FBI staff told to reveal roles in January 6 probes

Feb 03, 2025, updated Feb 03, 2025
Critics say Donald Trump is carrying out a purge of FBI staff involved in the January 6 riot cases.
Critics say Donald Trump is carrying out a purge of FBI staff involved in the January 6 riot cases.

FBI employees have been ordered to answer detailed questions about their work on criminal cases related to the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol by supporters of President Donald Trump, stoking fear of more sackings.

“I know myself and others receiving this questionnaire have a lot of questions and concerns, which I am working hard to get answers to,” Chad Yarbrough, the assistant director of the Criminal Investigative Division at FBI headquarters, wrote in an email seen by Reuters.

The memo, seen by Reuters, directs employees to give their job title, any role they played in the January 6 investigations and whether they helped supervise such investigations.

Yarbrough told employees the answers were due by Monday AED.

It follows the firing on Friday night (local time) by Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove of eight senior FBI officials from agency headquarters, as well as the heads of the Miami and Washington, DC, field offices.

Another memo, written by Bove on Friday, also demanded that the FBI by Wednesday AEDT turn over to him a list of every employee who worked on January 6 cases. He has also demanded a list of those who worked on a criminal case filed last year against leaders of the militant Hamas group in connection with the Gaza war.

Bove last week fired more than a dozen career Justice Department prosecutors who worked on the two now-dismissed criminal cases brought by Special Counsel Jack Smith against Trump, one involving actions taken to try to overturn the 2020 election results and the other involving classified government documents.

A FBI spokesperson declined to comment on the questionnaire.

Democrats and other critics have said Trump’s team is carrying out a purge of FBI and Justice Department officials who had roles in the criminal cases against him and the January 6 rioters.

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On Trump’s first day back in office on January 20, he commuted the sentences of 14 people in connection with the Capitol attack and pardoned the rest – including those who violently attacked law enforcement officers.

In an email to staff last week announcing details about the order from the Bove, acting FBI director Brian Driscoll said the request “encompasses thousands of employees across the country who have supported these investigative efforts”.

“I am one of those employees, as is acting Deputy Director [Robert] Kissane,” Driscoll said.

Despite reports about other firings throughout the bureau, emails seen by Reuters from both the FBI Agents Association and from James Dennehy, the assistant FBI director in charge of the New York office, made it clear that no one else had been asked to resign.

Nevertheless, some employees had started to clear out their desks amid concerns they might be next, according to the FBI Agents Association email seen by Reuters.

“Today, we find ourselves in the middle of a battle of our own, as good people are being walked out of the FBI and others are being targeted because they did their jobs in accordance with the law and FBI policy,” Dennehy wrote on Friday, saying he gave credit to Driscoll and Kissane for “fighting for this organisation”.

Dennehy added that other than the select group of people named in Bove’s memo, “NO ONE has been told they are being removed at this time”.

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