Exactly six months ago today, a violent mob stormed the U.S. Capitol after attending a rally in which then president Donald Trump proclaimed, “We fight like hell. And if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.”

Despite hundreds of arrests already made, the FBI is still looking for a number of people who took part in the violence that day in which four people died – not including law enforcement officers who succumbed to injury or suicide in subsequent days. One hundred and fifty police officers were hurt in the chaos. As many as 200 are believed to have contracted coronavirus as a result of their exposure that day.

The Bureau just released a number of videos contain disturbing images of the incredible danger the police officers found themselves in on January 6 as the mob descended on the Capitol building. The video clips – which have not been made public before today – feature suspects investigators are trying to track down and bring to justice.

Ultimately, the mob was unable to achieve its goal and stop the inevitable: the 2020 results were certified by Congress – a little later than expected – and Trump was forced to push his conspiracy theories without the president’s bully pulpit.

In the months since, the Capitol Police, under new leadership, has tried to identify its failings. Reports have been written, recommendations adopted.

The Department of Justice has described its post-attack activities as “likely the most complex investigation ever prosecuted” in its 150-year history. The DOJ has arrested over 500 people from over 40 states in connection with the riot. Twelve have pleaded guilty and at least one woman, Anna Morgan-Lloyd, has been sentenced to probation.

In recent days, law enforcement has handed down a slew of indictments against rioters who targeted the press.

The 500-plus defendants face charges ranging from assaulting federal law enforcement officers to obstruction of an official proceeding. The most common charge is entering or remaining in a restricted building or grounds. Several members of militia groups have been charged with conspiracy. They face the prospect of years in jail. The DOJ has reportedly considered sedition charges, although the agency’s lack of transparency has been the source of frustration.

According to CBS News, at least 55 of those arrested served in the military; a dozen were current or former police officers at the time of the attack.

The Associated Press reports that the FBI is still working to identify three hundred individuals that were captured on Capitol surveillance footage on the day of the riot. Among those at large is an individual who planted pipe bombs in front of the Democratic National Committee and the Republican National Committee.

They will find them,” Robert Anderson Jr., former executive assistant director of the FBI’s Criminal, Cyber, Response, and Services Branch told the AP. “I don’t care how long it takes. If they are looking for them, they will find them.”

But it’s unclear if the most politically explosive aspect of a true January 6th reckoning is underway. Will Trump and his Big Lie supporters within the GOP be held responsible? The Republican Party has blocked a bipartisan congressional inquiry and it has banished Trump critics from leadership positions. Now the Democrats are forced to pursue a partisan probe.

In fact, far from examining the role they played in the upheaval, Republicans are instead whitewashing history. Rep. Andrew Clyde (R-GA) compared the rioters to tourists. On right-wing media, commentators suggest that the riot is being overly dramatized. Some even say it was a false flag operation led by Antifa. Trump has tried to shift the focus to his favorite strawmen: BLM protesters.

So as the men and women who stormed the Capitol are winding up in police custody, on their way to jail, their enablers are still in power.

“The guardrails I thought were in place around many of our democratic institutions really depend on the two parties agreeing to those ground rules and … one of them right now doesn’t seem as committed to them as in previous generations. That worries me,” former President Barack Obama said last week. He added, “And I think we should all be worried.”