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Takeaways from Monday's Jan. 6 committee meeting

Takeaways from Monday's Jan. 6 committee meeting
Thank you. Mr. Chairman. And I wanna thank you for your extraordinary leadership of this committee generations to come, will praise you and the Vice chair for your unswerving devotion to the rule of law. Several months ago you tasked several of our members in the subcommittee with bringing recommendations to the full Committee about potential referrals to the Department of Justice and other authorities based on evidence of criminal and civil offenses that has come to our attention over the course of our investigation. We are now prepared to share those recommendations today. Mr Chairman, let me begin with some relevant background considerations to our criminal referrals. The dangerous assault on american constitutional democracy that took place on january 6th 2021 consists of hundreds of individual criminal offenses. Most such crimes are already being prosecuted by the Department of Justice. We proposed to the committee advancing referrals where the gravity of the specific offense, the severity of its actual harm and the centrality of the offender to the overall design of the unlawful scheme. To overthrow the election, compel us to speak. Ours is not *** system of justice where foot soldiers go to jail and the masterminds and ringleaders get *** free pass. Mr. Chairman, as you know, our committee had the opportunity last spring to present much of our evidence to *** federal judge, something that distinguishes our investigation from any other congressional investigation. I can recall in the context of resolving evidentiary privilege, issues related to the crime, fraud doctrine in the Eastman case. U. S. District Court Judge David carter examined just *** small subset of our evidence to determine whether it showed the likely commission of *** federal offense. The judge concluded that both former President Donald trump and john Eastman likely violated two federal criminal statutes. This is the starting point for our analysis today. The first criminal statute we invoke for referral, therefore, is title 18 section 15 12 C, which makes it unlawful for anyone to corruptly obstruct influence or impede any official proceeding of the United States government. We believe that the evidence described by my colleagues today and assembled throughout our hearings, warrants *** criminal referral of former President Donald J trump john Eastman and others for violations of this statute. The whole purpose and obvious effect of trump's scheme were to obstruct influence and impede this official proceeding. The central moment for the lawful transfer of power in the United States. Second, we believe that there is more than sufficient evidence to refer former President Donald J. Trump john Eastman and others for violating Title 18 section 3 71. This statute makes it *** crime to conspire to defraud the United States, in other words to make an agreement to impair obstruct or defeat the lawful functions of the United States government by deceitful or dishonest means former president trump did not engage in *** plan to defraud the United States acting alone. He entered into agreements, formal and informal with several other individuals who assisted him with his criminal objectives. Our report describes in detail the actions of numerous co conspirators who agreed with and participated in trump's plan to impair obstruct and defeat the certification of President biden's electoral victory. That said, the subcommittee does not attempt to determine all of the potential participants in this conspiracy. As our understanding of the role of many individuals may be incomplete even today because they refuse to answer our questions. We trust that the Department of Justice will be able to form *** far more complete picture through its own investigation. Third, we make *** referral based on title 18, Section 1001, which makes it unlawful to knowingly and willfully make materially false statements to the federal government. The evidence clearly suggests that president trump conspired with others to submit slates of fake electors to Congress and the Nationals Archives. We believe that this evidence we set forth in our report is more than sufficient for *** criminal referral of former President Donald J. Trump and others in connection with this offense as before. We don't try to determine all of the participants in this conspiracy, many of whom refused to answer our questions while under we trust that the Department of Justice will be able to form *** more complete picture through its own investigation. The fourth and final statute we invoke for referral is title 18 section 23 83. The statute applies to anyone who incites, assists or engages an insurrection against the United States of America and anyone who gives aid or comfort to an insurrection. An insurrection is *** rebellion against the authority of the United States. It is *** grave federal offense anchored in the constitution itself, which repeatedly opposes insurrections and domestic violence and indeed uses participation in insurrection by officeholders as automatic grounds for disqualification from ever holding public office again. At the federal or state level, anyone who incites others to engage in rebelling, assist them in doing so or gives aid and comfort to those engaged in insurrection is guilty of *** federal crime. The committee believes that more than sufficient evidence exists for *** criminal referral of former president trump for assisting or aiding and comforting those at the capitol who engaged in *** violent attack on the United States. The committee has developed significant evidence that President trump intended to disrupt the peaceful transfer transition of power Under our constitution. The president has an affirmative and primary constitutional duty to act to take care that the laws be faithfully executed. Nothing could be *** greater betrayal of this duty than to assist an insurrection against the constitutional order. The complete factual basis for this referral is set forth in detail throughout our report. These are not the only statutes that are potentially relevant to President Trump's conduct related to the 2020 election, depending on evidence developed by the Department of Justice. The president's actions could certainly trigger other criminal violations nor our president Trump and his immediate team. The only people identified for referrals in our report. As part of our investigation, We asked multiple members of Congress to speak with us about issues critical to our understanding of this attack on the 2020 election and our system of constitutional democracy. None agreed to provide that essential information. As *** result, we took the significant step of issuing them subpoenas based on the volume of information particular members possessed about one or more parts of President Trump's plans to overturn the election.
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Takeaways from Monday's Jan. 6 committee meeting
The Jan. 6 committee used its final public meeting Monday to summarize its 17-month investigation with a simple closing statement: All roads lead to Donald Trump.Members focused on how the former president's direct involvement in efforts to overturn the 2020 election makes him responsible for the violence that unfolded at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, and unfit to hold future office.The committee laid out the case for both the public and the Justice Department that there's evidence to pursue criminal charges against Trump on multiple criminal statutes, including obstructing an official proceeding, defrauding the United States, making false statements and assisting or aiding an insurrection.The committee released an executive summary of its report on Monday, and it plans to release the full report on Wednesday, as well as transcripts of committee interviews.Here are takeaways from the committee's final public meeting:Committee refers Trump to DOJFor months, the committee went back and forth over whether it would refer Trump to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution.On Monday, the committee didn't equivocate.The committee referred Trump to DOJ on at least four criminal charges, while saying in its executive summary it had evidence of possible charges of conspiring to injure or impede an officer and seditious conspiracy.In practice, the referral is effectively a symbolic measure. It does not require the Justice Department to act, and regardless, Attorney General Merrick Garland has already appointed a special counsel, Jack Smith, to take on two investigations related to Trump, including the Jan. 6 investigation.But the formal criminal referrals and the unveiling of its report this week underscore how much the Jan. 6 committee dug up and revealed Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election in the lead-up to Jan. 6. Now the ball is in the Justice Department's court.Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, said that he has "every confidence that the work of this committee will help provide a road map to justice, and that the agencies and institutions responsible for ensuring justice under the law will use the information we've provided to aid in their work."All roads lead to TrumpCommittee members repeatedly pointed to Trump's personal involvement in nearly every part of the broader plot to overturn the 2020 election and focused squarely on his role in the violence that unfolded on Jan. 6.Monday's presentation was a compelling closing salvo for the committee, which said Trump sought to break "the foundation of American democracy.""Donald Trump broke that faith. He lost the 2020 election and knew it. But he chose to try to stay in office through a multi-part scheme to overturn the results and block the transfer of power," Thompson said. "In the end, he summoned a mob to Washington, and knowing they were armed and angry, pointed them at the Capitol and told them to 'fight like hell.' There's no doubt about this."Specifically, the panel said Trump "oversaw" the legally dubious effort to put forward fake slates of electors in seven states he lost, arguing that the evidence shows he actively worked to "transmit false Electoral College ballots to Congress and the National Archives" despite concerns among his lawyers that doing so could be unlawful.Members stressed that Trump knew the election was not stolen but continued to push baseless claims about widespread voter fraud in an effort to upend Joe Biden's legitimate victory.Once more, committee uses video to illustrate its case against TrumpThe committee relied once again on video 바카라 게임 웹사이트 an effective and memorable tool the panel has used throughout its hearings with closed-door witness testimony and harrowing scenes from the violent attack on the Capitol, to make its case against Trump.Near the beginning of the hearing, the committee showed a 10-minute-plus video montage laying out all of its allegations against Trump, from witnesses saying that Trump was told he lost the election by his aides to the former president's failure to act on Jan. 6 as the violence at the Capitol was unfolding.The montage went step-by-step through Trump's efforts to block his election loss, showed how his attacks upended the lives of election workers and played body-cam footage of officers attacked by rioters.A bipartisan, if one-sided, endeavorRep. Andy Biggs 바카라 게임 웹사이트 one of the four subpoenaed GOP lawmakers that the panel referred to the House Ethics Committee on Monday 바카라 게임 웹사이트 tweeted before the hearing that the committee was a "partisan sham." Rep. Troy Nehls, a Republican who boycotted the committee, called it a "partisan witch hunt."But the panel is, in fact, bipartisan.It's important to remember how this all started. While there was partisan squabbling over which Republicans would be allowed to serve on the panel, House Democrats were willing to give committee slots to GOP lawmakers who had literally voted to overturn the 2020 results. Instead, Republicans boycotted.But two Republicans volunteered to join the panel: Rep. Liz Cheney, who was the No. 3 House Republican at the time, and Adam Kinzinger, a six-term lawmaker who was a rising star in the party. They both brought GOP staff members along with them who worked for the committee.To be sure, Cheney and Kinzinger are outliers in their caucus because they are anti-Trump. And that is the core of Trump's critiques of the committee 바카라 게임 웹사이트 that it stacked with Trump haters. Still, even if they oppose Trump, Cheney and Kinzinger are still conservative Republicans.During Monday's hearing, Kinzinger described how his House GOP colleagues were complicit in Trump's efforts to overturn the election. He highlighted evidence that Trump wanted top Justice Department officials to "put the facade of legitimacy" on his voter fraud claims so "Republican congressmen ... can distort and destroy and create doubt" about the 2020 election results.No matter what Trump and his allies say, Democrats will forever be able to accurately assert that the panel's findings, conclusions, final report and criminal referrals are bipartisan.

The Jan. 6 committee used its final public meeting Monday to summarize its 17-month investigation with a simple closing statement: All roads lead to Donald Trump.

Members focused on how the former president's direct involvement in efforts to overturn the 2020 election makes him responsible for the violence that unfolded at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021, and unfit to hold future office.

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The committee laid out the case for both the public and the Justice Department that there's evidence to pursue criminal charges against Trump on multiple criminal statutes, including obstructing an official proceeding, defrauding the United States, making false statements and assisting or aiding an insurrection.

The committee released an executive summary of its report on Monday, and it plans to release the full report on Wednesday, as well as transcripts of committee interviews.

Here are takeaways from the committee's final public meeting:

Committee refers Trump to DOJ

For months, the committee went back and forth over whether it would refer Trump to the Justice Department for criminal prosecution.

On Monday, the committee didn't equivocate.

The committee referred Trump to DOJ on at least four criminal charges, while saying in its executive summary it had evidence of possible charges of conspiring to injure or impede an officer and seditious conspiracy.

In practice, the referral is effectively a symbolic measure. It does not require the Justice Department to act, and regardless, Attorney General Merrick Garland has already appointed a special counsel, Jack Smith, to take on two investigations related to Trump, including the Jan. 6 investigation.

But the formal criminal referrals and the unveiling of its report this week underscore how much the Jan. 6 committee dug up and revealed Trump's efforts to overturn the 2020 election in the lead-up to Jan. 6. Now the ball is in the Justice Department's court.

Committee Chairman Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, said that he has "every confidence that the work of this committee will help provide a road map to justice, and that the agencies and institutions responsible for ensuring justice under the law will use the information we've provided to aid in their work."

All roads lead to Trump

Committee members repeatedly pointed to Trump's personal involvement in nearly every part of the broader plot to overturn the 2020 election and focused squarely on his role in the violence that unfolded on Jan. 6.

Monday's presentation was a compelling closing salvo for the committee, which said Trump sought to break "the foundation of American democracy."

"Donald Trump broke that faith. He lost the 2020 election and knew it. But he chose to try to stay in office through a multi-part scheme to overturn the results and block the transfer of power," Thompson said. "In the end, he summoned a mob to Washington, and knowing they were armed and angry, pointed them at the Capitol and told them to 'fight like hell.' There's no doubt about this."

Specifically, the panel said Trump "oversaw" the legally dubious effort to put forward fake slates of electors in seven states he lost, arguing that the evidence shows he actively worked to "transmit false Electoral College ballots to Congress and the National Archives" despite concerns among his lawyers that doing so could be unlawful.

Members stressed that Trump knew the election was not stolen but continued to push baseless claims about widespread voter fraud in an effort to upend Joe Biden's legitimate victory.

Once more, committee uses video to illustrate its case against Trump

The committee relied once again on video 바카라 게임 웹사이트 an effective and memorable tool the panel has used throughout its hearings with closed-door witness testimony and harrowing scenes from the violent attack on the Capitol, to make its case against Trump.

Near the beginning of the hearing, the committee showed a 10-minute-plus video montage laying out all of its allegations against Trump, from witnesses saying that Trump was told he lost the election by his aides to the former president's failure to act on Jan. 6 as the violence at the Capitol was unfolding.

The montage went step-by-step through Trump's efforts to block his election loss, showed how his attacks upended the lives of election workers and played body-cam footage of officers attacked by rioters.

A bipartisan, if one-sided, endeavor

Rep. Andy Biggs 바카라 게임 웹사이트 one of the four subpoenaed GOP lawmakers that the panel referred to the House Ethics Committee on Monday 바카라 게임 웹사이트 tweeted before the hearing that the committee was a "partisan sham." Rep. Troy Nehls, a Republican who boycotted the committee, called it a "partisan witch hunt."

But the panel is, in fact, bipartisan.

It's important to remember how this all started. While there was partisan squabbling over which Republicans would be allowed to serve on the panel, House Democrats were willing to give committee slots to GOP lawmakers who had literally voted to overturn the 2020 results. Instead, Republicans boycotted.

But two Republicans volunteered to join the panel: Rep. Liz Cheney, who was the No. 3 House Republican at the time, and Adam Kinzinger, a six-term lawmaker who was a rising star in the party. They both brought GOP staff members along with them who worked for the committee.

To be sure, Cheney and Kinzinger are outliers in their caucus because they are anti-Trump. And that is the core of Trump's critiques of the committee 바카라 게임 웹사이트 that it stacked with Trump haters. Still, even if they oppose Trump, Cheney and Kinzinger are still conservative Republicans.

During Monday's hearing, Kinzinger described how his House GOP colleagues were complicit in Trump's efforts to overturn the election. He highlighted evidence that Trump wanted top Justice Department officials to "put the facade of legitimacy" on his voter fraud claims so "Republican congressmen ... can distort and destroy and create doubt" about the 2020 election results.

No matter what Trump and his allies say, Democrats will forever be able to accurately assert that the panel's findings, conclusions, final report and criminal referrals are bipartisan.