By Julie Kelly
Matthew Graves just received a court summons.
As the U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia, Graves is rarely on the receiving end of a legal inquiry. In fact, Gravesâ hand must be tired from signing thousands of criminal indictments, sentencing memos, and plea offers related to his ongoing investigation into the events of January 6, 2021. Just this week, the FBI arrested two more individuals on minor offenses, giving Gravesâ overstaffed office more fresh meat for the Justice Departmentâs vengeful retaliation against Americans who protested the certification of Joe Bidenâs election that day.
No investigative technique is too invasive for Gravesâ henchmen to use in court proceedings. Big Tech, banking institutions, airlines, hotels, and other private interests work hand-in-glove with the Justice Department to hunt down Trump supporters and track their every movement before and on January 6. Much of the evidence consists of video footage captured by Capitol policeâs closed-circuit television system during the breach of the building. Investigators routinely include still shots of the surveillance video in criminal complaints.
But now Graves is under pressure from all sides to make the video footage public. A consortium of major media companies is suing Graves and the FBI for ignoring Freedom of Information Act requests to obtain the still-secret recordings. As Iâve reported since May 2021, the entire trove was designated âhighly sensitiveâ government material shortly after the investigation began. Clips entered as evidence in January 6 cases are under strict protective orders.
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