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FBI ignored 'massive amount' of intelligence before January 6: Senate

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The report details how the agencies failed to recognize and warn of the potential for violence as some of then-President Donald Trump’s supporters openly planned the siege in messages, forums online
The FBI and the Department of Homeland Security downplayed or ignored a massive amount of intelligence information ahead of the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol, according to the chairman of a Senate panel that on Tuesday released a new report on the intelligence failures ahead of the insurrection.
The report details how the agencies failed to recognize and warn of the potential for violence as some of then-President Donald Trump’s supporters openly planned the siege in messages and forums online.
Among the multitude of intelligence that was overlooked was a December 2020 tip to the FBI that members of the far-right extremist group Proud Boys planned to be in Washington, DC, for the certification of Joe Biden’s victory and their « plan is to literally kill people », the report said.
The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee said the agencies were also aware of many social media posts that foreshadowed violence, some calling on Trump’s supporters to come armed and storm the Capitol, kill lawmakers or burn the place to the ground.
Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, the Democratic chairman of the Homeland panel, said the breakdown was largely a failure of imagination to see threats that the Capitol could be breached as credible, echoing the findings of the September 11 commission about intelligence failures ahead of the 2001 terrorist attacks.
The report by the panel’s majority staff says the intelligence community has not entirely recalibrated to focus on the threats of domestic, rather than international, terrorism. And government intelligence leaders failed to sound the alarm in part because they could not conceive that the US Capitol Building would be overrun by rioters.
Still, Peters said, the reasons for dismissing what he called a massive amount of intelligence defies an easy explanation.
While several other reports have examined the intelligence failures around January 6 — including a bipartisan 2021 Senate report, the House January 6 committee last year and several separate internal assessments by the Capitol Police and other government agencies the latest investigation is the first congressional report to focus solely on the actions of the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis.
In the wake of the attack, Peters said the committee interviewed officials at both agencies and found what was pretty constant finger pointing at each other.
Everybody should be accountable because everybody failed, Peters said.
Using emails and interviews collected by the Senate committee and others, including from the House January 6 panel, the report lays out in detail the intelligence the agencies received in the weeks ahead of the attack.

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