Here’s what conservatives need to know.
A stunning revelation has rocked Washington, D.C., as former President Donald Trump is demanding answers after reports confirmed that 274 plainclothes FBI agents were at the U.S. Capitol during the events of January 6, 2021.
These bombshell revelations are igniting serious questions about what really happened that day—and whether the American people were misled by the very agencies sworn to protect them.
FBI Admits Presence — But Blames “Crowd Control”
The FBI admitted to Fox News Digital that agents were indeed present at the Capitol but claimed they only arrived after the protest turned violent. Officials insist they were there to assist overwhelmed Capitol Police with crowd control.
However, this explanation isn’t sitting well with many Americans—or former Trump administration officials.
Kash Patel, a top Trump ally and former Pentagon official, slammed the FBI’s actions:
“Sending FBI agents into a crowd control mission goes against agency standards and procedures,” Patel said. “This was the failure of corrupt leadership that lied to Congress and to the American people about what really happened on January 6.”
Patel praised brave FBI whistleblowers who are now stepping forward to expose the truth, promising transparency and accountability under new leadership.
Trump: Wray ‘Has Some Major Explaining to Do’
President Trump, who has long criticized the FBI’s handling of January 6, took to Truth Social to blast former FBI Director Christopher Wray.
“It was just revealed that the FBI secretly placed, against all rules and protocols, 274 FBI Agents into the crowd just prior to, and during, the January 6th Hoax,” Trump wrote. “This is completely different from what Wray testified to Congress over and over again! Many Great American Patriots were forced to pay a very big price simply for loving their country.”
Since returning to the White House, President Trump has pardoned or commuted the sentences of every January 6 defendant who faced politically motivated charges.
Trump also demanded that every agent’s identity and actions that day be made public, calling it a necessary step to restore trust in America’s justice system.
Wray’s Conflicting Testimony Raises Red Flags
Christopher Wray previously told Congress that the FBI did not orchestrate the Capitol unrest. However, he refused to answer directly when asked whether undercover agents or informants were embedded in the crowd.
Adding to the controversy, the Justice Department Inspector General released a December report stating there were no “undercover FBI employees” among the protesters—yet the report admitted there were 26 paid informants, including three tied to the FBI.
Critics say this language was carefully crafted to hide the full truth by confusing the terms “plainclothes” and “undercover.”
“This is classic Washington doublespeak,” Patel said. “The American people deserve real answers, not carefully worded half-truths.”
Why This Matters
These revelations have serious implications for the nation:
- Accountability: Why did Wray repeatedly refuse to disclose this information to Congress?
- Transparency: Who authorized 274 FBI agents to be deployed, and what were their true roles?
- Justice: Were innocent Americans unfairly targeted and prosecuted while federal agents may have stirred the chaos?
With former FBI Director James Comey already indicted for lying to Congress, conservatives say this proves a pattern of corruption at the highest levels of government.
“That’s two in a row—Comey and Wray—both caught lying while our country hangs in the balance,” Trump declared. “We can never allow this to happen to America again!”
The Fight for Truth Continues
For millions of patriotic Americans, this latest bombshell confirms their deepest fears: that January 6 was manipulated to smear Trump supporters and silence dissent.
With new whistleblowers coming forward and President Trump demanding action, the fight for truth and justice is just beginning.
Stay tuned as more evidence emerges about what really happened that day—and who was responsible.