From the start of President Donald Trump’s second term, he and his administration have prioritized purging the history of Jan. 6, from his blanket pardons of Trump-backed rioters to firing agents and prosecutors who did their jobs in bringing cases against people who broke the law, including those who attacked law enforcement officers that day in 2021.
The latest example comes in the sentencing of Taylor Taranto, scheduled for Thursday. His Jan. 6 charges were dismissed due to the president’s Day 1 command, but he was convicted this year of separate crimes he committed in 2023.
Ahead of his sentencing, two prosecutors on his case filed a memorandum Tuesday that referred to Jan. 6 and Trump — after which they were placed on leave, the Justice Department withdrew their memo, and new prosecutors came in and filed a new one Wednesday without mentioning Jan. 6 or Trump.
The initial 14-page memo, signed by prosecutors Carlos Valdivia and Samuel White, recounted that “On January 6, 2021, thousands of people comprising a mob of rioters attacked the U.S. Capitol while a joint session of Congress met to certify the results of the 2020 presidential election.” It further noted that Taranto “was accused of participating in the riot in Washington, D.C., by entering the U.S. Capitol Building,” and that he later “returned to his home in the State of Washington, where he promoted conspiracy theories about the events of January 6, 2021.”
Those words are not in the new 12-page memo from prosecutors Travis Wolf and Jonathan Hornok, the latter being chief of the criminal division for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington. The D.C. office is led by Jeanine Pirro, whose name is on both documents, too.
The deleted Trump reference relates more directly to the 2023 charges for which Taranto is set be sentenced. He was found guilty at a bench trial in May by U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols, a Trump appointee, of carrying two firearms without a license and unlawful possession of ammunition, and of violating a law against spreading false information and hoaxes.
The initial memo recalled that “on June 29, 2023, then-former President Donald Trump published on a social media platform the purported address of former President Barack Obama.” It further said that Taranto “re-posted the address on the same platform and thereafter started livestreaming from his van on his YouTube channel,” and that he “broadcast footage of himself as he drove through the Kalorama neighborhood in Washington, D.C., claiming he was searching for ‘tunnels’ he believed would provide him access to the private residences of certain high-profile individuals, including former President Obama.” Law enforcement swept Taranto’s van for hazardous materials and recovered two firearms and hundreds of rounds of ammunition.
The reference to Trump posting Obama’s address is also not in the new memo, nor is the reference to Taranto reposting the address. Scrubbing any Trump connection to criminality required sanitizing the full narrative of Taranto’s conduct. In the new version, he appears in Obama’s neighborhood from thin air.
Both the Jan. 6 and Trump references were statements of fact. Indeed, the now-suspended prosecutors didn’t call the people at the Capitol in 2021 “insurrectionists” but rather used the tamer term “rioters.” Yet even that milder account seems to have been too much for the administration to bear. The new memo doesn’t offer a different version of that day. It deleted that day. Maybe that is the administration’s version.








