Judicial
Watch Sues Justice Department Over Last-Minute January 6
Targeting
The Biden administration,
anticipating President-elect Donald Trump’s promise to issue pardons for
January 6, 2021, defendants, is believed to have accelerated prosecutions
in the final months of Biden’s term.
That is why we filed a Freedom
of Information Act (FOIA) lawsuit
against the U.S. Department of Justice for records on accelerated January 6
prosecutions after Donald Trump was elected president in November 2024 (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Justice (No. 1:25-cv-02161)).
We
sued in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia after the
Justice Department failed to respond to a November 2024 FOIA request for
the records of then-Attorney General Merrick Garland, then-Deputy Attorney
General Lisa O. Monaco, then-Principal Deputy Associate Attorney General
Benjamin C. Mizer, and then-Special Counsel Jack Smith “regarding a)
pardons of any person(s) incarcerated due convictions in federal court in
the District of Columbia related to crimes committed at the U.S. Capitol in
Washington, D.C, on
Wednesday, Jan. 6, 2021 b) directives or orders to focus on arresting
additional suspects by type of offense allegedly committed. The timeframe
of the request is from January – November 2024.”
On January 6,
2025, the Justice Department reportedly
considered charging up to 200
additional people for their alleged involvement at the U.S. Capitol
disturbance. About 1,583 people already had been facing federal charges. On
January 17, 2025, it was reported that the FBI and federal prosecutors continued
to make arrests and “pursue
hefty sentences for those who breached the U.S. Capitol grounds.”
Authorities made four arrests just days before Trump’s
inauguration.
The corrupt Biden Justice Department tried to undermine
the Trump administration by maliciously prosecuting American citizens tied
to January 6. Our lawsuit aims to get to the truth about this last-minute
abuse of power.
We have several FOIA lawsuits dealing with the
lawfare targeting Trump and his supporters.
In August 2025, we
announced that the U.S. Air Force will finally provide full
military funeral honors to Ashli Babbitt, the Air Force veteran who was
shot and killed inside the U.S. Capitol by then-Capitol Police Lt. Michael
Byrd on January 6, 2021. Babbitt was the only official January 6 homicide
victim. The Biden administration had previously denied Babbitt and her
family these honors in retaliation for being at the U.S. Capitol that day.
This decision comes on the heels of a massive, nearly $5 million Trump
administration settlement
to her family for wrongful death and other claims against the U.S.
Government.
Also in August, a Georgia state court issued an order
in our lawsuit for Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis to provide new
information and potentially conduct a new search for Trump-related records
because her affidavit to the court made no reference to whether any
searches of the devices of former Fulton County Special Prosecutor Nathan
Wade or those of Chief Investigator Michael
L. Hill, who was involved in gathering evidence and coordinating
investigative efforts and likely
met with the January 6 Committee.
In May 2025, we sued
the U.S. Department of Defense for records regarding a reported 2021
meeting between then-Attorney General Merrick Garland and then-Chairman of
the Joint Chiefs of Staff General Mark Milley during which they discussed
President Trump. During the meeting, Milley is alleged to have pressured
Garland to target “far-right” militia movements (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Defense (No.
1:25-cv-01330)).
In April 2025, we filed
a FOIA lawsuit against the Internal Revenue Service to obtain records
related to possible improper targeting of January 6, 2021, Capitol
protesters, their supporters, and related nonprofits (Judicial
Watch v. Internal Revenue Service (No. 1:25-cv-01290)).
In
February 2025, we sued
the U.S. Department of Defense for information about two conference calls
involving then-Chairman of the Joint Chief of Staff Mark Milley with the
Departments of Justice, Interior and Homeland Security regarding
coordination for the January 6, 2021, election certification (Judicial
Watch v. U.S. Department of Defense (No. 1:25-cv-00439)).
In
December 2024, we sued
the Justice Department for details of a reported meeting between Attorney
General Merrick Garland and. Milley in which they discussed President Trump
and during which General Milley pressured Garland to target American “far
right” militia movements (Judicial
Watch Inc. v. U.S. Department of Justice
(No. 1:24-cv-03380)).
FEMA,
Latest Agency with Employees Watching Porn at Work
Most of
us believe that Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) employees are
dedicated to keeping us safe, but it turns out many of them were watching
porn at work on government computers. Our Corruption Chronicles
blog reports:
Over
a decade after legislation was introduced in Congress to contain an
epidemic of federal workers watching pornography on government computers,
the nation’s Homeland Security Secretary has fired numerous employees
“for consuming
pornographic content during work hours while on government issued
devices,” according to statement
issued a few days ago by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS).
“Today, I am announcing that multiple disgraced FEMA [Federal Emergency
Management Agency] employees were fired for using their government devices
to consume sexually explicit content while on the job,” said DHS
Secretary Kristi Noem in the recent announcement. “These individuals had
access to critical information and intelligence and were entrusted to
safeguard Americans from emergencies—and
instead they were consuming pornography.” The DHS secretary added that
“in at least one case the pornography consumed was racially charged and
involved bestiality.”
During the recent
audit, DHS investigators also discovered that nearly half of the FEMA staff
regularly log into social media platforms while performing taxpayer funded
duties. DHS’s Insider Threat Operations Center (ITOC) identified that one
employee typed explicit and sexually charged phrases into a chatbot website
from his government devices for the purpose of having the comments read
back to him in an accent. Another individual, a government contracted
employee also stationed at the command center, accessed a popular social
media platform 578 times over a 30-day period. He was engaged in extensive
interactions with individuals online, viewing explicit sexual content while
on his work devices. He also accessed content that included graphic
photographs and videos and, on several occasions, used his government
computer to chat online with members presenting explicit content. The
examples appear to be a snippet of the porn problem at FEMA, the
beleaguered agency created by Jimmy Carter to help Americans recover from
disasters.
Porn has for years been part of
the job at some government agencies and in fact, numerous federal audits
have long documented the enraging details of public servants consuming it
during business hours. Judicial Watch has reported on the scandal for over
15 years, beginning with the porn
scandal at the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the agency charged with
policing the nation’s financial industry. While the economy crumbled, the
SEC was preoccupied with pornography. In fact, high-ranking managers at the
agency regularly spent work hours gawking at pornography web sites on their
government computers while the country’s financial system collapsed. The
U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) has also been embroiled in a
large-scale pornography scandal with the agency’s inspector general
issuing a special alert involving a “significant
increase” in the number of
employees and contractors viewing and sharing unlawful or otherwise
inappropriate pornographic content—including child pornography—using
their government-issued computers and other communication devices. The
National Science Foundation (NSF) has also been exposed by its inspector
general for employees spending significant portions of their workdays watching,
downloading and e-mailing pornography on government computers without
ever getting caught. The Environmental Protection Agency’s inspector
general has also uncovered multiple cases of employees working hard at
watching porn.
Government employees
viewing porn on taxpayer dime has been so pervasive that over ten years ago
a bill, Eliminating
Pornography from Agencies Act, was introduced in Congress to contain
the embarrassing crisis. Though it was never enacted, the proposed law
brought much-needed attention to the matter and inspired some agencies to
address the problem individually. The North Carolina congressman who
introduced the measure over a decade ago said it was necessary to stop
federal employees from accessing, watching or sharing pornography on
government-issued computers and devices. The former Republican lawmaker
introduced the bill after the EPA scandal, which
included one veteran employee viewing as much as six hours of pornography a
day in his office, according to a federal audit. The same employee
downloaded thousands of pornographic files onto his government computer,
and another used his official EPA email to access an internet site with
child pornography. The former congressman, Mark Meadows, who introduced the
anti-porn bill, rightfully said it was appalling that it requires an act of
Congress to ensure that federal agencies block access to porn
sites.
Until next
week,
