FBI swept up lawmakers' phone data, is treating some as suspects

FBI is ‘treating members of Congress as suspects in the MAGA riot probe and’has swept up lawmakers’ phone data during investigation’

  • The FBI is reportedly investigating members of Congress as ‘suspects’ in a probe of the January 6 insurrection and has swept up lawmakers’ phone data
  • The Intercept reported Monday that within hours of the MAGA riot the FBI began securing thousands of phone and electronic records connected to people there
  • Through special emergency powers, the FBI collected reams of private cell phone communications, some of which were from lawmakers and Hill staff 
  • ‘The data is also being used to map links between suspects, which include members of Congress,’ The Intercept said 
  • This could pose a problem, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse said, because the executive branch is restricted from probing Congress 
  • Whitehouse suggested last month that the Senate Judiciary and Homeland Security Committee probe whether lawmakers were involved in the riot 
  • The Rhode Island Democrat told The Intercept that he’s also asked the Senate Ethics panel to look into whether members of Congress aided the rioters 

The FBI is reportedly investigating members of Congress as ‘suspects’ in a probe of the January 6 insurrection and has swept up lawmakers’ phone data. 

The Intercept reported Monday that within hours of the Capitol break-in the FBI began securing thousands of phone and electronic records connected to people at the scene. 

Through special emergency powers, the FBI collected reams of private cell phone communications, some of which were from lawmakers and their staff.  

The FBI is reportedly investigating members of Congress as 'suspects' as part of the bureau's probe into the January 6 insurrection, The Intercept reported Monday, detailing the amount of cell phone data investigators have collected

The FBI is reportedly investigating members of Congress as ‘suspects’ as part of the bureau’s probe into the January 6 insurrection, The Intercept reported Monday, detailing the amount of cell phone data investigators have collected 

Investigators are ‘searching cell towers and phones pinging off cell sites in the area to determine visitors to the Capitol,’ a retired senior FBI official told the news site.  

The Intercept said investigators have relied on data ‘dumps’ from cell phone towers in the D.C. area to map out who was there. 

From there, they are able to trace call records – but not the content of the conversations – from phones. 

‘The data is also being used to map links between suspects, which include members of Congress,’ The Intercept said.    

A number of Democrats suggested after the MAGA riot that some of their Republican colleagues may have been involved.

GOP lawmakers have denied these allegations.  

A 2007 corruption case against former Rep. William Jefferson, a Louisiana Democrat, reinforced protections against the executive branch sweeping up records from Congress.  

An appeals court ruled the FBI improperly seized material from Jefferson’s office. 

In a statement released on January 11, Sen. Sheldon Whitehouse warned the Justice Department against investigating members of Congress’ role in the attack, saying that the Senate should do so instead. 

‘Separation of powers principles generally, and the speech and debate clause particularly, restrict the executive branch’s ability to investigate members of Congress. That’s why the Constitution puts the houses of Congress in charge of disciplining their members,’ Whitehouse elaborated to the Intercept. 

‘In the case of the January 6 insurrection, I’ve asked the Senate ethics panel to take a hard look at certain members’ behavior, including whether they coordinated or conspired with, aided and abetted, or gave aid and comfort to the insurrectionists,’ the Rhode Island Democrat continued. 

In the original statement, Whitehouse suggested that the Senate Judiciary and perhaps Homeland Security Committees probe colleagues’ role in the insurrection. 

Whitehouse also said that Republican Sens. Josh Hawley, Ted Cruz and Ron Johnson need to be removed from the committees investigating the insurrection. 

Hawley and Cruz were among the GOP senators to back a House GOP effort to challenge Electoral College vote counts in certain states during the January 6 joint session to certify that President Joe Biden won the 2020 presidential election.

A U.S. senator has to sign on to a House challenge in order for it to be debated. 

Their actions gave what Democrats call ‘the big lie’ – that President Donald Trump was cheated out of a second term due to widespread voter fraud – more weight. 

Since the insurrection, Johnson has downplayed the assault. 

The FBI refused to comment to the Intercept on specific tools investigators were using in the probe of the January 6 insurrection, except to say the bureau received more than 200,000 tips. 

The Justice Department declined to comment. 

‘As with all our operations, the FBI conducts itself according to our legal requirements and established policies,’ the FBI told The Intercept.   

source: dailymail.co.uk