South Dakota Gov. Kristi Noem said she and her immediate family are at a "very high risk" of identity theft after the House Jan. 6 Committee shared their Social Security numbers to the public.
In the two years since rioters sacked the U.S. Capitol, the department charged with securing the building and protecting the lawmakers inside it has significantly shifted its approach.
TWO YEARS OF JAN. 6. It was obvious when the Capitol riot took place on Jan. 6, 2021, that its aftereffects would last for a long time. The prosecutions alone would be lengthy, and indeed, they are still underway and will be for the foreseeable future. Politically, from the beginning, one party, the Republicans, had an incentive to move on, while the other, the Democrats, had an incentive to dwell on Jan. 6 for as long as possible. And indeed, for the last two years, Republicans have sought to move on, while Democrats have sought to dwell on Jan. 6 for as long as possible.
In the final weeks of 2022, the Democrat-led U.S. House committee investigating the Jan. 6, attack on the Capitol disclosed thousands of pages of transcripts of interviews the panel’s members