Jan. 6 panel seeks accountability for Trump as ringleader of Capitol attack

The special committee investigating last year’s attack on the U.S. Capitol returned to the public square on Thursday after a long hiatus, unveiling damaging new evidence — including fresh testimony and never-before-seen video footage — linking former President Trump directly to the violence of Jan. 6, 2021. 

In its ninth, and likely last, exploratory hearing before the investigation dissolves, the committee released new details about Trump’s plans to claim victory regardless of the election outcome; his refusal to accept defeat in the face of overwhelming evidence; and his failed effort to join thousands of his supporters on the march to the Capitol to block his election defeat. 

The panel also took the extraordinary, 11th-hour step of voting to subpoena Trump, who has been defiant throughout the investigation by continuing to praise the rioters who stormed the Capitol and to push false claims of a “stolen” 2020 election — the same fabrication that led to the Jan. 6 rampage. 

The subpoena is unlikely to prompt Trump’s cooperation, given both his defiance and the short window remaining before the select committee dissolves at the end of the current Congress. But leaders of the panel said they had no choice but to seek his testimony, since the central conclusion of their investigation has been to accuse Trump of being the ringleader of an effort to disenfranchise tens-of-millions of voters by overturning the election results.  

“We are obligated to seek answers directly from the man who set this all in motion,” said Rep. Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), the vice chair of the committee. “And every American is entitled to those answers.”

To make its case, the committee leaned heavily on Trump administration officials and other allies of the former president who had appeared throughout the previous eight hearings, in June and July. Those figures presented a vivid picture of a president who had planned, even months before the election, to claim victory regardless of the results; ignored his aides and family members when they told him he’d lost; went on a public campaign to promote false claims that rampant fraud had cost him the White House; and sent an armed mob to the Capitol on Jan. 6 to block Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s victory.  

“There’s no scenario where that action is benign,” said Rep. Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.). 

The cast of characters was familiar to anyone who had followed the previous hearings, featuring Cassidy Hutchinson, a former West Wing aide; William Barr, Trump’s former attorney general; Bill Stepien, Trump’s former campaign manager; and Jason Miller, a former Trump spokesman. That trend was no accident.

“The most striking fact is that all this evidence comes almost entirely from Republicans,” Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said.

The damning portrait, coming less than a month before the midterm elections, adds fuel to the Democrats’ ominous warnings that Trump and his Republican allies — who continue to push false claims of rampant fraud — pose an ongoing threat to America’s democratic institutions. 

With the volatile economy top of mind for many Americans heading into November, however, it’s unclear if that message will sway voters in any significant manner. Some Democratic strategists are already warning that a focus on Jan. 6 will backfire, and Trump’s allies are doubling down on their defense of the former president, particularly after Thursday’s subpoena.

“The January 6th Committee is OUT OF CONTROL!” tweeted Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas), who had refused a request from the committee to testify in the investigation. “They want to DESTROY Trump and EVERY one of his supporters!”

Amid the political uproar, the committee has sought to allow the events of Jan. 6 to speak for themselves. And on Thursday, investigators presented a host of new evidence, testimony and video footage, much of it obtained since the panel’s last hearing on July 21. 

The new disclosures included significant new details from some 1 million electronic communications the panel received from the Secret Service in response to a subpoena. The vast trove of information — exceeding what the committee asked for — is still being reviewed by the panel but offers new details about agents’ fears that Trump would still push to go to the Capitol after being told by his security detail he could not join his supporters there and their concerns for Vice President Mike Pence. 

The panel showed intelligence reports, which corroborated earlier testimony from Hutchinson, showing that the Secret Service was well aware that Trump supporters gathered near the Ellipse prior to the attack on the Capitol were heavily armed, preventing them from entering the secure area where Trump was speaking. 

They also showed segments of an interview with an unnamed former White House employee who said there was “[water] cooler talk” of “how angry the president was when they were, you know, in the limo” and that he was “irate” on the drive back to the White House, but stopped short of repeating Hutchinson’s second-hand account that Trump “lunged” at his driver.

Other messages showed that even once Trump was back at the White House following his speech, he was insistent on joining the mob at the Capitol. A Secret Service memo noted he would be “holding” at the Capitol for two hours before heading to meet his supporters. It wasn’t until shortly before 2 p.m. that the agency shut down such plans.

Minutes later Trump would fire off a tweet criticizing Pence, alarming one agent who noted it was probably “not going to be good for Pence,” and another who expressed alarm that the tweet had gotten over 20,000 likes in just minutes.

The panel also aired new evidence of Trump’s plan to retain power even if he lost. That effort was laid out in a new draft memo floated days before the election by Tom Fitton, a conservative legal activist and informal Trump advisor. The memo, which the committee says it obtained from the National Archives, promoted the idea that Trump would claim victory immediately and refuse to honor votes counted after Election Day — an illegal and unprecedented scheme that would have invalidated hundreds of thousands of mail-in ballots around the country. 

Brad Parscale, President Trump’s former campaign manager, testified that Trump’s plans to claim victory prematurely stretched back much further, to July of 2020, the committee said.

“It was a premeditated plan by the president to declare victory no matter what the actual result was,” said Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.). 

The committee also offered new evidence showing that Trump admitted to staffers that he had lost the election, even as he was challenging his loss in court and fanning the flames with faulty claims of widespread fraud.

“Can you believe I lost to this effing guy?” Trump said to Alyssa Farah Griffin, the former White House director of strategic communications, she said in a clip played by the committee.

The Thursday hearing comes after the committee promised to delve into Trump’s “state of mind.” The panel has no powers to bring criminal charges — “Our role is not to make decisions regarding prosecution,” Cheney emphasized — but at times the committee seemed to be whispering to the Justice Department, with members on the panel repeatedly referencing Trump’s state of mind, motivation and intent.

Offering those details could be key for an eventual Justice Department prosecution of Trump, as some of the crimes they could charge him with require more than just demonstrating illegal activity occurred, forcing them to demonstrate that Trump acted with corrupt intent.

The Jan. 6 investigators think they’ve done that already. 

“Yes, the president knew the crowd was angry because he had stoked that anger. He knew that they believed that the election had been rigged and stolen because he had told them falsely that it had been rigged and stolen. And by the time he incited that angry mob to march on the Capitol, he knew they were armed and dangerous, all the better to stop the peaceful transfer of power,” Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said.

As the investigation winds down, panel members must decide if they’ll make criminal referrals to the Justice Department — a process they haven’t ruled out. 

“We have sufficient information to consider criminal referrals for multiple individuals and to recommend a range of legislative proposals to guard against another Jan. 6,” said Cheney, without offering details. 

Meantime, the focus has shifted to the extraordinary legal battle likely to unfold over Trump’s testimony. 

“The violence and lawlessness of January 6th was unjustifiable, but our nation cannot only punish the foot soldiers who stormed our Capitol,” Cheney said. “Those who planned to overturn our election and brought us to the point of violence must also be accountable.”

Source: TEST FEED1

Trump's GOP allies blast Jan. 6 panel's issuing of subpoena

GOP allies of former President Trump are slamming the unanimous Thursday vote by the House Jan. 6 Select Committee to subpoena Trump, deriding it as a political tactic ahead of the midterms.

Conference Chair Elise Stefanik (N.Y.), the third-ranking Republican in the House, brushed off the subpoena as a “political ploy.”

“Today’s subpoena of President Donald J. Trump less than one month from the midterm elections is a desperate political ploy by Democrats and their mainstream media stenographer allies,” Stefanik said in a statement after the hearing.

“The American people are smart and the Democrats’ abuse of power will only energize the American people to Fire Nancy Pelosi once and for all and deliver a red tsunami that will elect a historic Republican Majority to hold Joe Biden accountable.”

Republicans are favored to win back the House majority in November’s midterms, which would end the second Speakership for Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.).

Rep. Ronny Jackson (R-Texas), who was previously Trump’s White House doctor, tweeted that the committee is “OUT OF CONTROL.”

“Subpoenaing President Trump is a DISGRACE! They want to DESTROY Trump and EVERY one of his supporters!” Jackson said. 

Rep. Andy Biggs (R-Ariz.), a former chair of the House Freedom Caucus, tweeted that the Trump subpoena is a “political hatched job by a political hatchet committee.”

“This committee is illegitimately formed, in violation of House rules, and is organized to search and destroy perceived political enemies,” Biggs said.

Their statements aligned with Trump’s own lashing out to the subpoena. He said that the committee waited until “the final moments of their last meeting” to ask him to speak to them “because the Committee is a total ‘BUST’ that has only served to further divide our Country.”

The vote to subpoena Trump came during what might be the Jan. 6 panel’s final public hearing on Thursday, after months of wavering on the decision.

House Republicans overall were far less active in online chatter during Thursday’s hearing than during some previous hearings.

In one instance, the House GOP conference had to delete a tweet that publicly attacked Sarah Matthews, former deputy press secretary in the Trump White House, for testifying despite the fact that she was working as GOP staff in the House at the time.

But the House Judiciary GOP account, run by Republican staff under Ranking Member Jim Jordan (R-Ohio), did react to the subpoena news: “The country is experiencing record crime and record inflation. Sadly, Democrats can’t get over their weird OBSESSION of President Trump to do anything about it.”

Republicans have long argued that the committee has no legitimate authority because it has no members appointed by the Republican minority leader. Those arguments have been rejected in courts. Pelosi vetoed two of House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy’s (R-Calif.) picks for the panel, prompting him to pull his other three choices and boycott participation in the committee. 

Pelosi did appoint two Republicans, Reps. Liz Cheney (Wyo.) and Adam Kinzinger (Ill.), causing them to be formally censured by the Republican National Committee.

Source: TEST FEED1

Five takeaways from likely last Jan. 6 hearing

The House committee investigating the attack on the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, held what may be its final public hearing on Thursday, seeking to put a fine point on its argument that the violence that day was fueled by former President Trump’s words and actions.

The hearing featured no live witnesses, but did include a plethora of new evidence from recent depositions, video footage and material turned over by the Secret Service. It culminated in the committee voting to subpoena Trump, a move that the former president will assuredly resist.

Here are five takeaways.

Panel takes big step with subpoena

The committee took the remarkable step of issuing a subpoena for testimony from Trump, making the decision after months of wavering on whether to compel cooperation from the bombastic former president.

Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said the subpoena was a matter of getting a thorough accounting of the events around Jan. 6, but also a matter of ensuring Trump is held accountable for his conduct.

​​“He is the one person at the center of the story of what happened on January 6. So we want to hear from him. The committee needs to do everything in our power to tell the most complete story possible,” Thompson said, shortly before the panel cast a unanimous 9-0 vote in favor of issuing the subpoena.

“We also recognize that a subpoena to a former president is a serious and extraordinary action. That’s why we want to take this step in full view of the American people, especially because the subject matter at issue is so important to the American people and the stakes are so high for our future and our democracy.”

The move marks a major escalation in the effort to hold Trump to account for the violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — a riot the committee contends was orchestrated by the former president. 

The subpoena is not likely to yield fruit, however, at least not in the near term, as Trump has remained defiant throughout the 16-month investigation and is expected to challenge the subpoena in the courts.

Within an hour of the panel gaveling out, Trump shot back on social media.

“Why didn’t the Unselect Committee ask me to testify months ago? Why did they wait until the very end, the final moments of their last meeting? Because the Committee is a total “BUST” that has only served to further divide our Country which, by the way, is doing very badly – A laughing stock all over the World?” he wrote.

If he fails to comply, the committee and then the full House could vote to hold Trump in contempt of Congress, sending a criminal referral to the Justice Department. 

The motion to subpoena Trump was introduced by Vice Chairwoman Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who lost her recent reelection bid after becoming a critic of the former president and the GOP for their response to Jan. 6. 

New video shows drama from leadership hideout

While much of Thursday’s hearing served as a synthesis of the committee’s work in demonstrating Trump’s role before and during the attack on the Capitol, one of the most striking pieces of new evidence came in the form of video footage of congressional leaders huddling in secure locations after the mob had breached the complex.

The footage showed Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) on the phone with then-Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D), then-Vice President Mike Pence, former acting Defense Secretary Christopher Miller and former acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen as they tried to restore order and gather information.

“Oh my gosh,” Pelosi told Northam as she watched footage of the riot. “They’re just breaking windows, they’re doing all, all, kinds of, I mean it’s really, that somebody, they said somebody was shot.”

“It’s just, it’s just horrendous. And all at the instigation of the president of the United States,” she added.

In another clip, Pelosi is shown talking to House Majority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.) as someone informs her that members on the floor are putting on gas masks.

“Do you believe this?” she asks.

In a clip filmed at 3 p.m., Schumer tells Pelosi “I’m gonna call up the effing secretary of [Defense].”

The footage, which had not previously been made public, provided a glimpse at the frantic situation behind the scenes as lawmakers grappled with the violence on Jan. 6. 

The panel has repeatedly sought to emphasize comments from the likes of House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.), Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) and others who, in the immediate aftermath of the riot, said Trump bore some of the blame for the day’s events.

Trump’s plan to declare victory was months in the making

The committee presented new evidence to bolster its case that Trump’s plan to declare victory, regardless of ongoing vote counting in various states, was premeditated for months before Election Day 2020.

The committee displayed a memo sent from Tom Fitton, a conservative activist, to two White House officials dated Oct. 31, 2020. The document outlined what Trump should say on Election Day, when experts predicted Trump would take an early lead over now-President Biden before mail-in and absentee ballots were counted and some states began tilting toward the Democrat.

“We had an election today—and I won,” Fitton wrote in the memo.

“The ballots counted by the election day deadline show the American people have bestowed on me the great honor of reelection as president of the United States,” Fitton wrote.

Brad Parscale, a former top Trump campaign official, told the committee that Trump had planned as early as July 2020 that he would say he won the election, even if he lost. 

Parscale served as campaign manager until July 2020, when he was demoted and replaced by Bill Stepien.

Steve Bannon, another former Trump adviser, said in an Oct. 31 recording played Thursday that Trump would “just declare victory,” adding that if Biden was winning, Trump would do “some crazy shit.”

“This big lie, President Trump’s effort to convince Americans that he had won the 2020 election, began before the election results even came in,” Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) said. “It was intentional, it was premeditated, it was not based on election results or any evidence of actual fraud affecting the results or any actual problems with voting machines.”

Messages show Secret Service knew of risks of violence

The committee publicized freshly obtained communications from the Secret Service showing agents were aware of concerns about violence leading up to that day and knew some in the crowd were armed.

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said the committee obtained “nearly one million emails, recordings and other electronic records from the Secret Service.”

“The documents we obtained from the Secret Service make clear that the crowd outside the magnetometers was armed, and the agents knew it,” Schiff said.

Schiff read off several messages in chats among Secret Service agents and emails exchanged among the agency. He displayed one intelligence summary from late December 2020 that included online chatter about occupying federal buildings and “intimidating Congress and invading the Capitol building.”

A Dec. 26, 2020, email from the Secret Service showed the agency had a tip that the Proud Boys, a far-right group, planned to march on the Capitol and felt it had a large enough group to overwhelm law enforcement.

A Jan. 5 email from a deputy Secret Service chief instructed agents to add certain objects to a list of items that supporters could not bring into a rally on the Ellipse near the White House planned for Jan. 6, including ballistic vests, tactical vests and ballistic helmets.

Messages from agents displayed Thursday also showed they were aware of online chatter making threats against then-Vice President Mike Pence.

One message showed Secret Service agents reacting in real time after Trump tweeted criticism of his vice president, with one noting it was probably “not going to be good for Pence” and another expressing alarm that the tweet had gotten over 20,000 likes in just minutes.

The committee issued the Secret Service a subpoena in July after the panel and agency became involved in controversy, partially due to reports that some text messages sent by Secret Service agents on Jan. 6 had been missing.

Panel faces dwindling time to take action

The midterm elections are less than a month away, and with Republicans expected to regain the majority, the panel is likely to be disbanded. As a result, the pressure is on for the committee to make the most of the time it has left.

Committee members signaled during Thursday’s hearing that they still have some remaining business to pursue during the remainder of this congressional session.

Cheney said the committee “may ultimately decide to make a series of criminal referrals to the Department of Justice,” though she noted decisions about prosecution rest with them. She also said the committee may make a “range of legislative proposals to guard against another Jan. 6.”

Rep. Pete Aguilar (D-Calif.) said Thursday the committee is reviewing testimony for the possibility of obstruction involving the Secret Service, including the potential that some in the agency were advised not to tell the panel about Trump’s alleged outburst in the presidential SUV after being told he would not be taken to the Capitol on Jan. 6. 

“After concluding its review of the voluminous additional Secret Service communications from Jan. 5 and Jan. 6, the committee will be recalling witnesses and conducting further investigative depositions based on that material. Following that activity, we will provide ever greater detail in our final report,” Aguilar said.

Much of the attention will likely shift in the coming weeks to the Department of Justice and how they handle any recommendations from the panel. The department is already conducting its own investigation into the events of Jan. 6.

Thursday’s hearing also likely marked something of a swan song for multiple members. Cheney lost a primary to a Trump-backed challenger but has not ruled out a 2024 presidential bid. Reps. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.) and Stephanie Murphy (D-Fla.) are retiring from Congress in January, and members like Rep. Elaine Luria (D-Va.) are facing tough reelection bids.

Mychael Schnell contributed

Source: TEST FEED1

Trump lashes out at Jan. 6 committee vote to subpoena him

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Former President Trump on Thursday dismissed a House committee’s vote to subpoena him for testimony about the events of Jan. 6, 2021, as a publicity stunt.

“Why didn’t the Unselect Committee ask me to testify months ago?” Trump posted on Truth Social shortly after the House panel investigating the Capitol riots on Jan. 6 voted to subpoena him.

“Why did they wait until the very end, the final moments of their last meeting? Because the Committee is a total ‘BUST’ that has only served to further divide our Country which, by the way, is doing very badly – A laughing stock all over the World?” Trump continued.

The nine-member panel on Thursday voted unanimously at the conclusion of its hearing to subpoena Trump for his testimony about the events leading up to, and on the day of Jan. 6, 2021, when pro-Trump rioters stormed the Capitol to try and halt the certification of the 2020 election results.

“He is the one person at the center of the story of what happened on Jan. 6. So we want to hear from him. The committee needs to do everything in our power to tell the most complete story possible and provide recommendations to help ensure that nothing like Jan. 6 ever happens again. We need to be fair and thorough in getting the full context for the evidence we’ve obtained,” Chairman Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.) said before the vote.

Thompson said the subpoena was also a matter of holding Trump accountable for his attempts to overturn the election result, which resulted in the violence of Jan. 6.

The subpoena is not likely to result in testimony from Trump, however. The former president has repeatedly derided the investigation as a partisan witch hunt, and is expected to challenge the subpoena in the courts, a process that is certain to extend beyond the life of the special committee, which is set to end later this year. 

“Today, 26 days before the Midterm Elections, America is truly a nation in decline. Inflation is out of control, the crime rate is at an all time high, and the crisis at our southern border has never been worse,” Taylor Budowich, a Trump spokesperson tweeted.

“However, instead of using their final days in power to make life for Americans any better, Democrats are doubling and tripling down on their partisan theatrics. Democrats have no solutions and they have no interest in leading our great nation,” he continued. “They are simply bitter, power hungry & desperate. Pres Trump will not be intimidate by their meritless rhetoric or un-American actions. Trump-endorsed candidates will sweep the Midterms, and America First leadership & solutions will be restored. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!”

Source: TEST FEED1

Dramatic video shows Pelosi, Schumer making urgent calls on Jan. 6

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Never-before-seen footage presented at Thursday’s Jan. 6 select committee hearing showed Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) and then-Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) making urgent calls from secure locations during the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

“We have got to get… finish the proceedings or else they will have a complete victory,” Pelosi told someone on the phone at 2:23 p.m. while walking through the Capitol, with an alarm audible in the background.

In a separate clip from a secure undisclosed location the afternoon of Jan. 6, Pelosi tells a room full of a few people, including then-House Minority Whip James Clyburn (D-S.C.), “there has to be some way we can maintain the sense that people have, that there’s some security, or some confidence, that government can function and that you can elect the president of the United States.”

When an unidentified person tells Pelosi that all individuals on the floor are putting on tear gas masks “to prepare for a breach,” the speaker turned to Clyburn and others in the room and asked “do you believe this?”

The committee also showed video taken around the same time of members walking through the Capitol, rioters running through the building and a group of people inside screaming “bring her out here.”

In a clip filmed at 3 p.m., Schumer tells Pelosi “I’m gonna call up the effing secretary of [defense].”

“We have some senators who are still in their hideaways,” Schumer tells acting Secretary of Defense Christopher Miller on the phone in a separate video, with Pelosi and House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-Md.) beside him. “They need massive personnel now. Can you get the Maryland National Guard to come too?”

“I have something to say, Mr. Secretary,” Pelosi said into the phone. “I’m gonna call the mayor of Washington, D.C. right now and see what other outreach she has, other police departments as Steny, Leader Hoyer, has mentioned.”

The panel then showed clips of Pelosi making calls to local leaders asking for help amid the riot.

“Hi governor, this is Nancy,” Pelosi said on the phone to Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam (D). “Governor, I don’t know if you have been approached about the Virginia National Guard, Mr. Hoyer was speaking to [Maryland] Governor [Larry] Hogan [(R)], but I still think you probably need the okay of the federal government in order to come into another jurisdiction.”

In the same clip, Pelosi is seen watching live video of the riot on CNN.

“Oh my gosh,” she said to Northam. “They’re just breaking windows, they’re doing all, all, kinds of, I mean it’s really, that somebody, they said somebody was shot.”

“It’s just, it’s just horrendous. And all at the instigation of the president of the United States,” she added.

The panel also showed video of Pelosi and Schumer speaking with Acting Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen from the secure location at 3:25 p.m.

“They’re breaking windows and going in, obviously ransacking our offices and all the rest of that. That’s nothing. The concern we have about personal harm,” Pelosi said.

“Safety,” Schumer chimed in.

“Personal safety is, it just transcends everything,” Pelosi said. “But the fact is on any given day, they’re breaking the law in many different ways, and quite frankly, much of it at the instigation of the president of the United States. And now, if he could at least, somebody.”

“Yeah, why don’t you get the president to tell them to leave the Capitol, Mr. Attorney General, in your law enforcement responsibility? A public statement, they should all leave,” Schumer said.

In a subsequent video, Pelosi and Schumer are seen huddling with Republican leaders including Mitch McConnell (Ky.), Steve Scalise (La.) and John Thune (S.D.).

“This cannot be just we’re waiting for so-and-so, we need them there now, whoever you’ve got,” Schumer said.

Source: TEST FEED1

Jan. 6 Committee votes unanimously to subpoena Trump

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The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol took the remarkable step Thursday of voting to subpoena former President Trump during what could be its final public hearing.

The televised vote comes after the panel wavered for months on whether it would subpoena the bombastic former president, who has frequently criticized the investigation as a partisan witch hunt designed to hurt him politically.

“He is the one person at the center of the story of what happened on Jan. 6. So we want to hear from him. The committee needs to do everything in our power to tell the most complete story possible and provide recommendations to help ensure that nothing like Jan. 6 ever happens again. We need to be fair and thorough in getting the full context for the evidence we’ve obtained,” Chair Bennie Thomspon (D-Miss.) said shortly before the panel cast a unanimous 9-0 vote in favor of issuing the subpoena.

“We also recognize that a subpoena to a former president is a serious and extraordinary action. That’s why we want to take this in full view of the American people.”

The move marks a major escalation in the effort to hold Trump accountable for the violence at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 — a riot the committee contends was orchestrated by the former president. 

The subpoena is not likely to yield fruit, however, as Trump has remained defiant throughout the 16-month investigation. The former president is expected to challenge the subpoena in the courts, a process that is certain to extend beyond the life of the special committee, which is set to end later this year. 

The motion to subpoena Trump was introduced by Vice Chair Liz Cheney (R-Wyo.), who lost her bid for reelection after becoming a foil to the former president and a regular debunker to his frequent claims of election fraud.

Cheney, vice chair of the committee, said that while investigators have “sufficient information” to weigh criminal referrals and make election reform recommendations to Congress, “a key task remains.” 

“We must seek the testimony, under oath, of Jan. 6’s central player,” she said.

Cheney then highlighted the figures in Trump’s inner circle who have appeared before the committee but revealed no information about their direct dealings with Trump, choosing instead to plead their Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.

That list includes Roger Stone, a Trump confidant; Michael Flynn, his former national security adviser; and John Eastman, a conservative lawyer who had drafted the dubious legal rationale on which the “stop the steal” movement rested. 

Cheney noted that the Justice Department is still investigating the roles all those figures played in Jan. 6. Meantime, she said, “we are obligated to seek answers directly from the man who sent this all in motion.” 

“And every American is entitled to those answers.”  

As recently as a few weeks ago, some members of the committee had acknowledged that a subpoena — for either Trump or his former Vice President Mike Pence — was likely futile. 

“If we were trying to get into a subpoena fight with either the former vice president or the former president, that litigation could not be concluded during the life of this Congress. And I think the former president has made clear that he has no intention of coming in,” Rep. Zoe Lofgren (D-Calif.) told CNN late last month. “So while we’d like to hear from both of them, I’m not expecting that we necessarily will.” 

But by issuing a subpoena, the committee likely lobs a new legal matter at Trump. If Trump declined to comply with the compulsory order to testify, the committee and then the House could vote on whether to send a contempt of Congress referral to the Justice Department.

The panel and the House have four times voted to hold in contempt of congress those who have refused to comply with its subpoena. But the Justice Department has only acted on two of those, bringing charges against one-time White House strategist Steve Bannon and White House advisor Peter Navarro. Bannon faces sentencing next week.

The panel spent months deliberating about whether to subpoena Pence, but those initial discussions appear to have petered out.

“The vice president said publicly that he thought he might want to come in. And so we were very encouraged by that. But since that time, his people have walked it back,” Lofgren said in the prior interview.

“The need for this committee to hear from Donald Trump goes beyond fact-finding,” Thompson said.

“This is a question about accountability to the American people. He must be accountable.”

This story was updated at 3:55 p.m.

Source: TEST FEED1

Supreme Court rejects Trump plea for intervention on special master

The Supreme Court on Thursday denied former President Trump’s plea to intervene in his legal battle and allow the special master to review the classified documents seized at Mar-a-Lago.

The court’s move came in a brief unsigned order without explanation. Justice Clarence Thomas, who handles emergency matters arising from Florida, had referred the matter to the full court.

Trump’s request to the high court followed an interim ruling by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit in favor of the Justice Department that exempted roughly 100 classified records from review by a neutral party, known as a special master, from the voluminous records seized from Trump’s Florida home.

DEVELOPING

Source: TEST FEED1

Secret service messages show they knew crowd outside Jan. 6 rally was armed

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The House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the Capitol on Thursday publicized freshly obtained communications from the Secret Service showing agents were aware of concerns about violence leading up to that day and that agents knew some in the crowd were armed.

Rep. Adam Schiff (D-Calif.) said the committee obtained “nearly 1 million emails, recordings and other electronic records from the Secret Service.”

“The documents we obtained from the Secret Service make clear that the crowd outside the magnetometers was armed, and the agents knew it,” Schiff said.

Schiff read off several messages in chats among Secret Service agents and emails exchanged among members. He displayed one intelligence summary from late December 2020 that included online chatter about occupying federal buildings and “intimidating Congress and invading the Capitol building.”

A Secret Service email dated Dec. 26 showed the agency had a tip that the Proud Boys, a far-right group, planned to march on the Capitol and felt they had a large enough group to overwhelm law enforcement.

“Secret Service had advanced information more than 10 days beforehand regarding the Proud Boys planning for Jan. 6,” Schiff said. “We know now of course that the Proud Boys and others did lead the assault on our Capitol building.

A Jan. 5, 2021, email from a deputy Secret Service chief instructed agents to add certain objects to a list of items that supporters could not bring into a rally on the Ellipse near the White House planned for Jan. 6, including ballistic vests, tactical vests and ballistic helmets.

“Calm before the storm I assume,” one agent wrote in a group chat the morning of Jan. 6, 2021.

Schiff said the panel in August started reviewing “hundreds of thousands of pages and multiple hours of that material.” He said the materials provided “substantial new evidence about what happened on Jan. 6 and the days leading up to do.”

“That review continues,” he added.

The committee issued the Secret Service a subpoena in July after the panel and agency became involved in controversy. News broke that some text messages sent by Secret Service on agents Jan. 6 had been deleted.

Source: TEST FEED1

Cassidy Hutchinson: Trump told Meadows 'this is embarrassing,' 'I don't want people to know that we lost'

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Former President Trump told his then-chief of staff “this is embarrassing,” and “I don’t want people to know that we lost,” after the Supreme Court ruled against him on a key case about the 2020 election, former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson told the House select committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

The Hutchinson’s testimony was revealed Thursday in what might be the Jan. 6 committee’s final public hearing.

The lawsuit considered by the Supreme Court in December 2020 was filed in Texas and challenged the presidential election results in Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin. Rep. Adam Kinzinger (R-Ill.), a member of the Jan. 6 panel, said Trump regarded the legal action as “his last chance at success in the courts.” 

On Dec. 11, 2020, the Supreme Court said it would not take up the case.

Hutchinson was present for a conversation between Trump and then-White House chief of staff Mark Meadows the day the Supreme Court rejected the lawsuit, she told the panel in testimony presented Thursday.

“The president was fired up about the Supreme Court decision,” Hutchinson said during a previous deposition conducted behind closed doors.

“The president, just raging about the decision and how it’s wrong, and why didn’t we make more calls, and just, his typical anger outburst at this decision,” she added.

Hutchinson said she and Meadows crossed paths with Trump in the White House when the pair was leaving a Christmas party in the residence.

“He had said something to the effect of, ‘I don’t want people to know we lost, Mark, this is embarrassing, figure it out, we need to figure it out, I don’t want people to know that we lost,’” Hutchinson said.

The panel also presented an email sent from a Secret Service agent the day the Supreme Court rejected the lawsuit.

“Just FYI. POTUS is pissed — breaking news — Supreme Court denied his law suit. He is livid now…,” the email reads.

Source: TEST FEED1

Live Coverage: January 6 committee takes aim at Trump

The House committee investigating last year’s attack on the Capitol assembles Thursday for what could be its final public hearing ahead of the midterms, promising to delve into former President Trump’s state of mind in a presentation designed to tie up a host of loose ends before the panel dissolves at the end of the year.

The hearing is scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. ET. Watch live in the video above and follow our live coverage below.

Source: TEST FEED1