
SHOWDOWN: Obama Judge Says Names of FBI Agents Involved in J6 Cases and Trump Investigations Can be Withheld From Public Amid “Safety” Concerns
DC Chief Judge James Boasberg, an Obama appointee, said the names of the anonymous FBI agents involved in the January 6 cases and Trump investigations can be withheld from the public for now.
On Tuesday, 9 FBI agents anonymously filed a lawsuit to block the Justice Department from accessing their names.
CNN reported Tuesday afternoon that the FBI turned over the names of the 5,000 employees who worked on J6 and Trump investigations.
According to NBC News, there were more than 2,400 cases in total – but 5,000 officials involved.
The FBI officials who worked on the J6 cases and Trump investigations were identified by a case management system.
Per NBC News reporter Ken Dilanian: An internal FBI document obtained by NBC News shows that executives use the FBIs Sentinel case file management system to identify agents and employees who worked on January 6 cases. The document says there were around 2400 investigations in total. The document says the search of case files was used to generate a list of names who then received a survey asking them exactly what they did on these cases. This is being viewed within the FBI as a retribution mission.
In an update, Ken Dilanian said that the list does not include names of the agents, rather, the agents were identified by a number called a “unique employee identifier.”