For your consideration ...
Since McCarthy is talking about having the 14000 hours of videos released, I wanted to give just a bit of perspective. The events on January 6th began with rallies starting about 9am. And by around 5pm, the Capitol was pretty much cleared. So, doing some simple estimating arithmetic exercise .... if the majority of sequestered 14000 hours of videos were taken between 9am and 5 pm, that would mean, that there were at least 1,750 cameras recording the events that day. One thousand seven hundred fifty video cameras! Each camera recording 8 hours each. All pointed to, and within, the Capitol complex area.
Now, if these cameras were recording at a minimum resolution of 1080p, at approximately 400GB/hr, that would mean there is, or about, 5.6 quadrillion bytes of video files, or 5.6e+15. If recorded at a higher resolution, then even more of an astronomical amount of storage requirements would be needed. At a minimum this equates to about 5,600 1 terabyte hard drives for storage.
So even if released, the time it would take to review those 14000 hours would take an extremely long time. Unless, say, 1,750 honorable people were hired to watch 8 hours of recording each? But that's not gonna happen. So how long would it take for these videos to be properly analyzed for any defense or finger pointing? I wonder.
Food for thought.