Consider This from NPR

Why did NPR build an archive of January 6th documents?

10 min
Feb 21, 2026about 2 months ago
Listen to Episode
Summary

NPR built a comprehensive archive documenting January 6th Capitol attack events, including videos, court records, and criminal case tracking. Investigative reporter Tom Dreisbach led the effort to preserve this historical record as the public narrative around the attack continues to be rewritten and distorted.

Insights
  • Institutional media archives serve as critical historical preservation tools when official narratives are being actively rewritten or sanitized by political actors
  • Data-driven journalism on criminal cases revealed significant patterns (14-20% military connections) that prompted government-level policy reviews and public interest
  • Individual case studies demonstrate varied motivations and outcomes among participants, ranging from those who underwent genuine ideological shifts to those maintaining extremist positions
  • Narrative control around major historical events is contested in real-time, requiring journalists to document specifics and evidence before records are potentially destroyed or lost
  • Public access to primary source materials (video, court documents, body camera footage) enables independent analysis and discovery beyond initial journalistic framing
Trends
Institutional narrative control and historical revisionism becoming central to political strategy and public discourseData journalism expanding beyond reporting to include public-facing archives and databases for transparency and accountabilityGrowing concern about preservation of digital evidence and court records as institutional memoryIncreased focus on documenting extremism connections within military and law enforcement institutionsShift in how major political figures publicly reframe controversial events to align with electoral strategyJournalists taking on archival and historical preservation roles traditionally held by government institutionsQAnon and militia group recruitment patterns becoming subject of systematic investigative documentationCriminal justice outcomes (sentencing disparities) becoming measurable data points for public understanding
Topics
January 6th Capitol Attack DocumentationCriminal Justice Sentencing AnalysisMilitary Extremism and RadicalizationMilitia Group Recruitment (Proud Boys, Oath Keepers)QAnon Conspiracy Theory TrackingHistorical Narrative PreservationDigital Evidence ArchivingPolitical Disinformation and RevisionismInvestigative Journalism MethodologyCourt Records and Legal DocumentationExtremism in Military RanksPolitical Violence and TerrorismPublic Archive AccessibilityIdeological Deprogramming and RehabilitationGovernment Accountability Documentation
Companies
NPR
Built and maintains the January 6th archive documenting the Capitol attack through investigative reporting and public...
The Pentagon
Conducted review of extremism in military ranks following NPR's reporting that 14-20% of January 6th defendants had m...
People
Tom Dreisbach
NPR investigative reporter who led the January 6th archive project, spending over 5 years documenting the attack thro...
Donald Trump
Former president whose public statements about January 6th shifted from condemning participants to defending them and...
Jason Riddle
January 6th participant profiled in NPR reporting who stormed Capitol, was sentenced to 90 days jail, and subsequentl...
Jake Lang
January 6th defendant who maintains extremist views and stated willingness to use violence, viewing the attack as 'ju...
Jonathan Haidt
Author of 'The Anxious Generation' whose work on social media harms was mentioned in podcast promotional content
Quotes
"We kind of thought of it as like a January 6th museum in a way, where it covered different aspects of that day, the violence, the weapons people used, the motivations of people, and tried to preserve in a way this history of what happened that day at a time when the government has been actively trying to erase or whitewash or otherwise distort the events of January 6th."
Tom Dreisbach
"Trump is promoting criminal behavior. That was a criminal act. January 6th was a crime. And I think it's going to result in more death."
Jason Riddle
"It was like I actually not sure anyone is going to do this... over time it just became clear that if we didn't do this, then it's possible some of this stuff would be destroyed forever."
Tom Dreisbach
"Trump likes to refer to January 6th as a day of love. And I think of it as a day of loss. Everyone connected to that day seemed to lose something."
Tom Dreisbach
"I just hope people remember the specifics and the human lives that were at the center of what happened at the Capitol."
Tom Dreisbach
Full Transcript
USA! USA! And we fight. We fight like hell. It has been five years since the attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021, when a pro-Trump mob stormed the building, trying to stop the certification of the presidential election. And if you don't fight like hell, you're not going to have a country anymore. Pre-sand! Pre-sand! In the years since, journalists, investigators, and historians have tried to piece together and understand what happened that day. And at NPR, investigative reporter Tom Dreisbach wanted to do even more. He led an ambitious team effort to preserve a comprehensive record of those events for future generations. The January 6th archive is a timeline of the moments before, during and after that attack. Built from video evidence gathered over many years. It also includes a database tracking every criminal case tied to January 6th. We kind of thought of it as like a January 6th museum in a way, where it covered different aspects of that day, the violence, the weapons people used, the motivations of people, and tried to preserve in a way this history of what happened that day at a time when the government has been actively trying to erase or whitewash or otherwise distort the events of January 6th. Consider this as the narrative around the January 6th attack continues to change, NPR reporters built an archive to document what happened. From NPR, I'm Emily Kwong. Is there an acquaintance in your life that you'd love to turn into an actual friend? And have you thought about saying, hey, we should hang out sometime. Maybe think again. The more specific you are, the more likely it is that you're actually going to get together, you know, pull out your calendar, pick a time, pick a thing to do together and actually follow through. Listen to the Life Kit podcast in the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. Jonathan Haidt's book, The Anxious Generation, sparked a movement to warn kids and their parents about the harms of social media. Yes, my claim is that will change brain development in ways that will make you less capable, confident, happy and sociable as an adult. But what do young people think? Gen Z is just going to think, well, we're cursed. That's on the TED Radio Hour. Listen on the NPR app or wherever you get your podcasts. It's Consider This from NPR. Five years ago after the attack on the Capitol during the certification of the 2020 election NPR set out to gather thousands of videos court exhibits and records from that day into one place To create a comprehensive archive of what happened and to preserve it at a time when the public narrative around January 6th continues to change For this week Reporter Notebook I wanted to talk with NPR's Tom Dreisbach about how the project came together and what it took to document years of work. So I started by asking him how long he thinks he spent on it. I could not quantify, you know, the work started on January 6 itself of 2021. So that was more than five years ago. That was really days and days and weeks and months of my life was obsessively watching video. We started noticing from the criminal cases that a number of the people being arrested had served in the military or had connections to the military or even active duty military service members in some capacity. And so we had this thought, okay, could we actually, you know, put some numbers to this. And we did a story pretty early on, I think, you know, just a few weeks after the attack. By NPR's count, nearly 20% of people charged in connection with the attack and rioting are veterans. NPR investigative correspondent Tom Dreisbach is here to talk about what we found. Hi, Tom. Hey, Ari. That number has since gone down to about 14%, but it was a significant enough number that it led to a review by the Pentagon of extremism in the ranks. And we realized, oh, wow, if this could lead to, you know, information and impact for the public that people were really interested in, what else can we learn by taking comprehensive approach? And then we decided, well, if we're going to do this, we should make it available to the public. We would read every single arrest record and there would be these arrest affidavits written by FBI agents that would kind of tell the story of each person's participation in the riot. We tracked things like the number of people who had ties to extremist groups, so like the Proud Boys or the Oath Keepers or people who were followers of the QAnon conspiracy theory. And out of that, you know, we picked individual stories that were interesting but also just tried to get a comprehensive picture. And so, you know, there was a question, well, what are the outcomes going to be from all these investigations and arrests? And we were able to put numbers to that, like that the median sentence was 30 days in jail. About a third of people who were actually sentenced got no jail time at all. I'm really curious about this group of people, this over 1,500 people from all 50 states who were arrested in connection to January 6th. What else did you learn about them as people? Oh, it's such a varied group. One guy that we ended up profiling was a man named Jason Riddle. He was a big time Trump supporter. He loved just sort of the attention it got him. He loved being in people's faces. He also had a drinking problem. He's very open about this now. He was an alcoholic and he kind of was lost in his life a little bit And when he heard about the January 6th rally he was excited He was like yeah he been to you know more than a dozen Trump rallies in his life He calls it like a party. So he went into the building. He stormed the Capitol. He found a bottle of wine inside, was drinking it until a police officer said, like, get the heck out of here. And he was sentenced for his participation. He got 90 days in jail. But the process of going through the criminal justice system led him to get sober. And in the process of getting sober and dealing with his alcoholism, he started to rethink a lot of things in his life, including his support for Trump. Trump is promoting criminal behavior. That was a criminal act. January 6th was a crime. And I think it's going to result in more death. Eventually, there's going to be another riot. Something's going to happen if you keep promoting these lies. That's what January 6th was a result of his lies. On the other hand, there's many, many people who see themselves as victims, as martyrs in some way, and that they believe that they're still victims and they deserve restitution from the federal government. There's one man named Jake Lang who said he is still willing to use violence. I'm very proud to have done what I did on January 6th, and I think that it was just the beginning of what America needs to cleanse itself. And then, of course, when it comes to President Trump himself, how he publicly talks about this day has changed, too. What was the moment that you realized that this history was being rewritten by the president himself and by others? It started kind of slowly and then seemed to be all at once. Over time, you know, Trump just embraced the January 6th defendants. He started to just say that, no, they didn't do anything wrong. He had gone from like he said that they had defiled the seat of democracy and they must pay. They must pay for their crimes to saying that they were actually the victims. And he really made his entire 2024 presidential campaign in part about the January 6th defendants. And so it became clear that the narrative about what actually happened that day was being rewritten before our eyes. And at a time when we were getting more and more information from court records about what actually had happened because we were getting so much more video and so many more verdicts in these cases that were being proven factually in court at the same time as it felt like the public's understanding was slipping away from us. That sounds like a call to action as a journalist. Like they say that journalists write the first draft of history, but in this case, you're recovering the first draft of history or at least the elements for the first draft of history. And that was on you all to do because it if not you then who it sounds like is what you were thinking That what it felt like It was like I actually not sure anyone is going to do this And I started getting calls you know over this process from prosecutors who were like hey I actually was looking for the record from this case that I prosecuted related to January 6th Do you have it? And in some cases I was able to help. But, you know, over time it just became clear that if we didn't do this, then it's possible some of this stuff would be destroyed forever. What kind of story did you want to tell with the authority you had of all the materials? How did you choose to, like, focus it? Well, there's not one story you can tell from this. And our hope is that with the archive, people can find a lot of those stories themselves. They can look at individual cases. They can view surveillance footage, body cam footage for themselves and see what happened that day. And maybe discover stories that even we didn't realize were there in the archive. And so our approach was not just telling one story but trying to make sure that this history is available for future generations. How do you ultimately hope January 6th will be remembered? One of the overriding feelings or thoughts that I had throughout the process of reporting this was the level of violence and the level of terror felt by people who were inside the Capitol or defending the Capitol as police officers. You know, it can be sanitized in many cases and has been sanitized by the administration. And so in some ways, I hope people remember just how traumatic that day was for the country, arguably, and certainly for all the people who were there. Trump likes to refer to January 6th as a day of love. And I think of it as a day of loss. Everyone connected to that day seemed to lose something. So it's not for me to say ultimately how people remember that day, but I just hope people remember the specifics and the human lives that were at the center of what happened at the Capitol. Tom Dreisbach is a correspondent on NPR's investigations team. You can look through the reporting and see all the evidence for yourself at npr.org slash J6 Archive. Tom, thank you so much. Thanks so much, Emily. This episode was produced by Lina Muhammad and Daniel Offman. It was edited by Sarah Robbins. Our executive producer is Sammy Yannigan. It's Consider This. I'm Emily Kwong. That's plus.npr.org.