
Judge dismisses suit seeking to block ID of FBI agents who investigated Jan. 6 cases
U.S. District Court Judge Jia Cobb, a Biden appointee, expressed sympathy for agents who went to court seeking limitations on the Trump administration after the Justice Department demanded a list of all who had done investigative work on the cases of rioters.
'Plaintiffs filed these cases in a whirlwind of chaos and fear,' Cobb wrote, adding that 'some former January 6 defendants, now pardoned and at large, called for FBI agents to be doxed (or worse).'
'Since then, the dust has settled some—and this case has evolved,' Cobb continued.
FBI agents have been in court since February, filing the case shortly after eight top career FBI officials were fired, and principal Deputy Attorney General Emil Bove, now nominated for a lifetime appointment to the Third Circuit Court of Appeals, demanded the list.
But Cobb determined that the Justice Department does not appear poised to act on agents' fears that a list would be used not only to fire agents but release their identities as an act of retribution.
'The Court ordered expedited jurisdictional discovery to cut through the chaos and allow Plaintiffs to shore up their standing allegations,' Cobb wrote.
'That discovery revealed no evidence that Defendants are on the verge of disclosing Plaintiffs' identities, nor have Plaintiffs plausibly alleged that such a disclosure is imminent. The Court must therefore dismiss Plaintiffs' disclosure-related claims.'
Attorneys for the FBI Agents Association said they were prepared to return to court if the government did not fulfill its pledge.
'We are proud to defend the FBI employees who bravely investigated the January 6th attacks. The Court acknowledged that the disclosure of agents' names would endanger them and accepted the Government's claims that it would not do so. We stand ready to return to Court immediately if the Government does not live up to its obligations,' attorneys Margaret Donovan and Chris Mattei said in a statement.
Bove has not denied the list will be used to review the work of the thousands of agents who played a role in the cases of Jan. 6, 2021, rioters and did not foreclose the possibility that some could be fired. Agents were also asked to fill out a questionnaire about their role in the sprawling investigation.
'No FBI employee who simply followed orders and carried out their duties in an ethical manner with respect to January 6 investigations is at risk of termination or other penalties,' Bove wrote shortly after requesting the list.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
5 minutes ago
- Yahoo
Nvidia's $4 Trillion Power Play: How Jensen Huang Just Outmaneuvered Washington and Beijing
Jensen Huang just pulled off a move few CEOs could even attemptlet alone survive. Days after meeting with President Donald Trump in Washington, the Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) chief landed in Beijing to announce the resumption of H20 chip sales to China, reversing what had been a hardline U.S. export ban. At the same time, Huang kicked off a major supply-chain expo, met with top Chinese trade officials, and delivered his remarks partly in Mandarin. Nvidia declined to comment on its behind-the-scenes diplomacy, but the timing speaks volumes: while Washington and Beijing remain at odds, Huang is threading the needleand it could be giving Nvidia a decisive advantage. Warning! GuruFocus has detected 4 Warning Signs with NVDA. Unlike Apple's Tim Cook or Tesla's Elon Muskwho've had on-again, off-again relationships with TrumpHuang seems to be playing the long game. He's stayed out of politics publicly, but privately made the case that restricting U.S. chips only accelerates China's self-sufficiency. And he's done it while showing cultural fluency in China and restraint on hot-button issues like Taiwan. At a press briefing, Huang brushed off suggestions he influenced Trump's shift, saying: I don't think I changed his mind. But it's hard to ignore the fact that Nvidia just regained access to a market that could define the next wave of AI demand. Is Huang now a de facto bridge between two increasingly fractured tech ecosystems? Maybe. He's not seeking that role, but he's also the only one who hasn't burned either bridge. Nvidia just became the first $4 trillion chip company, and it didn't get there by picking sidesit got there by selling the shovels in an AI gold rush. And now, with H20 chips back in play, Huang could be setting Nvidia up for a fresh wave of growtheven as the geopolitical storm swirls around him. Investors should keep watching. This isn't just about chips anymore. This article first appeared on GuruFocus. Sign in to access your portfolio


Fox News
5 minutes ago
- Fox News
New Yorkers are looking for common sense and strong leadership, GOP representative says
All times eastern Making Money with Charles Payne FOX News Radio Live Channel Coverage WATCH LIVE: President Trump signs first major federal crypto bill into law


Fox News
5 minutes ago
- Fox News
'The View' co-host slams Democrats for 'broken trust' over Biden heath cover-up
All times eastern Making Money with Charles Payne FOX News Radio Live Channel Coverage WATCH LIVE: President Trump signs first major federal crypto bill into law