REPORT: New FBI Lab Report and Witness Testimony Deepen Mystery in Unsolved Jan. 6 Pipe Bomb Case

Newly released evidence suggests explosive devices may have been planted later than originally claimed — or not meant to explode at all.

The long-unsolved case of the pipe bombs planted outside the Republican and Democratic National Committee headquarters on January 6, 2021 has taken a dramatic turn. Newly released FBI lab analysis and a key witness interview obtained by Just the News inject fresh doubt into the official narrative — including the timeline and intent of the devices.

FBI Director Kash Patel, who recently took over the bureau, turned over the documents to Congress, sparking renewed scrutiny of a case that remains unsolved four years later despite surveillance footage, public tips, and a substantial reward.

Key Findings Raise Questions About FBI’s Jan. 6 Narrative

Among the most significant revelations:

Both devices were built with the chemical building blocks of black powder and 60-minute kitchen timers.

However, the FBI lab report never used the word “viable” to describe either device — raising questions about whether they were intended to detonate at all.

A key witness who discovered the RNC bomb said the timer still had 20 minutes remaining when she found it — suggesting it may have been planted just shortly before its discovery, not 16 hours earlier as the FBI has long claimed.

The devices were labeled as “Improvised Explosive Devices” (IEDs) and had destructive potential if properly assembled, but neither detonated, and the lab report offers no clear explanation why.

“When properly assembled and initiated, an IED of this sort can cause property damage, bodily injury, or death,” the lab report states. But it avoids saying whether these bombs were truly ready to explode.

Contradictory Timelines: Was the RNC Bomb Planted Hours Later?

The FBI has consistently stated that the bombs were planted at approximately 8:16 PM on Jan. 5, based on timestamped security footage showing a suspect placing the RNC bomb.

But a Commerce Department employee, who discovered the RNC device while doing laundry around 12:40 PM on Jan. 6, told the FBI it was not there at noon, when she first passed by the area.

“I can confirm that the device must have been placed between 12:00–12:40 PM EST,” she said in her tip to the FBI.

She also reported that the timer was set to “20” when she discovered it — indicating that, if the timer were running, the bomb had only been ticking for 40 minutes — again contradicting the FBI’s 16-hour timeline.

The witness, identified as a worker inside a first responder communications program at the U.S. Commerce Department, told investigators she had no memory or recognition of the suspect widely shown in FBI footage.

Congressional investigators are now exploring several alternative theories:

The bombs were not meant to explode, but were planted as a diversion to redirect law enforcement resources away from the Capitol.

Someone reset the timers later — possibly even on Jan. 6 — to make the devices appear more threatening than they were.

The FBI’s initial timeline may be flawed or intentionally misleading.

“The single greatest action that facilitated the protesters’ ease of entry into the Capitol on January 6 was the placing of the pipe bombs,” said Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Ga.), chairman of the House Judiciary subcommittee investigating law enforcement’s Jan. 6 response.

“The FBI was zealous in pursuing those trespassing at the Capitol but quite lacking in their pursuit of whomever placed the pipe bombs.”

The newly released materials cast serious doubt on the official version of events surrounding the Jan. 6 pipe bombs. Whether these devices were real threats, failed weapons, or stage-managed distractions, one thing is now clear: the case is far from closed — and may point to broader failures inside the FBI during one of the most scrutinized moments in modern U.S. history.

Photo credit: Gage Skidmore via Flickr