Accountability Tracker

The Public Record of Who Did What

Every official who betrayed their oath. Every member of Congress who has the power to stop it and won't. Named. Documented. On the record.

How This Works

We track officials across all branches:

Executive Branch — Cabinet secretaries, DOJ leadership, agency heads, federal agents who abused power

Congress — Members with oversight authority who refuse to use it

Courts — Judges whose rulings enabled abuse (and those who pushed back)

Each entry includes:

  • What they did (specific, dated, documented)

  • The evidence (sources, video, official records)

  • Who can hold them accountable

  • What's been done (usually nothing)

This isn't opinion. It's evidence.

Executive Branch

Named. Documented. On the Record.

Todd Blanche

Deputy Attorney General

What he did:

Ordered the FBI to stop the civil rights investigation into ICE agent Jonathan Ross's killing of Renée Good. Directed agents to instead investigate Good, the dead woman, for assault on an officer.

Evidence:

  • Reporting by NBC News, CBS News, MS NOW (January 23, 2026)

  • Twelve federal prosecutors resigned over DOJ handling

  • FBI Supervisor Tracee Mergen resigned rather than comply

  • Federal magistrate judge refused the warrant

Who can hold him accountable:

Jim Jordan, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, has subpoena authority over the Deputy Attorney General.

What's been done:

Nothing. Zero subpoenas issued. Zero hearings scheduled.

Harmeet Dhillon

Assistant Attorney General, Civil Rights Division

What she did:

Approved the decision not to conduct a civil rights investigation into the killing of Renée Good. The person running the division that exists to investigate civil rights violations decided her division wouldn't investigate.

Evidence:

  • Reporting by NBC News, Al Jazeera (January 19-23, 2026)

  • Six senior Civil Rights Division leaders resigned or accelerated retirement to protest

Who can hold her accountable:

Jim Jordan, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee

What's been done:

Nothing.

Kristi Noem

Secretary of Homeland Security

What she did:

  • Claimed Renée Good "weaponized her vehicle." Video contradicts this.

  • Oversaw deadliest year in ICE detention in two decades (32 deaths in 2025, 4 more in early 2026)

  • Blocked state investigators from accessing evidence

  • Obstructed congressional oversight of ICE facilities

Evidence:

  • Video analyzed by CNN, MPR, Washington Post

  • Mayor Frey: "Having seen the video myself, I want to tell everybody directly that is bullshit"

  • Articles of impeachment filed January 14, 2026 (70+ signatures)

Who can hold her accountable:

  • Mark Green, Chairman of House Homeland Security Committee (subpoena power)

  • Full House (impeachment)

What's been done:

Impeachment articles buried. Zero subpoenas from Chairman Green.

Jonathan Ross

ICE Agent, Enforcement and Removal Operations

What he did:

Shot Renée Good three times (arm, chest, head) on January 7, 2026. Video shows Good's car turning away from Ross when he fired.

Evidence:

  • Video from Ross's phone and bystanders

  • Independent autopsy confirming three gunshot wounds

  • Good left bleeding for almost three minutes; agents turned away a physician

Status:

Still employed. Never charged. DOJ declined to investigate.

Who can hold him accountable:

  • Mark Green (subpoena power)

  • DOJ (declined)

  • Minnesota AG Keith Ellison (pursuing state options)

What's been done:

Congress: Nothing. DOJ: Investigated the victim instead.

Congress

The Power They Have and Won't Use

Jim Jordan

Chairman, House Judiciary Committee (R-OH)

Powers he has:

  • Subpoena authority over DOJ officials

  • Oversight jurisdiction over DOJ, FBI, federal law enforcement

  • Authority to compel testimony under oath

  • Contempt authority

What he's done:

  • Zero subpoenas on DOJ's handling of the Good case

  • Has not called Blanche or Dhillon to testify

  • Has not called resigned prosecutors or FBI Supervisor Mergen

  • January 22, 2026: Held hearing to attack Jack Smith instead of investigating current abuses

The contrast:

Issued subpoenas constantly when Biden was president. Has issued zero over this.

Oath status:

Swore to "support and defend the Constitution." Has the power. Refuses to use it.

Mark Green

Chairman, House Homeland Security Committee (R-TN)

Powers he has:

  • Subpoena authority over DHS officials

  • Oversight jurisdiction over DHS, ICE, CBP

  • Can compel testimony from Secretary Noem and ICE leadership

What he's done:

  • Zero subpoenas on the Good killing

  • Has not called Noem to testify about false statements

  • Has not called Jonathan Ross

  • Has not held hearings on 27 shootings since January 2025

Oath status:

Swore to "support and defend the Constitution." Has subpoena power. Won't use it.

Courts

The Record

Federal Magistrate Judges, District of Minnesota

What they did:

Rejected DOJ's warrant to investigate Renée Good (the dead victim) for assault. Also rejected multiple arrest warrants against protesters for lack of probable cause.

Why it matters:

Probable cause is a low bar. Federal judges are finding DOJ can't clear it. Some parts of the judiciary still function.

Who Honored Their Oaths

Tracee Mergen

Former FBI Supervisor, Minneapolis Field Office

What she did:

Resigned rather than reclassify the investigation from civil rights probe to investigating the dead victim.

What sources said:

  • CBS News: Left "due to the pressure on her to reclassify/discontinue the Good investigation"

  • FBI source: "Would not bow to pressure"

Twelve Federal Prosecutors

What they did:

Resigned over DOJ's handling of the Good case. Included former acting U.S. Attorney Joseph H. Thompson and Civil Rights Division members.

Date: January 13, 2026

Why it matters:

The people whose job is to investigate civil rights violations walked out rather than participate.

Six Civil Rights Division Senior Leaders

What they did:

Accelerated plans to resign or retire to protest the decision not to investigate the Good shooting.

Why it matters:

Career officials. Decades of service. They saw what was happening and refused to be part of it.

The Record Is Clear

Everyone documented here took an oath to support and defend the Constitution.

Some honored it. They refused, resigned, pushed back.

Most didn't. They have the power to act and choose not to. Or they actively participated in abuses.

The 2026 midterms are 10 months away. Every member of Congress on this list will face voters. This record will follow them.

Updates

This tracker is updated as events develop. New entries are added when:

  • Officials take documented actions that violate their oath

  • Congress members with oversight authority refuse to act

  • Courts issue rulings enabling or checking abuse

  • Officials resign or are removed

Last updated: January 25, 2026

Sources

All entries are based on:

  • Official government records and transcripts

  • Court filings and rulings

  • Verified reporting from Reuters, AP, and major news organizations

  • Video evidence

  • Congressional voting records

No Wikipedia. No speculation. No anonymous accusations.

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