Page:CTRL0000034600 - Transcribed Interview of Richard Peter Donoghue, (Oct. 1, 2021).pdf/149

149 And the calls—well, how did you communicate AG Rosen's desire to have these components called upon? Was that in an email or a phone call?

I called each of the five agency leads separately. I know them all. We all work well together. I said, this is what the AG wants. And they all said, fine, no problem. And they either told me on the spot what they would be sending or they got back to me in very short order and said, this is what we can send.

And the timeframe for this is—when do you think those calls were made?

I would say someplace after December 28th, so it's maybe the 28th, 29th, 30th, somewhere in there. It's in advance of December 6th, certainly. We had move people from around the country, we had to move their equipment. So you need a couple of days to move all these people and their equipment to D.C.

Mr. Andres. In advance to January 6th. You said December 6th.

Mr. Donoghue. Oh, I'm sorry. I misspoke and said December 6th.

Thank you.


 * BY :

Exhibits 32 and 33 is some of the intelligence received by the Washington Field Office. And I know you said you've reviewed this prior to today, but exhibit 32, for the record, is pages from Atlantic Council's Digital Forensic Research unit, which includes tweets and pictures about January 6th; as well as, exhibit 33 is an email to WFO about thedonald.win blog citing essentially potential violence, as well as a blog received from the Anti-Defamation League.

Now, all of this information was sent to WFO. Were you aware of any of this specific intelligence, that outside resources were being sent to the Bureau?

No. I never saw any of these until recently in preparation for these interviews.