When a law-enforcement agency quietly deletes empirical findings that contradict a sitting presidentâs public claims, it sets a precedent for politicized control of the factual record that weakens democratic accountability and our ability to defend our own rights. On the facts provided, the conduct is not clearly criminal: removing a public webpage and citing ârecent Executive Ordersâ does not, by itself, meet elements of federal obstruction or falsification statutes like 18 U.S.C. § 1519 absent evidence of intent to destroy records to impede an investigation or proceeding. The threat is institutional: using opaque âreviewâ rationales to curate government truth-telling invites weaponization of public information systems against inconvenient data, especially during a live national debate over domestic violent extremism.