We need blaster this. What do we got? I can't get We gotta get something, man. Come on. We got it back. Speaker 0: At 1:15 PM, officer Thao crosses the line and engages with demonstrators. As the scuffle ensues, he discharges 2 rounds from his taser, also known as an ECD. After expending all his munitions, officer Thao yells at the officers on the west terrace of the capital above them to start shooting what they have into the crowd. The less lethal team fires into the crowd for a third time. 1:17 PM. A second wave of DC Metropolitan Police officers show up on the east side of the capitol. They are the first to bring in explosive ammunition rounds that they will soon distribute to officers on west plaza. Officer Tara Tindall is crouched on the ground readying CS gas rounds. Commander officer Robert Glover gives the first audible authorization to deploy explosives into the crowd. Speaker 2: Standby. Standby. Standby. Deploy. Speaker 0: Around 1:30 PM on the southwest side of the plaza, officers push the crowd back and are able to establish a police line again. The police will hold this line for about an hour. Speaker 2: Stay modified. Stay modified. Speaker 3: Stay on the floor. 33 k at Bri Street. Speaker 0: At 1:32 PM, an officer laments that chucking grenades into the crowd is just gonna make things worse. Speaker 2: This is gonna make it worse. And it's not. Hold on. Hold on. Hold on. Speaker 0: Moments later, the same officer seems to have changed his mind and is actively searching for munitions to discharge in the crowd. Speaker 2: I'm coming out with smoke. I got the burner no matter what I want. Speaker 0: A burner or hot burning smoke grenade can get extremely hot and become a fire risk. Speaker 2: I need triple chasers. Speaker 0: After not receiving approval to use the triple chaser, officer Thao appears to be reprimanded by another officer for his use of smoke moments earlier. Another captain tells officer Thao to hold on discharging CS gas into the crowd. Speaker 2: Hey. Frank, you got anything else? Speaker 0: Back on the west plaza of the capital, officer Thao receives a Stinger 40 millimeter, 60 caliber rubber balls round and rushes to fire it into the crowd. Speaker 2: Alright. I need a round. Good CF. Speaker 0: 30 seconds later, he's given a baton round. He again heads over to the police line to fire it into the crowd. At 2:18 PM, police body cam picks up a tense conversation among officers where one officer admits that they're hitting innocent people. Speaker 2: And and not only that, we're taking out 1 and 10 of them are getting rain here. It's it's we're multiplying them by hitting them. Speaker 0: At 2:24 PM, president Trump tweets, Mike Pence didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect our country and our constitution. Speaker 4: Our investigation found that immediately after the president's 2:24 PM tweet, the crowds both outside the capital and inside the capital surged. Speaker 0: What the January 6th committee failed to mention was that it was officers misusing munitions and CS gas at that same time that led to a surge. Speaker 2: Hey, Rich. Yeah. Speaker 0: At the urging of officer Thao, a DC MPD officer attempts to fire a CS gas canister into the crowd. A short time later, after being gassed out, the police are forced to fall back and they soon lose their position. As officers on the west plaza, unequipped with gas masks, struggle breathing, the plume of CS gas can be seen from the overhead camera on the lower right corner of your screen. It blows over the entire area of the west plaza that the police had secured for nearly an hour. Within 3 minutes of the officer CS gas misfire, the police line on the west plaza entirely collapses. Speaker 2: We got tear gas when we were in the middle of a prayer. We were kneeling down a break. If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't happen. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray. Speaker 0: I set up up. That's what Speaker 2: they did. They set up they set up 64. Absolutely. And then they asked that to come in 2 hours later. They set us up. They need everybody right Speaker 3: away. No. Speaker 2: By the way, they set up a. I'm a bitch. Realize how it could be. We are going to get over the road on the steps of capital right now. We're taking. Okay? If you guys go down there, the tank appliances working very minimally. There's 10,000 to 1. You're gonna lose the steps, and we're getting people hurt like a Speaker 0: Demonstrators are seen entering from the west side of the capital while police officers watch them walk through the doors. Speaker 2: At least 3 mortally wounded, if not 3 dead today. 2 older men by the ambulance and this girl shoving in. No. Excuse me. Hello?
Saved - January 14, 2025 at 5:16 PM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Peaceful protester Josh Black was the first person shot and wounded on J6, and was then given a USSR style show trial and sentenced to 22 months in federal prison. He’s out now. @PreacherOChrist “That’s what I pulled out of my face… if I drink water, it leaks out of my cheek” https://t.co/K5aF3dlWHx

Video Transcript AI Summary
They shot you with this? I pulled it out of my face; it seems like a piece of a grenade. It went all the way through my mouth. If I drink water, it leaks from my cheek, and I'm still getting plastic out. What do you want to say to people? They stole our country. The government isn't our provider; the Lord is. Our rights come from God, and the government is supposed to protect them, but they aren't. It's not just Democrats; Republicans are just as corrupt. They're all involved in dirty dealings. It's all so gross.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: They shot you with one of these? That's what I pulled out of my face. I think that's a piece of a grenade or something. He pulled us out of his face. Can we see your face? Look at that. It went all the way through. It went through your face and your mouth? All the way through. Yeah. So you pulled this out of your mouth? If I drink water, it leaks out of my cheek. And I'm I'm still getting plastic out of my mouth. So what do you wanna say to the people out there? I don't know what to tell them, man. I mean, they stole our country. What are you gonna do about it? The government ain't our provider. The lord is. You know, the government don't give us freedom. The lord does. All of our rights were given to us by god, and they're supposed to be protecting them. They're not. And it ain't Democrat or Republican. Republicans are just as dirty. They're all crooked. They're all they got dirt on them or they paid them off. So That's so gross. This is gross.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On J6, DC and Capitol police shoot a round through a man's cheek, blow a man's lip off, and shatter another's femur with their projectile and explosive munitions, grenades, and mortars: https://t.co/yXdF9Mny8x

Saved - January 13, 2025 at 11:46 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I shared new, never-before-seen videos from a Capitol Police officer's camera showing them opening fire on J6 protesters without warning. It's concerning that @SpeakerJohnson and @RepMTG haven't addressed this. I believe we need to pardon the civil rights victims from J6 and hold their judges accountable. Additionally, I posted footage of DC police arriving with explosive munitions, where the commander ordered them to bomb the crowd without any warnings. This raises serious questions about the actions taken that day.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

🚨 NEW NEVER BEFORE SEEN VIDEOS FROM A US CAPITOL POLICE OFFICER CAMERA SHOW THE MOMENT THEY OPENED FIRE ON INNOCENT J6 1A PROTESTERS WITHOUT WARNING. @SpeakerJohnson DIDN’T RELEASE THIS, @RepMTG DIDN’T INVESTIGATE IT! PARDON J6 CIVIL RIGHTS VICTIMS AND IMPEACH THEIR JUDGES! 🇺🇸 https://t.co/5ooX69Unuz

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

1:06pm on January 6th: The first 5 minutes of the protest outside the Capitol. Who's attacking who? Capitol Police shoot at the heads of J6ers not any committing violence. 2/x continue for more EXCLUSIVE NEW J6 VIDEOS...

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

THIS VIDEO SHOWS THE MOMENT DC POLICE ARRIVE WITH EXPLOSIVE MUNITIONS AND BEGIN BOMBING THE CROWD. https://t.co/vAijSW1A2Y

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

DC commander Glover orders his officers to begin throwing grenades deep into the J6 crowd with no warnings given. https://t.co/dvSkDiRRk6

Saved - January 12, 2025 at 4:21 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
I shared breaking news about newly released footage from January 6, showing Capitol Police firing at protesters without any prior dispersal warnings. This footage, withheld for four years, highlights that many protesters were peaceful and not committing violence. Legal precedents require warnings before using force, and the lack of compliance with these laws raises serious concerns. Officers admitted that their munitions were hitting innocent people, inciting more unrest. The situation escalated without proper protocols, contradicting prior restrictions on police conduct during protests.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

BREAKING!!! NEW J6 FOOTAGE RELEASED OF FIRST SHOTS FIRED AT PROTESTERS OUTSIDE THE CAPITOL NO ONE IS RIOTING YET CAPITOL POLICE OFFICERS ARE FIRING AT THEIR HEADS DC DOJ AND THE J6 SELECT COMMITTEE HID ALL OF THIS FOOTAGE FROM DEFENDANTS AND THE PUBLIC 1/x continue for more EXCLUSIVE NEW J6 VIDEOS...

Video Transcript AI Summary
We need to take control of the roadside and get inside the house. That's where the criminals are hiding.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Who wants in there? We're fighting for the roadside here. We need to get in the house. That's where the criminals are. That's where the criminals are.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

1:06pm on January 6th: The first 5 minutes of the protest outside the Capitol. Who's attacking who? Capitol Police shoot at the heads of J6ers not any committing violence. 2/x continue for more EXCLUSIVE NEW J6 VIDEOS...

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The newly discovered footage was filmed by this USCP officer with this camera This new video footage conclusively shows that no legally required dispersal warnings were given to J6 protesters before open firing on them This highly exculpatory footage and evidence was EXCLUDED from the J6 Select Committee hearings, and was withheld from defendants and the American public for 4 years! 3/x continue for more EXCLUSIVE NEW J6 VIDEOS...

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Dispersal warnings have been required of DC police forces to disperse a protest going back to as early as 1977, and have been reinforced by the DC Circuit Court numerous times: Law and precedent hold that is unlawful to open fire on a crowd, even if some individuals are committing violence, without first warning everybody to come into compliance or disperse: Not only are dispersal warnings required by the DC Court, but the DC FAAA requires the use of an LRAD amplification system at minimum, mandating that warnings are not sufficient unless they are clearly audible: see: DC First Amendment Assemblies Act; Dellums v. Powell, 566 F.2d 167, 184 (D.C. Cir. 1977); Chang v. United States, 738 F. Supp. 2d 83 (D.C. Cir. 2010); Barham v. Ramsey, 434 F.3d 565 (D.C. Cir. 2006); Goodwin v. Dist. of Columbia 579 F. Supp. 3d 159 (D.D.C. 2022). "Dellums [566 F.2d 167] establishes a "bright line rule" that "where a group contains persons who have not been violent or obstructive, police may not mass arrest the demonstration as a group without fair warning or notice and the opportunity to come into compliance and disperse."

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

USCP Deputy Chief Waldow gives no dispersal orders and has no LRAD, yet he can be heard on radio transmissions claiming to have given warnings numerous times. @HanneBlaze64 @EpochTimes

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

1:13PM: DC arrives with canisters of OC spray and pelican cases full of explosives 4 stimuli upon explosion inflicting "psychological and physiological effects". They wage war on the sea of people on the West Plaza who had done nothing wrong mercilessly for more than an hour.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

DC commander Glover orders his officers to begin throwing grenades deep into the J6 crowd with no warnings given.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

1:18: Just minutes prior to the arrival of explosive munitions outside the Capitol, DC Sgt Thau demands Capitol snipers above open fire on the crowd. Thau yells "FUCKING SHOOT THEM!" Capitol snipers strike a group of entirely peaceful protesters standing near a large wooden cross. 8/x continue for more EXCLUSIVE NEW J6 VIDEOS...

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 1:17pm, Thau orders Capitol PD ‘snipers nest’ to continue firing indiscriminately into the crowd. He screams “let’s go, fucking shoot them!” “Shoot! Shoot! Shoot!”

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

1:18: Rounds strike multiple peaceful protesters in the head, including AJ Fischer and his stepfather Brian Boele who had been helping injured protesters and police, and a group of Proud Boys who had been keeping the peace, before they were struck. 9/x continue for more EXCLUSIVE NEW J6 VIDEOS...

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On J6, DC and Capitol police shoot a round through a man's cheek, blow a man's lip off, and shatter another's femur with their projectile and explosive munitions, grenades, and mortars:

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

In early 2024, DC police Sgt Daniel Thau was interviewed by FBI, see Thau's 302 below: Thau states that he believes officer munitions and use of force made things worse, they were set up, and that DOJ has been overly aggressive in prosecuting J6 defendants compared to George Floyd rioters. He argues that J6 defendants didn't know they were in a restricted area and were being railroaded by politically motivated DOJ who showed no interest in previous leftwing riots when he and other officers were injured. Notably, Thau and his fellow officers DC MPD on the West Plaza had been sued at least 3 times for similar conduct against protesters with munitions: Ferris v. Dist. of Columbia, No. 1:23-cv-481-RCL (D.D.C. 2023); Westfahl v. Dist. of Columbia, 75 F. Supp. 3d 365 (D.D.C. 2014); Black Lives Matter D.C. v. Trump, 544 F. Supp. 3d 15 (D.D.C. 2021).

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

2:18: DC police Sgt's Edwards and Thau admit to DC commander that their munitions are hitting innocent people, and inciting ten protesters for every one they hit:

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On January 6th at 2:18pm, DC police Sgt. Edwards admits to his Commander that their munitions are hitting innocent people. Officer Thau admits that they are inciting ten protestors for every person they hit. 💣🔥

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On J6, Capitol & DC police were restricted from using munitions against protesters: "Impact projectiles will not be fired indiscriminately into crowds" On January 5, 2021, USCP operations plan explicitly restricted the firing of impact projectiles into crowds and required verbal dispersal commands using a PA system; outlining 13 permitted events on Capitol Grounds between Jan 4-6 and USCP primary mission objective "to provide an environment in which lawful first amendment activity can be safely demonstrated." Months before J6 in 2020, DC City Council and DC Mayor Bowser banned the use of tear gas, pepper spray, rubber bullets and stun grenades by DC police to disperse a First Amendment assembly: Source: USCP use of force directive, January 5th 2021: “Impact projectiles will not be fired indiscriminately into crowds.” - pg. 7 https://justthenews.com/sites/default/files/2022-09/CDU%20Operational%20Plan.pdf

Page not found | Just The Newsx justthenews.com

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

2:25: DC police, after exhausting nearly all of their munitions, gas their own police line and retreat. Watch this scene below in an excerpt from @TCNetwork in early 2024. @TuckerCarlson says that J6: A TRUE TIMELINE should be the most famous film in America! @J6TrueTimeline

Saved - November 6, 2024 at 10:11 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

🚨 JANUARY 6 POLICE BRUTALITY UNCOVERED! POLICE BROKE THE LAW, VIOLATED CIVIL RIGHTS AND STARTED THE RIOT! uncoverdc.com/2023/09/28/j6-… https://t.co/Wy2XXM1oU8

Video Transcript AI Summary
I warned about chemical munitions and called for deployment. There's chaos as flashbangs are being used against us, and officers are shooting into their own crowd. We’re here to support Blue Lives Matter, but this is how we’re treated. A large crowd is approaching on High Street, and we need backup. There were violent acts that day, including brutal assaults on police officers. Our officers acted as necessary. However, if the police hadn’t used concussion grenades and pepper spray, the situation might have remained peaceful. We were standing close to them, and they initiated the violence without provocation. We’ve been tear-gassed.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I have given warnings about chemical munition. I need the left and left of key position above me to start deploying. Launch. Launch. Launch. Speaker 1: Hey. Speaker 2: Welcome to the front of the fucking line. Come here. So That's just that's all I need to do. Holy fuck it. Speaker 3: This is too too good. Speaker 1: You gotta turn around. Speaker 2: We need more fucking Yep, they're deploying flashbangs on us. Speaker 1: They're shooting into their own people. Speaker 4: We're supposed to be supporting Blue Lives Matter. We represent Blue Lives, and this is Speaker 1: what they do to us. Speaker 3: Stay more deployed. Stay more deployed. Speaker 2: I'm under control. What's your ETA for Ry Street? Speaker 5: 89123 up here. You're 43 on the north side of High Street. Speaker 2: A very large crowd coming down High Street. 51, I need you here, please. Speaker 6: As one who is here and, who has custody of these 44000 hours of videos, I can attest there were acts of violence. There were acts of terrible violence that day. Even from what I had seen with my own eyes and and through the media, I've seen acts of violence against police officers that I had not seen before. And it was brutal, and it was ugly. And, our officers online did what they needed to do at the time. Speaker 3: If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray. Speaker 2: They've been tear gassing us.
Saved - September 26, 2024 at 11:42 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@julie_kelly2 What about DHS HSI informants? Why is the discussion about only one federal agency? @julie_kelly2 https://t.co/sUWZ03tNtS

Saved - March 30, 2024 at 2:47 AM
reSee.it AI Summary
On January 6th, a series of posts provide evidence of police brutality and misconduct during the storming of the US Capitol. Officer Thau is seen requesting and using excessive force against peaceful protestors. The police incite the crowd with grenades and mortars, resulting in injuries and even death. Violations of protocol and illegal actions are highlighted, raising questions about the legality of the clearing of the protest. The posts also mention instances of police beating women and an officer urinating on the Capitol. The first bloodshed is attributed to CPD Inspector Lloyd.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

What led to the storming of the US Capitol on January 6th? #FollowTheTimeline POLICE BRUTALITY evidence thread. 🧵👇 https://t.co/rbAoyjRAOk

Video Transcript AI Summary
Welcome to the front of the line. If they hadn't used force, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was mistaken about that guy. I think he might have died. I hope he survived. Translated: I hope he survived.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Hey. Welcome to the front of your fucking line. Come here. Speaker 1: If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades, if they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was wrong. I thought that guy was causing problems, but he's not. Go. I think that man probably died. I hope he saved his life.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On January 6th at 1:13pm: Officer Thau and the DC Metropolitan Police arrived on the Capitol’s West Plaza. Upon arrival, Thau frantically requests Capitol Police provide him with “blast munitions” to start throwing at the mostly peaceful crowd. https://t.co/6Uve6W8Vf8

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Thau repeatedly requests “blast munitions” from different supervisors on the ground for the next 10 minutes. https://t.co/xuUTRNh8pG

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 1:17pm, Thau orders Capitol PD ‘snipers nest’ to continue firing indiscriminately into the crowd. He screams “let’s go, fucking shoot them!” “Shoot! Shoot! Shoot!” https://t.co/R2zzliZJlx

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 1:22pm, Thau grabs a DC officer’s taser. He then rushes to the front line and proceeds to tase a random protestor who can be heard screaming in pain. The crowd responds angrily to Thau’s offensive use of the weapon, yelling “what the fuck is wrong with you guys?!” https://t.co/EBV72ZGgKY

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Blast and incendiary munitions arrive at 1:25pm. From approx 1:25pm until 2:25pm, Capitol and DC police incite the crowd with an unrelenting barrage of grenades and mortars. Protestor Kevin Greeson drops dead at 1:28pm. Witnesses allege he was killed by one of these grenades.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On January 6th at 2:02pm, protestor Derrick Vargo is pushed from a ledge on the NW staircase by a Capitol PD officer as he attempts to hang a Trump flag. https://t.co/8Dv2CVCvVQ

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 2:03pm, DC police first use their LRAD system (long range acoustic device), in violation of established protocol. DC law requires police to give 3 separate warnings with the LRAD and an opportunity to disperse before using violence or munitions to clear a protest crowd. https://t.co/CK9tepSw2t

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The text images included here are from Jon Turley’s testimony on the clearing of the Pershing Park BLM protests outside the White House in 2020. The attempted clearing of the West Plaza protest was evidently illegal according to case law highlighted in Turley’s 6/29/20 testimony. Oddly, Judge Emmet Sullivan, who wrote these rules, has not addressed this fact in his January 6th rulings and convictions. The entirety of Turley’s remarkably relevant testimony can be found at congress.gov/116/meeting/ho…

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On January 6th at 2:18pm, DC police Sgt. Edwards admits to his Commander that their munitions are hitting innocent people. Officer Thau admits that they are inciting ten protestors for every person they hit. 💣🔥 https://t.co/1YU7RrYkBM

Video Transcript AI Summary
We need to help the Christians. The wind is against us. We're in trouble. We're causing them pain by attacking them.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: We're gonna have to get a real We're gonna be fine if we can help the Christian. We're not gonna be patient, man. Nothing's gonna help. The wind is that us? Yeah. I know. We're we're fucked. Right. The wind is not us. We'll get hit with a lot of pain to fly. And and not only that, we're taking out 1 and 10 of them are getting wagering here. It's it's we're multiplying them by hitting them.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 2:19pm, the DC commander orders officers not to “lose the steps of the Capitol.” At 2:25pm, more 40mm munitions arrive. Thau orders Officer ‘Rich’ to shoot a CS mortar “over the fucking scaffolding.” Rich misfires and gases the entire DC police line, causing them to retreat. https://t.co/L9ht2E5yOv

Video Transcript AI Summary
We need to decide whether to return this and get that back. We can't lose the Capitol steps. Put it on the scaffolding. I'll make sure. You have to throw it back. I'm sorry. What did you think? Congressman. Oh no. Translation: We must decide whether to return this item and retrieve the other. We cannot lose the Capitol steps. Place it on the scaffolding. I will ensure it. You must throw it back. I apologize. What were you thinking? Congressman. Oh no.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: We're we're gonna decide if we're gonna give this up and take that back around. We can't lose the steps of the capital. I know. I know. Hey, Rich. Put it up on the fucking scaffolding. Hey. I'll make sure Oh, no. Yes. I don't know. You gotta throw it back. I'm sorry. Hey. What I thought? Hey. What I thought? Congressman. Shit.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 2:33pm, Thau tells arriving DC MPD officers to abandon the West Plaza, ordering them “do not go down the fucking stairs.” https://t.co/IDyze55TqY

Video Transcript AI Summary
We're in trouble at the Capitol steps. Don't go down there, it's dangerous. Paint compliance isn't working well. We're outnumbered 10,000 to 1. We're losing ground, people are getting hurt. Stay here, we can't help from there. It's chaotic, don't risk it.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: MPD, come here. Speaker 1: Hey. Hey. Come here, guys. Real quick. I'm a be as fucking real as I fucking can be. We are going to get overrun on the steps of the Capitol right now. We're getting fucking hammered. Okay? If you guys go down there, the paint compliance is working very minimally. There's 10,000 to 1. You're gonna lose the fucking steps, and we're getting people hurt like a motherfucking business. Do not go down there because you're gonna get fucked up. He's pulling asses out. Do not fucking go down there. Yeah. But can we help from here? You cannot. No. There's nothing we're doing this time. Speaker 0: We're doing? Speaker 1: We're holding, dude. We've been fighting for 2 and a half hours and we've lost ground. Speaker 0: We have fucking We've got Speaker 1: so many injuries. Dude, it's fucking shit shit shit shit shit. You're all in Timmy, I'm getting I hey. For Do not go down the fucking sticks.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

For context, here is an overhead video timelapse of the West Plaza protest. #FollowTheTimeline https://t.co/aG7k7KqItV

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/tKJIWPEjs4 https://t.co/I3ru3AVq6l

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The first blood shed on January 6th. West Plaza 1:07pm. This shooting was an illegal civil rights violation. See case law: Fogarty v. Gallegos (10th Cir. 2008) https://t.co/hDRLWuxqlC

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

👆 Who terrorized who on January 6th? @LindseyGrahamSC @realDonaldTrump https://t.co/SIsXWOORIk

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Officer Thau 🚽 🏛 2:42pm

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@TPC4USA @ChemicalsOil @RepMTG @SpeakerMcCarthy This is not entirely accurate. We have evidence of one person pissing on the US Capitol. 👇 DC Metro Officer Daniel Thau’s bodycam at 2:42pm. Take a look. https://t.co/Tz8XaegiwB

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/rCZOuRwv5x

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

DC METRO POLICE BEAT WOMEN. This took place about 1 hour before the Capitol was stormed. @DCPoliceDept @M5NewsTx youtube.com/watch?v=TQGYNd… https://t.co/DF7L042OVw

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/PlDIV9jKuR

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

J6 100% never happened https://t.co/oSm6wMR52Q

Video Transcript AI Summary
A woman in a pink MAGA shirt pointed out that a Capitol Police officer had voted for Joe Biden, leading a small crowd to yell racist slurs at him. The officer expressed shock at being called a racial slur while in uniform.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 1 woman in a pink MAGA shirt yelled, you hear that guys? This nigga voted for Joe Biden. Then the crowd, perhaps around 20 people, joined in screaming, boo, fucking nigga. No one had ever, ever called me a nigger while wearing the uniform of a Capitol Police officer.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/0z0iLB6XT1

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Dunn’s own fellow Capitol PD officers allege that he’s lying. “It never happened” The reality is, @libradunn lost his shit and threatened to shoot peaceful MAGA protestors because he’s a racist BLM activist. @TPC4USA …pragmaticconstitutionalist.locals.com/post/3544429/c… https://t.co/kATM9GHiUk

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

thedrive.com/the-war-zone/3… https://t.co/w583qPRCIQ https://t.co/R0XmQdBMoo

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

First bloodshed of January 6th. The man who caused the so called riot.👇 Lloyd ordered Capitol Police to fire into a crowd who’d been standing there peacefully for 6 minutes, with no warning. (Required by law).

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@Tacosdad1 @ReallyAmerican1 @mmpadellan First was CPD Inspector Lloyd with a hand signal at 1:06pm. This was 6 minutes after the crowd assembled on the West Plaza, and 6 minutes before DC police arrived. One of these first shots went through Joshua Black’s cheek at 1:07pm. https://t.co/I9QMziXdxK

Saved - January 22, 2024 at 1:12 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
On January 6th, a pipe bomb was found at the RNC, set to detonate at 1pm. Karlin Younger, who found the bomb, has connections to the NSA, DOJ, and received a $90 million grant from the FBI. The timing coincided with the West Plaza protest and the hearing to certify the electoral count. The DHS had previously simulated this scenario, and the FBI released CCTV footage of the bombs being planted, but it was manipulated to hide the bomber's identity.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

JANUARY 6TH WAS AN INTEL OP. 👇🧵💣

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Karlin Younger, the woman who found the pipe bomb on Jan 6: 1: Works in NSA community 2: Works for DOJ 3: Received a $90 million dollar grant from the FBI a month before finding the bomb on Jan 6

@1_7_t_h - Am🇺🇸rican T🇺🇸rrorist

🚨🚨🚨 #karlinYounger AKA #J6 #pipebomb spotter: 1: Works in NSA community 2: Backgrounds in counter #terrorism 3: Taught English in #China 4: Studied political risk in #London 5: Received 90 mil from the @fbi a month before “finding bomb” on #Jan6 ~ #jan6tapes #J6footage #j4j6 https://t.co/jnXSZnHYBP

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The pipe bomb was found at the RNC at 12:40pm on January 6th. The timer was set to go off 20 minutes later at 1pm, but was allegedly stuck.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The 1pm detonation time coincides with the time the West Plaza protest outside the Capitol began, as well as the time Pence and Pelosi began the hearing to certify the electoral count.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The DHS ran an exercise 7 days before Jan 6 of this exact scenario: DHS simulated what would happen if the Capitol was stormed by extremists, after a pipe bomb sighting diverted resources away from the Capitol.

@julie_kelly2 - Julie Kelly 🇺🇸

Hmmm. As I reported in Nov 2021, a WashPo investigation into Jan 6 revealed the head of DC DHS intelligence performed a tabletop exercise on Dec 30 related to a bomb threat on Jan 6. A “young analyst” somehow “imagined the scenario.” Then it really happened! https://t.co/qJfaTBnSH1

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The FBI released CCTV footage to the public of the bombs being planted that was 1 frame per second. It’s a statistical impossibility that the DNC security camera’s frame rate is that low. For reference, the average rate of a gas station CCTV camera in America is 15 fps. https://t.co/xQ16dZdDQb

Video Transcript AI Summary
FBI agents are seeking tips regarding the unidentified person who planted bombs near the Democratic National Party Headquarters. One video shows the suspect sitting on a park bench near the location. The frame rate of most CCTV cameras is around 15 frames per second (FPS). However, the security video released by the FBI of the pipe bomb suspect operates at just one FPS. A study found that no cameras in America today operate at such a low frame rate. Considering the history of attacks on the DNC building and the security measures in place, it is highly unlikely that the FBI's video is the original, unedited footage.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Lester, FBI agents say they have no idea who planted the bombs, and they hope these new videos will generate some valuable tips. One shows the suspect walking up and sitting on a park bench near the Democratic National Party Headquarters. 1 of the bombs was later planted in the same area. Speaker 1: Frames per second, like its name implies, is the number of a Individual images or frames, the system captures every second. The average industry frame rate of most CCTV cameras is around 15 a per second. Speaker 2: We also recommend using a minimum of 15 FPS or frames per second. Now here at Proactive Security, we recommend actually a 15 frames per second. What you're looking at is the actual frame speed of the security video the FBI released to the public of the January 6th a pipe bomb suspect. It's just one frame per second. You're going to learn now why that is virtually impossible, a Unless this tape is not the original source footage, a comprehensive study in 2021 by one of the world's leading authorities on security cameras a Found that 0% of cameras in use in America today operate at just one frame per second. Statistically speaking, the odds that the video the FBI a The least to the public was unaltered is less than 1%. The average gas station in America uses 15 frames per second. A That would make the DNC national headquarters 15 times worse than the average gas station. A Meanwhile, we know the DNC cares so much about security at this area that for years, they have stationed a physical guard a the daytime right at this site. And that makes sense. It was the break in of the DNC National Headquarters 50 years ago that a the largest scandal in American history, Watergate. Between the history of attacks on the DNC building, a Plus the fact that DC was once the murder capital of the country, plus the fact that 0% of cameras in use today use one frame per second. It is virtually impossible the tape the FBI released was the actual unedited footage.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

0% of cameras in use today have a frame rate of 1-5fps. It is clear the FBI intentionally manipulated the footage to keep the bomber’s identity a mystery. Read this report on frame rate usage here: https://ipvm.com/reports/frame-rate-surveillance-guide https://t.co/wxcTy0eH2r

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/ao57jLr4Hm

Saved - January 6, 2024 at 5:21 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

🚨 #BREAKING: A class action civil rights lawsuit has been filed against the US Capitol Police, DC Metropolitan Police, Mayor Bowser, and Nancy Pelosi for the planned security failures and the illegal assault on early January 6th West Plaza protesters that led to the #J6 riot. https://t.co/wsbGIgngTn

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

For the last 3 years, right wing pundits have blamed the J6 riot on federal agent provocateurs. Until now, Americans didn't realize that the federal agents provoking the riot were uniformed police – USCP and MPD fired unrelenting munitions on the J6 protesters without warning, sparking a riot and the building entry an hour later.

Video Transcript AI Summary
During a protest, there were acts of violence against police officers. The speaker, who has custody of thousands of hours of videos, witnessed these acts. The officers responded with necessary force. However, another speaker claims that if the police hadn't used concussion grenades and pepper spray, the situation wouldn't have escalated. They argue that it was a peaceful protest and that the officers initiated the violence without provocation.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I have given warnings about chemical munition. I need to let the legal team position above me to start deploying. Launch. Launch. Watch. Speaker 1: You're under a giant. We need more fucking lunatic shit. Speaker 0: Yep. They're deploying flashbangs on us. Speaker 1: Stay Speaker 2: 89123 up here. Near 43 on the north side of ice cream. Very large tower coming down ice cream. 51, I need you here, please. Speaker 3: As one who was here and, who has custody of these 44,000 hours of videos, I can attest there were acts of violence or acts of terrible violence that day. Even from what I had seen with my own eyes And and through the media, I've seen acts of violence against police officers that I had not seen before. And it was brutal, and it was ugly. And, our officers online did what they needed to do at the time. Speaker 1: If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades. If they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet The Atlanta officers. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray.
Saved - December 15, 2023 at 1:30 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Right-wing pundits have long blamed federal agent provocateurs for the J6 riot, but recent revelations show that it was actually uniformed police, USCP and MPD, who fired munitions without warning, sparking the riot and building entry. USCP Chief Waldow and MPD Chief Glover may have violated the law and protester civil rights by ordering and launching chemical and explosive munitions without warnings. Relevant laws include the DC First Amendment Assemblies Act § 5-331.07 and Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law 18 USC § 242.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

For the last 3 years, right wing pundits have blamed the J6 riot on federal agent provocateurs. Until now, Americans didn't realize that the federal agents provoking the riot were uniformed police – USCP and MPD fired unrelenting munitions on the J6 protesters without warning, sparking a riot and the building entry an hour later.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Chemical munitions were deployed, including flashbangs. There was a request for assistance near the ice cream shop. The speaker, who has custody of thousands of hours of videos, witnessed acts of violence against police officers. The officers responded accordingly. However, another speaker argues that the protest was peaceful and the officers initiated the use of force with concussion grenades and pepper spray.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I have given warnings about chemical munition. I need to left and leave a key position above me to start deploying. Launch. Launch. Watch. Yep. They're deploying flashbangs on us. Speaker 1: Stay Speaker 2: 89123 up here. Near 43 on the north side of ice cream. Very large tower coming down ice cream. 51, I need you here, please. Speaker 3: As one who was here and, who has custody of these 44,000 hours of videos, I can attest there were acts of violence or acts of terrible violence that day. Even from what I had seen with my own eyes And and through the media, I've seen acts of violence against police officers that I had not seen before. And it was brutal, and it was ugly. And, our officers online did what they needed to do at the time. Speaker 4: If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades. If they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet The Atlanta officers. Speaker 1: They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. Speaker 4: We were not rushing them. Speaker 1: There was Speaker 4: no advance on them. They They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

USCP Chief Waldow and MPD Chief Glover violated the law and protester civil rights when they ordered “less lethal” munitions without warnings and had their officers launch hundreds of chemical and explosive munitions at early J6 protestors. 1. DC First Amendment Assemblies Act § 5-331.07 2. Deprivation of Rights Under Color of Law 18 USC § 242

Saved - November 25, 2023 at 5:16 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
The conversation revolves around the January 6th events at the US Capitol. Jim Jordan criticizes Liz Cheney for opposing an investigation, highlighting the ongoing FBI investigation and the need for Congress to ask important questions. He also criticizes the January 6th committee's actions, including multiple batches of subpoenas and requests to preserve communications. Jordan questions the committee's approach and its impact on Americans' constitutional rights. In response, InvestigateJ6 accuses the committee of covering up the true cause of the riot and manipulating evidence.

@WallStreetApes - Wall Street Apes

The January 6th Corruption Is All Coming Out. Liz Chaney Advocated For NO INVESTIGATION Into The Events Of Jan 6th 🚨 Jim Jordan (@Jim_Jordan) “Earlier, uh, representative (Liz) Cheney said, we can have an investigation, or we can let it go uninvestigated. I mean, what what a ridiculous statement. What the FBI has been investigating this issue for for the past since it happened. Exactly where it's supposed to have. 600 people have been charged. Investigations are supposed to happen in the executive branch. Congress has an oversight function, but Democrats don't wanna do that. They don't wanna ask the appropriate questions. Like, why was the security posture so weak that day? Why wasn't the National Guard here? They don't wanna ask those questions. Instead, the actions of the January 6th committee, I believe, are a complete assault on Americans' liberty. There have been 4 batches of subpoenas issued. Four batches. The one we're talking about today, mister Bannon, mister Meadows, mister Patel, mister Scavino. 2nd well, second one to mister Clark, employee of DOJ, former employee of DOJ. The 3rd batch, 2 organizers of some other rally didn't know about that happened that day, and then there's been subpoenas issued to 11 individuals, 11 American citizens, who asked the government for permission on an application to hold the Trump rally. Now think about this. They put their names on a application. The government asked them to do that. They give that application to government. The government granted it, and now the January 6th committee petitions them to ask them questions about exercising their First Amendment right to assemble. — One One other thing that January 6th committee has done that I believe is a direct attack on Liberty, they've sent letters to the carriers, the tech companies, asking that they for hundreds and hundreds of Americans, according to news reports, asking that they preserve all communications of that individual for the past 6 months. And they they told these they told these companies, oh, by the way, Don't let the person we're telling you to preserve information for, don't let them know like the law requires. Don't let them know that we've asked you to do this. And if you feel compelled to follow the law and tell them that this January 6th, that government is asking for this information to be preserved. If you feel compelled to tell us first. The old gag order concept. This is this is this is scary where they wanna go and what they're doing to Americans' constitutional rights. And finally, I would ask this this sort of fundamental question. How can you expect witnesses to participate when you wouldn't let Republicans participate in the committee? How can you do that?” I can’t transcribe it all due to X’s text limits but this is an eye opening listen and goes on for 5 minutes!

Video Transcript AI Summary
Representative Cheney's statement about investigating or letting the issue go uninvestigated is criticized as ridiculous. The FBI has been investigating the issue since it happened, and over 600 people have been charged. The January 6th committee's actions are seen as an assault on Americans' liberty, with multiple batches of subpoenas issued. The committee has even sent letters to tech companies asking them to preserve communications of hundreds of Americans without informing them. The speaker argues that the committee is targeting individuals who exercised their First Amendment right to assemble and petition the government. The speaker also highlights other pressing issues, such as border security, energy independence, and rising crime rates, which they believe the committee is avoiding. They hope Republicans and some Democrats will vote against the committee's actions.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Earlier, representative Cheney said, we can have an investigation, or we can let it go uninvestigated. I mean, what what a ridiculous statement. What the FBI's been investigating this issue for for the past since it happened, exactly where it's supposed to have. 600 people have been charged. Investigations are supposed to happen in the executive branch. Congress has an oversight function, but Democrats don't wanna do that. They don't wanna ask the appropriate questions. Like, why was the security posture so weak that day? Why wasn't the National Guard here? They don't wanna ask those questions. Instead, The actions of the January 6th committee, I believe, are a complete assault on Americans' liberty. There have been 4 batches of subpoenas issued. Four batches. The one we're talking about today, mister Bannon, mister Meadows, mister Patel, mister Scavino. 2nd, well, second one to mister Clark, employee of DOJ, former employee of DOJ. The 3rd batch to organizers of some other rally didn't know about that happened that day, and then there's been subpoenas issued to 11 individuals, 11 American citizens, Who asked the government for permission on an application to hold the Trump rally? I think about this. They put their names on an Application, the government asked them to do that. They give that application to the government. The government granted it, and now the January 6th Committee petitions them to ask them questions about exercising their First Amendment right to assemble. Here's what they asked them about. Here's what they asked them about. Subpoenaed to those individuals, 11 individuals includes a demand for agenda and selection of speakers for the rally. They asked him for coordination of the speaker's respective speeches, discussions of content, and they asked him think about this, communications with or concerning any member of congress. So If some of these individuals happen to talk to a member of congress exercising their First Amendment liberty to petition their government to redress their grievances, Wow. The January 6th committee wants to depose them on those kind of things. Some of these individuals are 20 some year old Staffers. I mean, this is largely a clerical thing when they filled out this application, setting out chairs, escorting people to their seats, plugging in microphones. No. No. They're gonna they're gonna go after them even though even though this the investigation the FBI is doing says, fine. Scan evidence of any type Here's what it says. Violence was not centrally coordinated. This is this is the Reuters story. Oh, and here's the source here's the source on that story. Senior lawmakers have been briefed in detail on the results of the FBI's investigation so far, find them credible, a Democrat congressional source said. So there is an investigation going on where it's supposed to happen in the executive branch. Oh, I forgot. One other thing that January 6th committee has done that I believe is a direct attack on Liberty. They've sent letters to the carriers, the tech companies asking that they for hundreds and hundreds of Americans, according to news reports, Ask them that they preserve all communications of that individual for the past 6 months. And they told these, they told these companies, oh, by the way, don't let the person we're telling you to preserve information for, don't let them know, like the law requires, don't let them know that we've asked you to do this. And if you feel compelled to follow the law and tell them that this January 6th, that government is asking for this information to be preserved, if you feel compelled to tell us first. The old gag order concept. This is this is this is scary where they want to go and what they're doing to Americans' constitutional rights. And finally, I would ask this this sort of fundamental question. How can you expect witnesses to participate when you wouldn't let Republicans participate in the committee? How can you do that? We know what this is about. This is plain and simple. This is about they got nothing else to talk about. They got nothing else to talk. This is the worst administration in history. We went from a secure border to complete chaos, complete chaos. Every single month has been worse than the one before. March was the highest month on record for illegal crossings, illegal migrant encounters until April. April was the highest month until May. May was the highest month until June. June was the highest month until July, 212,000 that month alone. They got nothing else to talk about. We went from energy independence to the president of the United States begging OPEC to increase production. They can't talk about that. No. They're gonna use this committee to attack American citizens' liberties, fundamental first amendment rights. We went from Relatively safe streets to violent climb up in every major urban area in this country, can't talk about that, can't address those problems that real Americans care about. No, We're going to assault Americans' First Amendment rights. Can't talk about inflation. Real wage has gone down. Supplies, can't talk about that. Supply chain problems, empty shelves in the stores, can't talk about that. Nope. Going to go after this. I hope every single Republican votes against this. I hope some Democrats decide that this is not how it's supposed to work. We just had a decision last last year. The Mazur disease, these guys are obsessed with going after President Trump. We just had a decision in the Mazur's case last year that says this is not how it's supposed to work. Slap back Congress because they wanted to get information that they were entitled to. They don't do the investigation. The executive branch does. Mr. Chairman, I look forward to questions

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@WallStreetApes @hodgetwins @Jim_Jordan The J6 committee covered up the true cause of the January 6th riot at the US Capitol. They purposely doctored evidence and misconstrued the timeline to hide the first hour of the protest outside the Capitol. WATCH:

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

For the last 3 years, right wing pundits have blamed the J6 riot on federal agent provocateurs. Until now, Americans didn't realize that the federal agents provoking the riot were uniformed police – USCP and MPD fired unrelenting munitions on the J6 protesters without warning, sparking a riot and the building entry an hour later.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Chemical munitions were deployed, and flashbangs were used against the speakers. There was a request for assistance near an ice cream tower. The speaker, who has custody of 44,000 hours of videos, witnessed acts of violence against police officers that were brutal and ugly. The officers did what they had to do. However, another speaker claims that if the police hadn't used concussion grenades and pepper spray, the incident wouldn't have occurred. They argue that it was a peaceful protest and deny any aggression towards the officers. The situation escalated when the police started firing without provocation.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I have given warnings about chemical munition. I need to left and leave a key position above me to start deploying. Launch. Launch. Watch. Yep. They're deploying flashbangs on us. Speaker 1: Stay Speaker 2: 89123 up here. Near 43 on the north side of ice cream. Very large tower coming down ice cream. 51, I need you here, please. Speaker 3: As one who was here and, who has custody of these 44,000 hours of videos, I can attest there were acts of violence or acts of terrible violence that day. Even from what I had seen with my own eyes And and through the media, I've seen acts of violence against police officers that I had not seen before. And it was brutal, and it was ugly. And, our officers online did what they needed to do at the time. Speaker 4: If they'd never thrown the concussion grenades. If they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet The Atlanta officers. Speaker 1: They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. Speaker 4: We were not rushing them. Speaker 1: There was Speaker 4: no advance on them. They They just started throwing concussion grenades and pepper spray.
Saved - November 25, 2023 at 3:12 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

On January 6th at 2:18pm, DC police Sgt. Edwards admits to his Commander that their munitions are hitting innocent people. Officer Thau admits that they are inciting ten protestors for every person they hit. 💣🔥 https://t.co/1YU7RrYkBM

Video Transcript AI Summary
We are facing a challenge, but we will overcome it by supporting each other. The wind is against us, but we won't let it stop us. We are determined to multiply our efforts and find a solution.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: We're gonna have to get a real We're gonna be fine if we can help the Christian. We're not gonna. Nothing's gonna help. The wind is that us? Yeah. I know. We're we're Right. We're we're we're we're multiplying them by hitting
Saved - October 29, 2023 at 2:21 AM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@SharylAttkisson It was the police. It’s abundantly clear.

Saved - September 12, 2023 at 10:09 PM

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Look at all this early J6 footage @TuckerCarlson could show the world, but won't. His producer @gregg_re and his team at Fox were given all of this last year. #J6CoverUp J6 protestors were fired upon with NO warning. USCP Chief Waldow lied saying he gave warnings but never did.

Video Transcript AI Summary
There were warnings about chemical munitions and a call to start deploying. Flashbangs were deployed and there were reports of violence against police officers. One person claims it was a peaceful protest and that the officers started firing without provocation. The phrase "I can't breathe" was repeated multiple times.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: I have given warnings about chemical munitions. I need the left and left of key position upon me to Speaker 1: start deploying. Launch. Launch. Launch. Of Speaker 2: Hey. Welcome to the front Speaker 1: of the Speaker 2: fucking line. Come here. To of Speaker 1: Let's go, fucking to to move forward. Speaker 2: Yep. They're deploying flashbangs on us. Speaker 1: To to aboard. To They're shooting into their own people. We're supposed to be supporting Blue Lives Matter. We represent to protect to Speaker 3: pull. 8900. 23 up here. Gear 43 on the north side of High Street. Very large crowd coming down on High Street. 51, I need you here, please. Speaker 1: To of approved. Speaker 2: To put Speaker 4: As one who is here and, who has custody of these 44,000 hours of videos, I can attest there were acts of violence, there were acts of terrible violence that day. Even from what I had seen with my own eyes and and through the media, I've seen of Acts of violence against police officers that I had not seen before. And it was brutal and it was ugly. And, our officers online did what they needed to do at the time. Speaker 1: To protect. Speaker 2: If they'd never thrown Concussion grenades. If they'd never used a pepper spray, this wouldn't have happened. It was a peaceful protest. I was standing within 15 feet of the line of office. To fight. They started firing at us before anybody did anything to them. We were not rushing them. There was no advance on them. They just started throwing concussion Grenades and pepper Speaker 1: sprayers. Speaker 2: They've been Speaker 1: to I can't breathe. I can't breathe. I can't breathe. I can't breathe. I can't breathe. I can't breathe.
Saved - June 12, 2023 at 11:18 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
In the conversation, @InvestigateJ6 shares videos and articles related to the events of January 6th, highlighting Officer Thau's actions and the first bloodshed. @HelpStopHate expresses satisfaction with finding crucial evidence.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

At 2:33pm, Thau tells arriving DC MPD officers to abandon the West Plaza, ordering them “do not go down the fucking stairs.”

Video Transcript AI Summary
Speaker 0 urgently warns the group that they are about to be overrun on the steps of the Capitol. They are outnumbered and the paint compliance is not effective. Going down there would result in getting hurt. They cannot help from their current position and have been fighting for over 2 hours, losing ground and sustaining many injuries. The situation is described as terrible. The speaker emphasizes not to go down the steps.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: MPD, come here. Hey. Hey. Come here, guys. Real quick. I'm a be as fucking real as I fucking can be. We are going to get overrun on the steps of the Capitol right now. We're getting fucking hammered. Okay? If you guys go down there, the paint compliance is working very minimally. There's 10,000 to 1. We're gonna lose the fucking steps, and we're getting people hurt like a motherfucking penis. Do not go down there because you're gonna get fucked up. He's Do not fucking go down. Can we help from here? You cannot. No. There's nothing we're doing on top. Doing? We're holding, dude. We've been fighting for 2 and a half hours, and we've lost ground. We have fucking we've got so many injuries. Dude, it's fucking shit shit shit shit. You're all good. Timmy, I'm getting I hey. Do not go down the fucking sticks.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

For context, here is an overhead video timelapse of the West Plaza protest. #FollowTheTimeline

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

The first blood shed on January 6th. West Plaza 1:07pm. This shooting was an illegal civil rights violation. See case law: Fogarty v. Gallegos (10th Cir. 2008)

@HelpStopHate - StopHate.com🛑

Here's a picture of the @CapitolPolice who shot Joshua Matthew Black in the cheek with a rubber bullet FOR NO REASON at 1:07 PM on #January6 right after a man on a megaphone implored "Please do not fire on us! We don't mean you any harm." #PoliceBrutality https://www.justice.gov/usao-dc/defendants/black-joshua-matthew

BLACK, Joshua Matthew justice.gov

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

👆 Who terrorized who on January 6th? @LindseyGrahamSC @realDonaldTrump

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Officer Thau 🚽 🏛 2:42pm https://t.co/u1F4s7KOwN

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@TPC4USA @ChemicalsOil @RepMTG @SpeakerMcCarthy This is not entirely accurate. We have evidence of one person pissing on the US Capitol. 👇 DC Metro Officer Daniel Thau’s bodycam at 2:42pm. Take a look.

Video Transcript AI Summary
Jimmy is asked to cover the speaker while they take a bathroom break. The speaker reassures Jimmy that everything is under control and they will be back soon.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: Hey, Jimmy. Jimmy, Jimmy, cover me. Alright? It's fucking covered. I gotta go some point. I ain't gonna die having a piss. Hold on. Hold on.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/rCZOuRwv5x

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

DC METRO POLICE BEAT WOMEN. This took place about 1 hour before the Capitol was stormed. @DCPoliceDept @M5NewsTx youtube.com/watch?v=TQGYNd…

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/PlDIV9jKuR

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

J6 100% never happened

Video Transcript AI Summary
A woman in a pink MAGA shirt shouted that a person had voted for Joe Biden, using a racial slur. The small crowd of about 20 people joined in, yelling derogatory remarks. This was the first time I had ever been called such a derogatory term while wearing my Capitol police officer uniform.
Full Transcript
Speaker 0: 1 woman in a pink MAGA shirt yelled, you hear that guys? This nigger voted for Joe Biden. Then the crowd, perhaps around 20 people, joined in screaming, boo, fucking nigger. No one had ever, ever called me a nigger while wearing the uniform of a Capitol police officer.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

https://t.co/0z0iLB6XT1

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

Dunn’s own fellow Capitol PD officers allege that he’s lying. “It never happened” The reality is, @libradunn lost his shit and threatened to shoot peaceful MAGA protestors because he’s a racist BLM activist. @TPC4USA …pragmaticconstitutionalist.locals.com/post/3544429/c…

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

thedrive.com/the-war-zone/3… https://t.co/w583qPRCIQ

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

First bloodshed of January 6th. The man who caused the so called riot.👇 Lloyd ordered Capitol Police to fire into a crowd who’d been standing there peacefully for 6 minutes, with no warning. (Required by law). https://t.co/2WzMZCRciK

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

@Tacosdad1 @ReallyAmerican1 @mmpadellan First was CPD Inspector Lloyd with a hand signal at 1:06pm. This was 6 minutes after the crowd assembled on the West Plaza, and 6 minutes before DC police arrived. One of these first shots went through Joshua Black’s cheek at 1:07pm.

@HelpStopHate - StopHate.com🛑

@InvestigateJ6 It was an extremely gratifying discovery when I found Lloyd in that video and gave it to the attorneys. Game changer!

Saved - March 24, 2023 at 8:41 PM
reSee.it AI Summary
Jen Loh, National Director for LEXIT, is an FBI informant embedded within the Proud Boy defendants' families' prayer group. The story was confirmed by Alan Feuer of the New York Times. Additionally, it was revealed that Judy is Ethan Nordean's mom and Henry is Enrique Tarrio, two of the five defendants in the ongoing Proud Boys J6 trial.

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

🚨👀 San Antonio. Jen Loh is a CHS. FBI Informant. I’m going to bill the FBI for that http://InvestigateJ6.org shirt I was asked to send her. @julie_kelly2 @gatewaypundit @RepLuna

Home Watch: investigatej6.org

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

For those who don’t know. Henry is Enrique Tarrio and Judy is Ethan Nordean’s mom. 2 of the 5 defendants in the ongoing Proud Boys J6 trial. https://t.co/Og3kyxDuHa

@julie_kelly2 - Julie Kelly 🇺🇸

BREAKING NEWS: Just when you think DOJ can't get any dirtier-- New motion just filed by defense in Proud Boys trial accusing DOJ of using an FBI informant to spy on and infiltrate the defense team

@julie_kelly2 - Julie Kelly 🇺🇸

BREAKING NEWS: Just when you think DOJ can't get any dirtier-- New motion just filed by defense in Proud Boys trial accusing DOJ of using an FBI informant to spy on and infiltrate the defense team

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

“SALINAS” Further confirmation. ✅

@InvestigateJ6 - InvestigateJ6

New York Times’ Alan Feuer confirms the story we broke yesterday. Jen Loh, National Director for LEXIT (Latino-Exit) is the FBI informant embedded within the Proud Boy defendant’s families’ prayer group.

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