News

President Trump’s sweeping clemency for Jan. 6 defendants have taken a number of surprising twists and turns nearly three ...
The eight defendants from the Jan. 6 Capitol riot were featured as the “special surprise guests” of the Jackson County GOP’s ...
Fallout in Washington continues after President Donald Trump's pardons and commutations for over 1,500 people involved in the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol. Four years after they raided the ...
On the first day he took office, Trump pardoned almost every individual convicted of crimes related to the deadly January 6, ...
Five former prosecutors who worked on criminal cases stemming from the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol are urging ...
Richard Bigo Barnett, 63, a self-described “J6 Patriot”, and retired firefighter, called the appointment “A sad day for MAGA” ...
Years ahead of schedule, the new U.S. Capitol Police budget has soared to nearly $1 billion, and officials are blaming the ...
In an extraordinary step, the Manhattan Democratic Party will vote Wednesday on whether to punish uptown Congressman Adriano ...
The top U.S. spy's chief of staff on Wednesday said the U.S. intelligence community is investigating whether the FBI was ...
Individuals convicted in the Jan. 6, 2021 U.S. Capitol riots can no longer obtain jobs with the city of Chicago thanks to a new ordinance.
The following is adapted from a talk delivered at a Hillsdale College luncheon in Anchorage, Alaska, on January 22, 2025.
A federal judge is weighing a DOJ request to reimburse some pardoned Jan. 6 defendants who were ordered to pay fines for US Capitol riot repairs.