The president has required all FBI agents to fill out a questionnaire disclosing what role they played in the January 6 probes
FBI agents investigating UFOs are concerned about losing their jobs after being required to disclose any role they may have had in the Capitol riot cases, Politico has claimed, citing anonymous sources. Some agents from a secret working group investigating unidentified anomalous phenomena (UAP) reportedly participated in the January 6 probes.
On January 6, 2021, thousands of Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol in a bid to halt certification of the 2020 election, which saw Democrat Joe Biden emerge victorious. The subsequent clashes between protesters and the police left five people dead, and dozens more injured, including 140 police officers.
In the aftermath of the incident, more than 1,500 participants ended up being charged with federal crimes. After assuming office last month, Trump commuted the sentences of 14 people connected with the riots and pardoned the rest.
In its article on Monday, Politico reported that FBI employees nationwide, including those in the UAP working group, have been told to complete a questionnaire detailing their involvement in cases related to the January 6 riots.
“I have spoken to several agents from the UAP working group who are afraid of losing their role and the investigation getting unintentionally compromised,” Ryan Graves, executive director of Americans for Safe Aerospace, told the media outlet. Graves said his group had partnered with the FBI unit in question.
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The working group’s existence had not been publicized before, according to Politico. According to the outlet’s sources, it comprises a national program manager and more than a dozen agents nationwide. These agents are supposedly tasked with gathering intelligence, interviewing witnesses, and integrating classified data related to UAP activity into reports.
Over the weekend, Reuters and AP, citing unnamed sources, claimed that Acting Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove had issued a memo announcing that assessments potentially leading to “personnel actions” within the federal agency were necessary.
Approximately 4,000 FBI employees were required to fill out the questionnaire focusing on their roles in the January 6 probes, according to Reuters and AP.
Graves told Politico that “these leaders might not be aware of the incredible work these agents are doing,” referring to the UAP working group. He expressed concern that the group’s investigations would be nixed as a result of a potential purge.
Trump has repeatedly accused the FBI of being biased against him and “politicized.” He has never conceded defeat in the 2020 election, insisting that the vote was rigged.
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