WASHINGTON — FBI inspectors who evaluated the domestic terrorism program in the bureau’s Washington field office two years ago gave it a “failing grade,” meaning it was considered both ineffective and inefficient, two former FBI officials familiar with the matter tell NBC News.

The inspection — akin to an internal audit — found that mechanisms for collecting, analyzing and sharing threat intelligence were lacking — the same factors that appear to have played a role in the security failure that led to the U.S. Capitol being overrun by domestic extremists Jan. 6, the former officials said.

“It wasn’t being worked fully, in short,” said one of the former FBI officials, who was there at the time.

“They didn’t have (enough) intelligence analysts assigned, and the ones who had been assigned in the past weren’t doing intel work,” the former official said. “They had few sources or understanding of the threat in their area of responsibility.”

The second former official, who was directly involved, said the evaluation also criticized the Washington field office’s procedures for sharing intelligence with other police agencies, including the Capitol Police. Capitol Police said they had no intelligence from the FBI about possible threats prior to the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, in which a pro-Trump mob overwhelmed the agency’s officers and one officer died.

Jan. 13, 202102:48

Washington, D.C. is considered the top domestic terror target in the country, and the FBI’s Inspection Division sent a team to evaluate how the D.C. field office’s domestic terrorism programs were working. FBI inspection reports are generally not made public.

The inspectors examined the office files to determine the number and quality of the office’s human sources in domestic terrorism, and the intelligence papers the analysts were writing, the first former official said.

“They saw a big need for improvement,” said a third former FBI official briefed on the matter. “They were uncomfortable with the iconic target city not having the best mechanisms to collect on and counter the threat. They found problems with how they interact with the other agencies, specifically the Capitol Police.”

The FBI’s Washington Field Office did not respond to an NBC News request for comment.

The sources said the “failing grade” wasn’t necessarily due to incompetence or bad management – there was a larger context. Domestic terrorism was ranked as a low priority in the FBI compared to international terrorism, the former official said, which meant that it did not always attract the most aggressive agents.

The second former FBI official said that one complicating factor was the large number of threats made on social media and in other forms on a near-daily basis against federal government targets in Washington, D.C., and the difficulty in sorting out what is real from what is simply aspirational.

A poster distributed by the FBI seeks information on a suspected pipe bomber on Jan. 13, 2021, in Washington, D.C.Eric Baradat / AFP – Getty Images

Also unclear is what improvements have been made since the inspection. But investigating domestic terrorism has been a challenge across the bureau. A fourth source, a former FBI official who worked in a senior role on domestic terrorism, told NBC News of experiencing ongoing frustration, because agents felt hamstrung by FBI lawyers who worried that an investigation or intelligence collection bumped up against protected free speech.

NBC News reported Sunday that according to law enforcement sources briefed on the matter, the FBI and the NYPD shared some threat information with the Capitol Police in the days before the riot.

But NBC News also reported Tuesday that the FBI did not issue a comprehensive intelligence bulletin sharing everything its intelligence analysts had gathered about extremist postings on social media threatening violence. That didn’t happen because some FBI officials were concerned that issuing such a bulletin would run afoul of First Amendment protections for political speech — a view not everyone within the FBI agreed with, sources familiar with the matter said.

The acting assistant chief of the Capitol Police told Congress on Tuesday that he was not aware of any intelligence from the FBI in advance of Jan. 6.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

You May Also Like

‘The right verdict’: U.S. lawmakers praise Chauvin conviction in George Floyd death

WASHINGTON — Lawmakers in Congress widely praised the jury that rendered a…

Amplify Energy Shares Tumble After California Oil Spill

Oil washed up on Huntington Beach, Calif., on Sunday. Photo: Mario Tama/Getty…

Top-ranked Ash Barty stuns tennis world, retires at 25

Ash Barty did things on her own terms as she won three…

U.S. Marines who perished in Norway helicopter crash identified

Four U.S. Marines killed when a helicopter crashed in Norway last week…