Daily Press

Fox’s Carlson given Jan. 6 footage

Democrats condemn McCarthy’s decision as a ‘security breach’

- By Lisa Mascaro, Farnoush Amiri and Mary Clare Jalonick

WASHINGTON — Thousands of hours of surveillan­ce footage from the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol are being made available to Fox News Channel host Tucker Carlson, a stunning level of access granted by House Speaker Kevin McCarthy that Democrats swiftly condemned as a “grave” breach of security with potentiall­y far-reaching consequenc­es.

The hard-right political commentato­r said his team is spending the week at the Capitol poring through the video and preparing to reveal their findings to his viewers. But granting exclusive access to sensitive Jan. 6 security footage to such a deeply partisan figure is a highly unusual move, seen by some critics as essentiall­y outsourcin­g House oversight to a TV personalit­y who has promoted conspiracy theories about the attack.

“It’s a shocking developmen­t that brings in both political concerns but even more importantl­y, security concerns,” said Rep. Dan Goldman, D-N.Y., who was a chief counsel during President Donald Trump’s first impeachmen­t trial.

Many critics warn that security at the Capitol could be endangered if Carlson airs security footage that details how the rioters accessed the building and the routes lawmakers used to flee to safety. And a sharply partisan retelling of the Capitol attack could accelerate a dangerous rewriting of the history of what happened Jan. 6, when Trump encouraged a mob of supporters to head to the Capitol to overturn Joe Biden’s election.

“It is not lost on anyone that the one person that the speaker decides to give hours and hours of sensitive secret surveillan­ce footage is the person who peddled a bogus documentar­y trying to debunk responsibi­lity for the Jan. 6 riot from Donald Trump onto others,” Goldman said.

“Kevin McCarthy has turned over the security of the Capitol to Tucker Carlson and that’s a scary thought,” he added.

McCarthy’s office declined to confirm the arrangemen­t, first reported by Axios, despite repeated requests for comment.

Gripping images and videos from the Capitol attack by Trump supporters have been widely circulated by documentar­ians, news organizati­ons and even the rioters themselves. But officials have held back much of the surveillan­ce video from hundreds of security cameras stationed in and

around the Capitol that offer a detailed view of the grisly scene and the brutal beatings of police as they tried to stop the rioters.

The House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack went through a painstakin­g process to work closely with the U.S. Capitol Police to review and ultimately release approved segments of the surveillan­ce footage as part of its public hearings last year.

U.S. Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger issued a terse statement when asked about the new release of footage: “When Congressio­nal Leadership or Congressio­nal Oversight Committees ask for things like this, we must give it to them.”

House Democratic leader Hakeem Jeffries called McCarthy’s decision an “egregious security breach” that threatens the safety of Capitol workers.

“Unfortunat­ely, the apparent disclosure of sensitive

video material is yet another example of the grave threat to the security of the American people represente­d by the extreme MAGA Republican majority,” Jeffries, D-N.Y. said in a letter to House colleagues.

Rep. Zoe Lofgren, D-Calif., the former chairwoman of the House Administra­tion Committee and a member of the committee that investigat­ed Jan. 6, said: “It’s really a road map to people who might want to attack the Capitol again. It would be of huge assistance to them.”

Carlson, who previously produced a documentar­y suggesting the federal government used the Capitol attack by Trump’s supporters as a pretext to persecute conservati­ves, confirmed that his team was reviewing the footage ahead of a possible airing.

“We believe we have secured the right to see whatever we want to see,” Carlson, who is the network’s

most-watched prime-time host, said on his show this week.

It’s not clear what protocols Carlson and his team are+ using to view the material, but he said that “access is unfettered.”

The House committee investigat­ing the events of Jan. 6 underwent an often intense process to review the tens of thousands of hours of footage as it documented its findings.

Over the nearly two-year probe, the panel, which was disbanded once Republican­s took control of the House last month, created a secure room in their Capitol Hill offices for staff to comb through the more than 14,000 hours of footage. The process took months, according to a person familiar with the investigat­ion who requested anonymity to discuss the private machinatio­ns.

Any clip of footage the committee wanted to use for their series of public hearings or for the final report had to be approved by Capitol Police to avoid any security breaches, the person said. If police had an objection, the committee would engage in negotiatio­ns to redact any content that could potentiall­y endanger the force or the mechanisms they use to protect the Capitol and lawmakers.

Anxiety over security is running high after Capitol Police reported an uptick in threats to member safety over the last several years, its highest on Jan. 6, 2021. The number of possible threats against members of Congress rose from about 4,000 in 2017 to more than 9,600 in 2021, then declined last year to 7,501.

Key Republican­s welcomed McCarthy’s decision as part of his commitment to create a more transparen­t House and engage in oversight, as Republican­s launch a far-reaching series of investigat­ions and probes touching many aspects of government.

Former Rep. Rodney Davis, R-Ill., said if House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s daughter, the documentar­y filmmaker Alexandra Pelosi, was able to film that day and release her footage, McCarthy should be able to grant Carlson access.

Others said the situations are not comparable — countless hours of footage have been released from many sources that captured what happened that deadly day. A mob of Trump supporters battled Capitol Police, in often violent scenes. Five people died in the riot and its aftermath.

“I don’t see how releasing thousands of hours of footage to one handpicked controvers­ial media figure could ever produce the same factual and careful analysis that the committee produced over that year and a half,” said Sandeep Prasanna, a former investigat­ive counsel on the Jan. 6 panel now in private practice.

 ?? SETH WENIG/AP 2022 ?? Former President Donald Trump, right, talks with Donald Trump Jr., center, and Fox News Channel host Tucker Carlson during the final round of the Bedminster Invitation­al LIV Golf tournament last summer in Bedminster, N.J.
SETH WENIG/AP 2022 Former President Donald Trump, right, talks with Donald Trump Jr., center, and Fox News Channel host Tucker Carlson during the final round of the Bedminster Invitation­al LIV Golf tournament last summer in Bedminster, N.J.

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