GOP's Controversial Move: Blurring January 6 Footage to Shield Rioters

House speaker Mike Johnson, a Republican, has announced plans to blur the faces of the insurrectionists who stormed the Capitol on January 6 before releasing new footage to the public, claiming that they don't want them to be charged or retaliated against. However, the Justice Department already has access to the surveillance footage. Some Republicans, including Georgia congressman Andrew Clyde, have downplayed the events of that day, with Clyde stating that the protesters appeared to be on a "normal tourist visit." Over 1,200 defendants have been charged in connection with the January 6 attack, with more than 400 sentenced to incarceration. Johnson plans to release around 90 hours of security footage to allow the public to draw their own conclusions. Meanwhile, Colorado's highest court will hear arguments on whether Trump's involvement in the insurrection warrants his removal from the ballot under the 14th Amendment.
- Republicans to blur faces in January 6 footage as ‘we don’t want them charged’ The Guardian US
- House Speaker Johnson wants to blur January 6 footage to protect Capitol rioters CNN
- You Won't Believe the Edits Republicans Are Making to the January 6 Tapes The New Republic
- What Mike Johnson is really hiding by blurring Jan. 6 footage MSNBC
- Speaker Mike Johnson says he's blurring Jan. 6 footage so rioters don't get charged NBC News
Reading Insights
0
0
2 min
vs 3 min read
76%
590 → 144 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on The Guardian US