An FBI “red cell” report predicted that law enforcement action and a “lack of coordination” between groups would prevent widespread violence in response to a disputed election.

One week before Election Day 2020 and just over two months before the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, an internal FBI analysis concluded that domestic violent extremists were “very willing to take action” in response to a disputed election but that “law enforcement preemption” and the “disorganization” of extremist groups “likely would hinder widespread violence.”

The so-called red cell report — the type of exercise that became widespread after the federal government’s Sept. 11 intelligence failures and are meant to challenge conventional wisdom and encourage outside-the-box thinking — was titled “Alternative Analysis: Potential Scenarios for Reactions of Domestic Violent Extremists to a Disputed 2020 US Presidential Election.” NBC News obtained a redacted copy of the report through a Freedom of Information Act request.

  • @qooqie@lemmy.world
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    409 months ago

    I mean everyone knew there was going to be a rally on Jan 6th even 2 months ahead of time. I heard about it and knew it’d only be the nuttiest of the nuts that showed up. I didn’t think it would be a shit show for the law enforcement though. They definitely needed more cops or something to help, could’ve saved some lives by being more prepared.

    • @grue@lemmy.world
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      9 months ago

      In other words, you didn’t count on the Capitol Police being compromised by the traitors and directed to deploy only a token force.

      (Look at the difference between how they responded on Jan 6 vs. how they responded to the Black Lives Matter protests the summer before, then try to tell me I’m wrong.)

      • @WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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        9 months ago

        It isn’t just the capitol police who were compromised. It was a pre-planned coup that required multiple compromises in high places. That means the FBI and all other agencies who had jurisdiction over the capitol, intelligence, and terrorist activity.

        People all over the world knew a coup attempt was likely, weeks in advance, solely from the extremist rhetoric on social media. I was one of them. Acting like it was a case of a few “dropping the ball” is insanity. Are we all to believe I’m more informed than a multi-trillion dollar surveillance state? If so, I offer my services as national security adviser. My salary is 5 million. Have your people call my people.

        • @Nobody@lemmy.world
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          169 months ago

          The Secret Service was in on January 6, or at least a faction within the Secret Service. Pence was aware of it. That’s why he refused to get in a car with other agents and only trusted his own personal detail.

          • @gravitas_deficiency@sh.itjust.works
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            169 months ago

            Pointedly, Pence refused to let the Secret Service evacuate him from the Capitol, and he hasn’t given a straight, full, and honest answer explaining why he refused. And there’s a LOT of unconfirmed speculation that he refused because he was suspicious that Trump has co-opted his detail, and he had no idea where they’d take him or what they’d do, which is pretty fucking insane if there’s even a shred of truth to it.

            • Aviandelight
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              9 months ago

              Reminds me of the scene in Goodfellas where De Niro’s character tried to lure Karen into the warehouse to look at some dresses and she runs away scared because she knows she’s going to be killed. I really hope Pence felt like that.