Every Deleted Jan. 6 Defendant Record the DOJ Erased | Filters | Searchable

Resist Hate · Accountability Archive

Deleted by the DOJ.
Preserved here.

On January 20, 2025, Donald Trump granted clemency to roughly 1,600 people charged over the January 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — full pardons for nearly all of them, commuted sentences for 14 Oath Keepers and Proud Boys figures. In May 2026, his Justice Department began systematically erasing its own public records of those prosecutions. This is the DOJ’s own defendant list, as it stood before the deletions: every name, every charge the department published, every case status. Searchable and filterable below. Tap any row to expand its full DOJ case record.

1,243
Names on the deleted DOJ list
Recorded convicted or sentenced
Assault-on-police entries
Deadly-weapon entries
14
Sentences commuted
Filter:
0 of 1,243 entries shown
# Name DOJ record — charges & case status Flags

Source & method: This table preserves the U.S. Department of Justice / U.S. Attorney’s Office for D.C. “Capitol Breach Cases” defendant list, reconstructed from daily archival snapshots (final snapshot: November 4, 2024) captured by security researcher Bob Rudis before the DOJ removed the records in May 2026. Charges appear exactly where the DOJ published them; for roughly half of the entries the DOJ listed only “see accompanying documents,” and those rows are marked accordingly. Case-status text is the DOJ’s own and lags actual outcomes — the department’s list recorded 555 convictions or sentencings, though by its own January 2025 statistics approximately 1,583 people had been charged and the large majority convicted before the blanket clemency. Category flags are assigned by Resist Hate from the DOJ’s published charge and status text and undercount the true totals for the same reason.

On the clemency: All individuals on this list were covered by the January 20, 2025 proclamation — full pardons for nearly everyone, with sentences commuted (convictions left intact) for 14 named Oath Keepers and Proud Boys members, flagged in purple below. Thomas Caldwell was subsequently pardoned in March 2025, and in April 2026 the Justice Department asked a federal appeals court to vacate the convictions of 12 of the remaining commutees.

Compiled by RESISTH8   RESISTH8.COM