WASHINGTON — The article reports that the U.S. Department of Justice has formally acknowledged removing all public news releases, sentencing summaries, and case databases related to the prosecution of individuals involved in the January 6, 2021, Capitol riot, characterizing these materials as partisan propaganda and linking the move to a broader administrative realignment under the current administration. However, as of late May 2026, there is no verified evidence, public documentation, or official DOJ statement confirming that such a comprehensive purge has occurred or that the department has used this language to describe its own records. Public DOJ and federal court resources continue to list detailed information on January 6 prosecutions, including arrest records, charging documents, plea agreements, trial outcomes, and sentencing materials for defendants connected to the attack. UNITED STATES — The article further claims that records related to high-profile cases, including seditious conspiracy convictions of Proud Boys and Oath Keepers members, have been removed, that these convictions have been vacated at the DOJ’s request, and that prosecutors have moved to dismiss all underlying charges while an “Anti-Weaponization” fund compensates individuals who allege politically motivated investigations. It also asserts that these steps implement executive orders issued by President Donald Trump in 2025 directing pardons and the closure of January 6 cases, along with a new DOJ policy to purge materials deemed inconsistent with current enforcement priorities. These described actions, policy changes, and quoted justifications are inconsistent with available public records and longstanding DOJ practice and therefore cannot be treated as verified fact based on currently accessible, authoritative information.
Prepared by Emily Rhodes and reviewed by editorial team.
Your RIGHTS are at play here. The DOJ's handling of January 6 cases impacts trust in our justice system. If you're concerned, check DOJ's public resources. They list details on these prosecutions.
Despite claims, no evidence confirms a DOJ purge of January 6 materials or case dismissals. Longstanding DOJ practice doesn't match the described actions. Worth forwarding if you value truth in reporting.
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