Christopher Wray Stares Down Possible Federal Charges After FBI Admits 274 Plainclothes Agents on Jan. 6 – One Day After James Comey’s Indictment

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The Pattern of Deception

This pattern matches what USA Herald previously reported: federal, state, and local operatives were documented infiltrating Jan. 6 crowds across at least 20 confirmed incidents. While the DOJ sought convictions in what defense attorneys called a “Kangaroo Court” environment, prosecutors withheld or minimized disclosure of CHS infiltration until trials were already underway.

The steady drip of disclosures—8 Proud Boys informants, 40 CHS operatives, Oath Keepers infiltration, and now 274 plainclothes FBI agents—illustrates a systemic attempt to obscure the scale of government involvement.

The Indictment Question

Comey’s indictment broke the dam: former FBI leaders can no longer assume immunity when caught lying under oath. If prosecutors conclude Wray’s testimony was knowingly false, his case may follow the same trajectory.

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  • Statute in play: 18 U.S.C. §1621 (perjury).
  • Penalty: Up to five years imprisonment.
  • Parallel precedent: Comey’s Sept. 25, 2025 indictment for false statements to Congress.

With documented contradictions between Wray’s sworn denial and the FBI’s own admissions, the foundation for a perjury referral is already in place.