The Justice Department has removed press releases detailing the charges against hundreds of individuals who participated in the Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol riot from its website, the department confirmed Friday.
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âNothing âquietâ about it,â the DOJ Rapid Response X account said in a post replying to allegations that the Justice Department had deleted press releases related to Jan. 6.
âWe are proud to reverse the DOJâs weaponization under the Biden administration,â the post continued. âWe will do everything in our power to make whole those who were persecuted for political purposes. This includes stripping DOJâs website of partisan propaganda.â
A review by NBC News found that the vast majority of press releases pertaining to Jan. 6 defendants have been removed from the DOJ website as of Friday evening.
The move to wipe hundreds of press releases from the official government site is the latest attempt by the Trump administration to reframe the Jan. 6 siege and to paint the rioters who participated in it as victims.
On his first day back in office, President Donald Trump mass pardoned the rioters. Soon after, Justice Department officials and FBI agents who were a part of the Jan. 6 investigation and prosecutions were fired.
And this week, the Justice Department announced a $1.8 billion âanti-weaponizationâ fund aimed to compensate those who âsuffered weaponization and lawfare.â
After acting Attorney General Todd Blanche did not rule out Jan. 6 riotersâ eligibility to be paid by the fund, outrage swelled from both Democrats and Republicans in Congress.
Sen. Dick Durbin, D-Ill., wrote Wednesday that the ânotion of the federal government doling out compensation to riotersâ was âabsurd and offensive,â in a letter to Blanche. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., called the fund a âpayout pot for punks,â on Thursday.
Lawmakers arenât the only ones who are fighting back against the fund.
A fired Jan. 6 prosecutor and a law professor acquitted in a federal case brought by the Trump administration filed a lawsuit Friday, arguing that the fund creates a politically discriminatory process that excludes certain individuals who say they were mistreated by Republican officials.
Citizens for Responsibility and Ethics in Washington, a watchdog organization in D.C., also filed suit Friday, calling the fund âa jaw-dropping act of presidential corruption.â It argued the fund wasnât approved by Congress, unlike prior funds that were aimed to compensate victims.
And Wednesday, two officers who protected the Capitol on Jan. 6 filed a separate suit, alleging that the fund would âdirectly finance the violent operations of rioters, paramilitaries, and their supporters.â
The lawsuits come after Ed Martin, who was removed from his role as head of the Justice Departmentâs âweaponizationâ working group earlier this year, predicted that the Justice Department would give millions of dollars to those charged over their actions on Jan. 6.

