America witnessed hundreds of people storm the Capitol Wednesday. Many of those who broke in and looted the building were captured in photographs and video. Some even live-streamed their crimes. Yet the Capitol police say they only arrested 14 people, most for unlawful entry. NPR cites another 70 arrests made by city police “on charges related to unrest from Wednesday through 7 a.m. Thursday… Most of those arrests were for violating curfew, with many also facing charges of unlawful entry.” But what about those bragging about what they did on social media, including people who vandalized and stole items from Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi’s office?

FBI Director Christopher Wray is addressing the lack of arrests today saying:

“Make no mistake: With our partners, we will hold accountable those who participated in yesterday’s siege of the Capitol.”

“Let me assure the American people the FBI has deployed our full investigative resources and is working closely with our federal, state, and local partners to aggressively pursue those involved in criminal activity during the events of January 6. Our agents and analysts have been hard at work through the night gathering evidence, sharing intelligence, and working with federal prosecutors to bring charges.”

On social media, there are hundreds of images like these.

The brazenness didn’t stop after the crimes. Some of the suspects are actually doing interviews.

Washington D.C. reporter Adam Longo interviewed a man named Steve Baker who said he was among those inside Nancy Pelosi’s office as it was ransacked. He says he approved of what happening and referred to items stolen from her office as “souvenirs.”

https://twitter.com/adamlongoTV/status/1347202865073442816

The FBI says “Members of the public can help by providing tips, information, and videos of illegal activity at fbi.gov/USCapitol. We are determined to find those responsible and ensure justice is served.”