WASHINGTON — The FBI should have done more to gather intelligence before the Capitol riot, according to a watchdog report Thursday that also said no undercover FBI employees were on the scene on Jan. 6, 2021, and none of the bureau's informants was authorized to participate.
The report from the Justice Department inspector general's office knocks down a fringe conspiracy theory advanced by some Republicans in Congress that the FBI played a role in instigating the events that day, when rioters determined to overturn Republican Donald Trump's 2020 election loss to Democrat Joe Biden stormed the building in a violent clash with police.
The review, released nearly four years after a dark chapter in history that shook the bedrock of American democracy, was narrow in scope, but aimed to shed light on gnawing questions that have dominated public discourse, including whether major intelligence failures preceded the riot and whether the FBI in some way provoked the violence. It's the latest major investigation about a day unlike any other in U.S. history, one that has already yielded congressional inquiries and federal and state indictments.
The report offers a mixed assessment of the FBI's performance in the run-up to the riot, crediting the bureau for preparing for the possibility of violence and for trying to identify known ''domestic terrorism subjects'' who planned to come to Washington that day.
But it said the FBI, in an action the now-deputy director described as a ''basic step that was missed,'' failed to canvass informants across all 56 of its field offices for any relevant intelligence. That was a step, the report concluded, ''that could have helped the FBI and its law enforcement partners with their preparations in advance of January 6.''
The report did find that 26 FBI informants were in Washington for election-related protests on Jan. 6, including three who had been tasked with traveling to the city to report on others who were potentially planning to attend the day's events. But while four informants entered the Capitol, none had been authorized to do so by the bureau or to break the law or encourage others to do so, the report said.
Many of the 26 informants did provide the FBI with information before the riot, but it ''was no more specific than, and was consistent with, other sources of information'' the FBI had acquired from other sources.
The FBI said in a letter responding to the report that it accepts the inspection general's recommendation ''regarding potential process improvements for future events.''