Three witnesses who were in the hallway outside the Speaker’s Lobby of the U.S. Capitol when Ashli Babbitt was shot were once wanted by the FBI, but their photos have disappeared from the FBI’s January 6 Most Wanted page.
The men, including one who tried to administer first aid to Babbitt while she lay bleeding on the floor, were initially listed on the most wanted page on April 16, 2021. They were assigned numbers 310, 311, and 312.
On April 29, sometime after 6:45 p.m., their photos were scrubbed from the FBI list, according to an archived version of the FBI.gov website stored by the Wayback Machine at the Internet Archive. It is not clear why the photos were removed.
The listing of “wanted” photos now skips from 309 to 313.
It has been the FBI’s practice to leave photos on the page and label them with a red banner that says “ARRESTED” any time a person is taken into custody.
“He is media. He’s a photojournalist,” Hansen told The Epoch Times.
The man has covered rioting in Portland and was present in Kenosha, Wis., the night Kyle Rittenhouse shot three men in self-defense during rioting over the police shooting of a black man armed with a knife in the summer of 2020, Hansen said.
“I can imagine he’s seen some stuff and dealt with something like that in the past and that’s why he was so level-headed compared to everyone else in that room,” Hansen said.
One of the other men removed from the FBI Most Wanted list is a still photographer, Hansen said. The third man, who carried a United States flag in the Speaker’s Lobby hallway, was among the first people to leave the area after Byrd shot Babbitt.
Aaron Babbitt, Ashli’s husband, said the situation leaves him wondering.
“I’d like an explanation as to why they’ve been removed,” Babbitt told The Epoch Times. “If there’s nothing nefarious, then that shouldn’t be a problem. The silence is, and has been, deafening.”
The Epoch Times contacted the U.S. Department of Justice regarding the three men, but did not receive any response.
This was not the first time a wanted person was removed from the FBI’s Jan. 6 Most Wanted list.
Most Witnesses Still Unidentified
Columbus Doors Opened for Protesters
Analysis of more Jan. 6 video shot inside the historic Columbus Doors showed at least five people who ended up in the hallway outside the Speaker’s Lobby first accessed the Capitol through the Columbus Doors.
Surveillance video shows a protester—the FBI alleges it is George A. Tenney III— unsuccessfully tried to open the inner Columbus Doors from the inside by pushing his shoulder against them. When that failed, he turned around and appeared to be listening to someone off-camera. He then returned and was able to open the left door.
Police rushed in and fought to stem the flow of protesters into the Rotunda. A high-pitched entry alarm rang. Protesters forced their way past two police officers at the door. “Open the other door!” someone boomed off camera.
A female officer in riot gear was thrown to the ground to the left of the open door. A few protesters went to help her up, but another officer rushed and warned the protesters, “Get back! Get back!” The female officer was helped to the Rotunda, where she was seen leaning over with her hands on her knees.
Back at the doors, a protester is ranted at a police officer guarding the inside of the Columbus Doors.
“‘We’ve got a job to do?’ I don’t care what you said. That’s a poor excuse!”
The officer asks the man, “You serve your country?”
“Yeah I did, for five years, and that’s a poor excuse!”
“So did I, for 25 years.”
“That’s a poor excuse, ‘I’ve got a job to do.’ Give me a [expletive] break!”
Agent of Chaos
One of the men the Babbitt family is most interested in identifying is known online as #RedOnRed.
He is seen on video in numerous places on the Capitol grounds on Jan. 6. On the ground level, he launched a long 2-by-4 through a window. On his way to the Speaker’s Lobby, he is seen doing martial arts kicks into wooden office doors. He was standing to the left of Babbitt when she climbed into a broken window and was shot.
One video shows him with two hands on the arm of a police officer. “We’re not against you, we’re not against your family,” he says. “We love this country. You love your country. You love your family. We’re standing up together.”
“Thank you,” the officer replies.
“You’re welcome. We’re not the enemy.”
#RedOnRed also appears on video by John Sullivan taken after Babbitt was shot.
He approaches the camera and said, “It’s the second guy on the left shot her.”
Sullivan replied, “Nobody else had a gun,” to which #RedOnRed said, “It’s the second guy on the left.”