Storming the Capitol: Deleted Pentagon SMS increase suspicion of targeted cover-up by the Trump administration

Cell phone traffic before and during the storming of the Capitol in Washington is considered a treasure trove of evidence.

Storming the Capitol: Deleted Pentagon SMS increase suspicion of targeted cover-up by the Trump administration

Cell phone traffic before and during the storming of the Capitol in Washington is considered a treasure trove of evidence. But as it turns out, the parliamentary committee of inquiry will not be able to rely on the material by January 6, 2021. First it became known that the SMS traffic of the Secret Service during the attack on the US parliament building was deleted for controversial reasons and allegedly cannot be restored. Now the independent monitoring organization American Oversight has published court documents which indicate that all messages for January 6 were also deleted from the cellphones of high-ranking officials in the US Department of Defense.

The service cell phones of high-ranking officials from both the Pentagon and the army are affected. The mobile phones of then Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller and Secretary of the Army Ryan McCarthy are no exception. The deletion is said to have been carried out in accordance with Pentagon and Army guidelines for departing employees. The files therefore contain the succinct note: "The text messages were not kept."

The loss of these text messages and other cellphone messages is sensitive because the people in question include those responsible for mobilizing the National Guard. In the event of an event as serious and endangering state order as the storming of the parliament building in the capital, they should have been alerted almost immediately. But according to previous information, Secretary of Defense Miller did not move the National Guard in the capital until an hour and a half after the first barricades on the Capitol had been breached. Intent or sloppiness? Was Donald Trump responsible for the delay? Answers to these questions were suspected in the text messages, which are now apparently lost.

What's more, "It's pretty clear from the reports of the Secret Service and senior DHS officials that this isn't just a DOD [Department of Defense] problem, A spokeswoman for America Oversight quoted the "Washington Post" as saying that not just an army problem, but an interagency problem.There are increasing suspicions that cellphone messages on and on January 6 were deleted in all relevant areas of the Trump administration The organization wrote a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland, who also wrote to Attorney General Merrick Garland, who had been contacted by Illinois Senator Richard Durbin, a Democrat, to investigate the disappearance.

Both the Justice Department and the Army declined to comment on the allegations. An unnamed Pentagon official, who wished to remain anonymous because of the sensitivity of the issue, described deleting the messages as a standard "process." He emphasized to the "Post" but: "Nobody tried to hide or cover up anything. That would be a wrong narrative." American Oversight points out that Freedom of Information Act requests were filed with various government agencies just a week after the storming of the Capitol. The messages were apparently deleted after the requests were submitted.

Sources: American Oversight, Letter to Attorney General Garland, Court Records United States District Court for the District of Columbia, Washington Post