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Capitol riot hearings: Donald Trump accused of staging an attempted coup [Post#145]

Tom Rice: South Carolina ousts Republican who voted to impeach Trump

A Republican congressman has lost his bid to cling on to his seat, after a furious backlash to his vote to impeach former US President Donald Trump.

Tom Rice, a five-term South Carolina incumbent, was beaten in a primary election by Trump-backed challenger Russell Fry, a state legislator.

But another Republican in the state who had criticised Mr Trump, Nancy Mace, comfortably won her vote.

Ms Mace had later visited Trump Tower in a show of loyalty.

Congressional votes were held on Tuesday in Maine, Nevada, North Dakota, South Carolina and Texas.

Mr Rice had been a reliable supporter of Mr Trump until the US Capitol riot on 6 January 2021, when he became one of 10 Republicans who sided with Democrats days later to impeach the outgoing president for inciting insurrection.

Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-61807281
 
In a characteristically bombastic speech, former President Donald Trump has spoken for the first time publicly about the Capitol riots hearing - dismissing it as "crazy" and a "theatrical production of partisan political fiction".

At the Faith and Freedom Coalition Conference on Friday in Nashville, Mr Trump described the riots on 6 January 2021 - in which five people were killed - as "a simple protest" that "got out of hand".

And he diminished the congressional investigation into what happened as "wasting everyone's time".

On the morning of 6 January, thousands of Trump supporters - inspired by an incendiary speech he had just given near the White House in which he repeated claims he had been denied a second term due to voter fraud - marched to the Capitol building that houses the US seat of government.

The Capitol was in session at the time, overseeing the congressional certification of Joe Biden's presidential election win.

A large group breached barriers at pedestrian entrances to the building's grounds. Several also entered the Capitol building itself after a mob smashed windows and forced open doors.

The United States Capitol Building in Washington, D.C. was breached by thousands of protesters during a "Stop The Steal" rally in support of President Donald Trump during the worldwide coronavirus pandemic. The demonstrators were protesting the results of the 2020 United States presidential election where Donald Trump was defeated by Joe Biden.

A House panel is now investigating the events of that day.

However, Mr Trump told supporters in Tennessee: "Let's be clear. This is not a congressional investigation, this horrible situation that's wasting everyone's time.

"This is a theatrical production of partisan political fiction that's getting these terrible, terrible ratings and they're going crazy. They're going crazy.

"The committee is taking the testimony of witnesses who defended me for eight hours, chopping it up and truncating soundbites to make it sound like what they said was absolutely terrible."

He went on: "Remember, it's also (about) the people that weren't allowed to even testify that wanted to. A lot of people wanted to go and testify about what they saw and how crooked it was.

"Meanwhile, the committee refuses to play any of the tape of people saying the good things, the things that we want to hear. It's a one-way street. It's a rigged deal. It's a disgrace."

Responding to claims made in the hearing that he had labelled his then vice president Mike Pence as a "wimp" for not following his wishes and halting the rubber-stamping of Mr Biden's win, Mr Trump told the crowd: "I never called Mike Pence a wimp. I never called him a wimp.

"Mike Pence had a chance to be great and he had a chance to be, frankly, historic. But... Mike, and I say it sadly because I like him, Mike did not have the courage to act."

The former president had some stinging criticism for fellow Republican Adam Kinzinger, who has said Trump "lit the flames" of the insurrection.

The congressman got emotional during his opening comments at the hearing.

Trump said: "Adam Kinzinger, the crier. He cries every time he speaks. This guy's got a mental disorder. He cries every time this guy gets up to speak, he starts crying. I said, there's something wrong with that guy."

He is said to be actively weighing whether he might formally launch a third presidential run.

SKY
 
Tom Rice: South Carolina ousts Republican who voted to impeach Trump

A Republican congressman has lost his bid to cling on to his seat, after a furious backlash to his vote to impeach former US President Donald Trump.

Tom Rice, a five-term South Carolina incumbent, was beaten in a primary election by Trump-backed challenger Russell Fry, a state legislator.

But another Republican in the state who had criticised Mr Trump, Nancy Mace, comfortably won her vote.

Ms Mace had later visited Trump Tower in a show of loyalty.

Congressional votes were held on Tuesday in Maine, Nevada, North Dakota, South Carolina and Texas.

Mr Rice had been a reliable supporter of Mr Trump until the US Capitol riot on 6 January 2021, when he became one of 10 Republicans who sided with Democrats days later to impeach the outgoing president for inciting insurrection.

Read more: https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-61807281

So sad to read.

USA is slowly disintegrating.
 
Donald Trump: State officials tell Capitol riots committee of abuse and threats from ex-president's supporters as he fought US election 'fraud'
A former election worker also tells the committee she received hate and racist abuse after the president repeatedly used her name in a phone call with Georgia's secretary of state.

State officials have described how Donald Trump pressured them to overturn results in the US election and said they received a torrent of abuse and threats from his supporters.

The testimony came during a session of the congressional committee that is investigating the Capitol riots in January 2021.

Rusty Bowers, speaker of the Arizona House of Representatives, said his office was "saturated" with tens of thousands of emails, voicemails and texts from supporters of Mr Trump after his unfounded claims about election fraud.

He described "disturbing" harassment, including an online smear campaign and a man with a pistol taunting his family and neighbours.

Mr Bowers, a Republican, recalled conversations with Mr Trump, his adviser John Eastman and lawyer Rudy Giuliani as they urged him to reject Arizona's election result so he could cling to power.

He said Mr Trump had called him after church one Sunday and asked for the state to replace its electors with those who favoured him rather than the true winner, Joe Biden.

"I said, Look, you're asking me to do something that is counter to my oath," Mr Bowers testified.

He said the ex-president had also asked him to hold a hearing at the state Capitol - which he refused - and claimed Mr Giuliani had told him: "We've got lots of theories [on election fraud], we just don't have the evidence."

Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and his deputy Gabe Sterling also testified.

Mr Raffensperger said Mr Trump had called and asked him to "find 11,780" votes so that he could hold onto the Republican state and block Joe Biden from the White House.

Audio was played that reveals Mr Trump repeatedly citing his fraud claims and suggesting a "criminal offence" if Georgia doesn't change its result.

The state counted three times before confirming Mr Biden's narrow win.

Sexualised texts and racist threats

Mr Raffensperger said his phone number was leaked, leading to countless texts from Trump supporters urging him to quit, while his wife received "sexualised texts".

A break-in at his daughter-in-law's home also left him "very concerned".

The ex-president defended himself on social media and referred to the phone call as "perfect".

Former Georgia election worker Wandrea ArShaye "Shaye" Moss also spoke of threats she received after Mr Trump used her name 18 times in a call with Mr Raffensperger.

She said she had become afraid to say her own name and "felt horrible... like it was all my fault".

Ms Moss testified: "A lot of threats, wishing death upon me, telling me that I'll be in jail with my mother... Be glad it's 2020 and not 1920... A lot of them [the threats] were racist. A lot of them were just hateful."

She said her son had also "heard horrible things about his mom, just because I did my job".

Mr Trump's claims that the election was "stolen" culminated in the notorious US Capitol riots, where his supporters stormed the heart of American democracy to try to stop Joe Biden's election win being certified.

Tuesday's hearing was the fourth this month looking at the incident, which has been likened by some to an attempted coup.

The seven Democrats and two Republicans on the committee believe Mr Trump's efforts were illegal and beyond normal political scheming.

He has denied wrongdoing, repeated his claims of election fraud - again without any evidence.

https://news.sky.com/story/donald-t...rters-as-he-fought-us-election-fraud-12638171
 
US Capitol Riots: 'I'm the effing president take me to the Capitol now', aide says Trump raged at Secret Service on January 6th
A former White House aide testified she was "scared" about what would happen ahead of the riots and said Mr Trump's chief of staff told her "things might get real real bad".

Donald Trump tried to grab the steering wheel from a US Secret Service agent when told he would not be taken to the US Capitol during a riot there - and even endorsed calls to "hang" his vice president, an investigation has been told

Cassidy Hutchinson, who served as a top aide to Mr Trump’s chief of staff, Mark Meadows, appeared in a live hearing by the committee investigating the January 6th Capitol riots on Tuesday.

Ms Hutchinson, 25, told the panel Mr Trump was angered after being told he would not be taken to the Capitol and quoted Mr Trump saying: "I'm the effing president, take me up to the Capitol now."

She testified that a Secret Service agent had to physically restrain Mr Trump who, sitting in the back seat, used his free hand to lunge toward the neck of Secret Service agent Robert Engel.

As his supporters laid siege to Congress, both Mr Trump and Mr Meadows appeared unconcerned about cries in the crowd to "hang Mike Pence!"

The president tweeted during the attack that Pence didn't have the "courage" to object to President Joe Biden's victory, as he presided over the joint session of Congress that day.

And Ms Hutchinson quoted Mr Meadows as saying that Trump "thinks Mike deserves it."

Thousands of Trump supporters stormed Congress on 6 January 2021 in a bid to thwart Joe Biden's election victory, smashing windows and sending politicians fleeing for their lives.

Four people died the day of the attack, more than 100 police officers were injured and one died the next day.

Four officers later died by suicide.

Ms Hutchinson also told the panel she was "scared, and nervous for what could happen" ahead of the riot after conversations with Mr Trump's lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, Mr Meadows and others.

She said she was apprehensive because she had heard plans for a rally and possible movements to the Capitol.

The former aide sat doors away from Mr Trump's Oval Office and testified that just days before the attack on the Capitol, Mr Meadows knew of the looming violence that could unfold.

Mr Meadows told Ms Hutchinson that "things might get real real bad," she said.

She said Mr Giuliani told her it was going to be "a great day" and "we're going to the Capitol."

She added: "It was the first moment that I remembered feeling scared and nervous of what could happen on Jan 6."

Trump did not care rally attendees were armed

Ms Hutchinson also testified that Mr Trump did not care that supporters at the January 6th rally preceding the riot were armed with weapons including AR-15-style rifles.

She said the then-president was angry that the Secret Service, which is charged with protecting the president, was using magnetometers to keep armed people out of the fenced-off area where he gave his speech.

The former White House aide said: "I overheard the president say something to the effect of 'I don't f****** care that they have weapons. They're not here to hurt me. Take the f******-ing mags away. Let my people in, they can march to the Capitol from here. Let the people in, take the f****** mags away."

However, the former president has dismissed Ms Hutchinson's and described her as "bad news!".

Writing on his online platform truthsocial.com, Mr Trump said: "I hardly know who this person, Cassidy Hutchinson, is, other than I heard very negative things about her (a total phony and "leaker"), and when she requested to go with certain others of the team to Florida after my having served a full term in office, I personally turned her request down.

"Why did she want to go with us if she felt we were so terrible? I understand that she was very upset and angry that I didn't want her to go, or be a member of the team. She is bad news!"

Trump threw lunch at wall after Bill Barr interview

According to video testimony shown by the committee from Kayleigh McEnany, Mr Trump's White House press secretary at the time, the former president was so enraged by an interview with the then-attorney general Bill Barr, he threw his lunch at the wall, leaving ketchup dripping down it.

Mr Barr had told the Associated Press there was no evidence of election fraud.

Ms Hutchinson told the committee there were "several times" where she was aware of him "either throwing dishes or flipping the tablecloth to let all the contents of the table go onto the floor".

Earlier hearings from the committee have focused on different aspects of the riot, including Mr Trump's efforts to pressure the Justice Department to upend the 2020 election results.

Mr Trump has consistently dismissed the 'January 6th Committee' as a Democratic Party witch-hunt, despite most of the witnesses being Republican Party members.

https://news.sky.com/story/us-capit...ged-at-secret-service-on-january-6th-12642112
 
Trump attacked Secret Service agent in attempt to reach Capitol on Jan. 6, aide testifies

WASHINGTON — President Trump lunged at a Secret Service agent, putting his hand on the man’s throat after he was told he would not be taken to the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, according to testimony by former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson.
“The president had a very strong, very angry response to” being told the Secret Service couldn’t take him to the Capitol after his speech on the Ellipse that day, Hutchinson testified during Tuesday’s hearing before the Jan. 6 committee. “I’m the f— President. Take me up to the Capitol now,” Trump said, according to Hutchinson’s testimony.

Trump moved to the front of the presidential limo and reached toward the steering wheel, Hutchinson said.

The head of Trump’s Secret Service detail, Bobby Engel, grabbed Trump’s hand off of the steering wheel, Hutchinson said she was told by Anthony Ornato, Trump’s chief of operations. Engel was present for the conversation.

“Sir, you need to take your hand off of the steering wheel, we’re going back to the West Wing, we’re not going to the Capitol,” Hutchinson recounted being told by Ornato.

“Mr. Trump then used his free hand to lunge toward Engel, and when Mr. Ornato recounted the story to me, he motioned to his clavicles,” she said.

Engel was in the room when Ornato told the story to Hutchinson and he did not correct or disagree with the story nor has he stated it was untrue since, Hutchinson said.

In a post on his social network, Truth Social, Trump called Hutchinson’s story “fake,” “sick” and “fraudulent.”

https://www.latimes.com/world-nation/story/2022-06-28/trump-strangle-secret-service-capitol-jan-6
 
Steve Bannon willing to testify at Capitol riot hearing

Former Trump strategist Steve Bannon has told the House select committee investigating the 6 January Capitol riots that he is willing to testify, according to US media.

Until now, he had refused to cooperate with the hearing.

In a letter seen by CBS News, his lawyer told the committee that Mr Bannon "is willing to, indeed prefers, to testify at your public hearing".

Mr Trump said the testimony would be "in the best interests" of Americans.

The select committee has conducted a nearly year-long investigation into how Trump supporters invaded Congress on 6 January 2021 to disrupt lawmakers as they certified Democrat Joe Biden's election victory.

Mr Bannon was summoned to testify on what he knew about the events leading up to the riot, but until now he had refused to comply.

He claims he was covered by "executive privilege", a legal principle that protects many White House communications.

However, at the time of the Capitol riots, Mr Bannon was not an official advisor to the president, which the committee says means that executive privilege does not apply.

What happened on 6 January at the Capitol riot?
Mr Bannon's testimony, if it goes ahead, could offer new insights into Trump's inner circle in the hours leading up to and during the riots.

According to the committee, the former Trump strategist had specific knowledge about the events planned for 6 January before they took place.

Trump himself has become frustrated at the committee hearings, describing them as a "one-sided witch-hunt", and has given his support for Mr Bannon's testimony.

In a letter seen by the AP news agency, the former president said he was "waiving executive privilege for you, which allows for you to go in and testify truthfully and fairly, as per the request of the unselect committee of political thugs and hacks".

However, the exact circumstances under which Mr Bannon will testify have not been agreed.

According to his lawyer Robert Costello, he wishes to appear before the committee in a public hearing, but standard procedure so far has been for testimony to be heard first in private interviews.

"We want to get all our questions answered, and you can't do that in a live format," committee member Zoe Lofgren - a Democrat - told CNN.

Mr Bannon is due to appear in court on 18 July on two charges of criminal contempt of Congress for previously refusing to testify and failing to submit documents.

BBC
 
Can't believe they are still going nuts about Capitol riot. I think other important issues need to be focused on.
 
Donald Trump watched the Capitol riots on television in his dining room and failed to take "immediate action in a time of crisis", an investigation has heard.

During the eighth hearing into the January 6 riots, the committee was told that the former president was aiming to stop or delay the congressional certification of Joe Biden's election victory by not intervening.

Thousands of his supporters stormed Congress during the riots last year, smashing windows, forcing open doors and scaring politicians.

The insurrection left five people dead, including a police officer, and more than 100 officers injured.

Congresswoman Liz Cheney said the only thing helping Mr Trump's goal was the "angry armed mob" that he "sent to the Capitol".

She added that Mr Trump chose not to answer pleas from Republican lawmakers to intervene and stop the violence for hours after the riots began.

"He refused to do what every American president must," she said.

The committee was told that his daughter Ivanka Trump and former chief of staff Mark Meadows were among those urging him to issue a strong condemnation of the events.

His son, Donald Trump Junior, also made a plea for his dad to do something, telling Mr Meadows: "He has got to condemn this s*** ASAP.

"This one you go to the mattresses on. They will try to f*** his entire legacy on this if it gets worse."

Congressman Adam Kinzinger, one of two Republicans on the committee, said Mr Trump "resisted" tweeting out that protesters should be peaceful, with former White House deputy press secretary Sarah Matthews saying he only agreed to do so after his daughter suggested using the phrase.

Ms Matthews said his tweet "did not go far enough" and Mr Trump initially "did not want to include any sort of mention of peace" in it.

This hearing was an astonishing insight into President Trump's mindset in those hours of violence on Capitol Hill. What was he doing? That is the question at the heart of this committee's investigation.

We now know he was watching the riot unfold on television from a dining room in the West Wing and refusing to call off the mob. Secret Service radio recordings sound panicked. One White House official described how staffers were fearing for their lives and calling family members to say goodbye.

The committee also revealed the large number of text messages being sent to his Chief of Staff Mark Meadows calling for him to stop the violence - from Fox News hosts, fellow Republicans, his son Donald Junior. Everyone close to him was appealing to him to do something. He was listening to no one.

It took him more than three hours before he agreed to tell the rioters to go home. Testimony from his former Deputy Press Secretary revealed it was his daughter Ivanka who finally got the former president to agree to some conciliatory language.

Then a day later, more evidence to show the president's ongoing denial. Outtakes from a video message he recorded on 7 January were shown to the committee. He's unwilling to say "the election is over".

How likely is it that the evidence being presented in this committee could result in Donald Trump facing face criminal charges? It's uncertain.

One key question is the question of intent.

Donald Trump never told this mob to break into the Capitol, he didn’t tell them to bring weapons. We do not have testimony to that effect. But there may be evidence when the hearings resume in September that link Donald Trump - or those in his circle - to a greater degree to the attack on the US Capitol.

The hearing aimed to show a "minute-by-minute" account of Mr Trump's actions for the duration of the attack on the Capitol building - a timeframe of 187 minutes.

Beginning at 1.10pm, when Mr Trump finished his speech sparking the riots, it came to an end at 4.17pm when he released his now-infamous video on Twitter telling his supporters to "go home in peace".

At 1.25pm, just 15 minutes after finishing his speech, Mr Trump went to the private dining room off the Oval Office, where he stayed until around 4pm.

Congresswoman Elaine Luria explained how he watched the chaos unfold on TV, saying he refused to do anything due to his "selfish desire to stay in power".

She said witnesses told the committee that he sat at his "usual spot" at the head of the table facing the television on the wall, which was showing Fox News.

The hearing noted that, despite pleas for him to take action, Mr Trump instead sent a number of tweets, including one sharing a link to his speech and another referencing Vice President Mike Pence.

In the tweet, he said Mr Pence "didn't have the courage to do what should have been done to protect" the US.

Footage played to the hearing showed a lot of anger was focused on Mr Pence, with protesters chanting for him to be hanged, calling him a traitor and saying he had "screwed" the American people.

Shortly after the tweet was sent, the committee said the incident escalated but Mr Trump continued to make calls to delay Mr Biden's congressional certification as president.

Ms Matthews described the tweet as "pouring gasoline on the fire".

In secret service radio traffic played to the committee, officers can be heard voicing their concerns about getting Mr Pence out of the building safely.

"Starting to kick in windows of the Capitol. VP being pulled. Decision in the next 2-3 minutes or... VP may be stuck in Capitol," security logs read.

"If we lose any more time, we may lose the ability to leave," one agent said. "If we are going to leave, we need to do it now."

Sharing images of the White House call log, the committee said they show Mr Trump made no calls at all while the violence ensued.

It wasn't until just after 4pm, more than three hours after the siege began, that Mr Trump recorded his video message from the White House's Rose Garden.

The committee heard that a script had been written for him to read, but he decided to "go off the cuff" instead.

An outtake of his message, played to the hearing, showed Mr Trump wanted to claim that the majority of supporters were acting "peacefully" at the Capitol.

"I urge all my supporters to do exactly as 99.9% of them have already been doing - express their passions and opinions peacefully," he was recorded as saying.

In another clip, showing an outtake of a message recorded the next day, the former president still refused to say the "election is over", asking to just say that Congress had certified the result instead.

In his closing remarks, Mr Kinzinger described Mr Trump's conduct as a "supreme violation of his oath of office" and a "dishonour" to America's democracy.

"It is a stain on our history," he added.

The hearing could be the last one this summer, with another round due to take place in September.

SKY
 
<blockquote class="twitter-tweet" data-partner="tweetdeck"><p lang="en" dir="ltr">Oh my god. These Trump outtakes are as humiliating as they are incriminating. <a href="https://t.co/rI5PHrYx6s">pic.twitter.com/rI5PHrYx6s</a></p>— MeidasTouch.com (@MeidasTouch) <a href="https://twitter.com/MeidasTouch/status/1550305486695632896?ref_src=twsrc%5Etfw">July 22, 2022</a></blockquote>
<script async src="https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js" charset="utf-8"></script>
 
Can't believe they are still going nuts about Capitol riot. I think other important issues need to be focused on.

There has never been an armed insurrection against the US government since 1863. They have to address this. Trump should face charges of Treason, IMO.
 
Can't believe they are still going nuts about Capitol riot. I think other important issues need to be focused on.

Liberals are bricking it because Trump could be back in power. These same liberals call for Trump's impeachment and treason but will never want Bush (or Blair) to be tried for war crimes.

Liberals are the new fascists. Their ideology must be destroyed.
 
Bannon sentenced to four months in jail

A federal judge has sentenced former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon to four months in jail.

District Court Judge Carl Nichols also ordered Bannon to pay a fine of $6,500 (£5,830).

==

Donald Trump's former adviser Steve Bannon is sentenced to four months in jail after he refused to co-operate with the congressional committee investigating last year's Capitol riot

He has also been fined $6,500 (£5,830)

Bannon was found guilty in July of two counts of contempt of Congress after he refused to testify and failed to hand over documents

The Department of Justice had asked for a six month jail term and a $200,000 fine

Bannon, 68, denies wrongdoing and is expected to appeal his conviction

He served as Trump's chief strategist in the early stages of his presidency but left his role at the White House in 2017

Bannon is said to have been an unofficial adviser to the former president at the time of the riot on 6 January 2021

The attack saw crowds of Trump supporters storm the Capitol building in an effort to stop President Joe Biden's victory from being certified
 
Bannon sentenced to four months in jail

A federal judge has sentenced former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon to four months in jail.

District Court Judge Carl Nichols also ordered Bannon to pay a fine of $6,500 (£5,830).

==

Donald Trump's former adviser Steve Bannon is sentenced to four months in jail after he refused to co-operate with the congressional committee investigating last year's Capitol riot

He has also been fined $6,500 (£5,830)

Bannon was found guilty in July of two counts of contempt of Congress after he refused to testify and failed to hand over documents

The Department of Justice had asked for a six month jail term and a $200,000 fine

Bannon, 68, denies wrongdoing and is expected to appeal his conviction

He served as Trump's chief strategist in the early stages of his presidency but left his role at the White House in 2017

Bannon is said to have been an unofficial adviser to the former president at the time of the riot on 6 January 2021

The attack saw crowds of Trump supporters storm the Capitol building in an effort to stop President Joe Biden's victory from being certified

Respect to Steve Bannon, he isn't a grass or a sellout.
 
He sold his soul to trump to get that pardon where he cheated people out of money for the wall. I think there is another case against him coming up also.
 
He would sing like a canary if he wasnt benefitting from Trump and his massively idiotic following which is willing to dole out any amount of money to him in the name of campaign donations or other causes. Bannon knows he is sitting on a gold mine as long as he keeps extending the Trump narrative and selling it.
 
He would sing like a canary if he wasnt benefitting from Trump and his massively idiotic following which is willing to dole out any amount of money to him in the name of campaign donations or other causes. Bannon knows he is sitting on a gold mine as long as he keeps extending the Trump narrative and selling it.

There is not much difference between Bannon and Alex jones. Hate business is great for their bank accounts.
 
The congressional panel investigating last year's Capitol riot has issued a legal summons ordering former President Donald Trump to testify to lawmakers.

Addressing him, the document reads: "You were at the center of the first and only effort by any US President to overturn an election."

It goes on: "You knew this activity was illegal and unconstitutional."

A lawyer for Mr Trump accused the lawmakers on the committee of "flouting norms".

The former president has lambasted the inquiry as a ruse designed to distract voters from the "disaster" of Democratic governance with US midterm elections looming next month.

Mr Trump could face criminal charges if he does not comply with the subpoena.

He has until 4 November to provide documents to the 6 January committee, and must appear for deposition testimony on or about 14 November.

If Mr Trump refuses to testify to Congress or hand over the requested material, the committee could refer the matter to the Department of Justice - potentially triggering criminal proceedings.

The subpoena was issued just hours after former Trump strategist Steve Bannon was fined $6,500 (£5,800) and sentenced to four months in jail for contempt of Congress.

He was convicted after refusing to give the committee testimony or documents.

Another Trump aide, Peter Navarro, is due to stand trial for contempt of Congress next month after refusing to co-operate with a similar subpoena.

The select committee is looking into Trump supporters' violent storming of the US Capitol building on 6 January, 2021.

The panel's seven Democrats and two Republicans unanimously voted last week to force the Republican to testify about his role in the riot.

Lawmakers say Mr Trump egged on his supporters to reject the 2020 presidential election result, leading them to storm the halls of Congress in an effort to prevent Joe Biden from being certified as the winner.

In a letter that accompanied the subpoena, chairman Bennie Thompson and vice-chairwoman Liz Cheney said the committee had "assembled overwhelming evidence, including from dozens of your former appointees and staff, that you personally orchestrated and oversaw a multi-part effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election".

"You took all of these actions despite the rulings of more than 60 courts rejecting your election fraud claims and other challenges to the legality of the 2020 presidential election, despite having specific and detailed information from the Justice Department and your senior campaign staff informing you that your election claims were false, and despite your obligation as President to ensure that the laws of our nation are faithfully executed," the letter added.

Mr Trump's legal team slammed the subpoena.

"We understand that, once again, flouting norms and appropriate and customary process, the Committee has publicly released a copy of its subpoena," said lawyer David Warrington.

"As with any similar matter, we will review and analyse it, and will respond as appropriate to this unprecedented action."

If Republicans retake control of the House of Representatives after November's midterm elections - which is widely expected - the 6 January committee's work will come to an end and the panel will be disbanded.

Ms Cheney - the top Republican on the panel and the daughter of former Republican vice-president Dick Cheney - will leave in January after losing a primary race in August to a Trump-backed challenger. The committee's only other Republican member, Adam Kinzinger, plans to retire at the end of this

BBC
 
An independent lawyer has been appointed to oversee the US justice department's criminal investigations into former President Donald Trump.

Jack Smith, a former war crimes prosecutor, was named special counsel by Attorney General Merrick Garland in a news conference.

He will lead inquiries into how Mr Trump handled classified documents and his alleged role in the Capitol riot.

Mr Trump, who is the subject of several other probes, denies any wrongdoing.

Mr Smith will ultimately decide whether the former Republican president, who announced his 2024 candidacy just three days ago, will face criminal charges.

"In certain extraordinary cases it is in the public interest to appoint a special prosecutor to independently manage an investigation and prosecution," Mr Garland said on Friday.

"Due to recent developments, including the former president's announcement that he is a candidate in the next election, and the sitting president's intention to be a candidate as well, I have concluded that it is in the public interest."

He said the move would give the public confidence in the investigation.

In a statement on Friday evening from his Florida estate Mar-a-Lago, Mr Trump slammed the "horrendous abuse of power" by a "corrupt and highly political" justice department in appointing a "super-radical left" special counsel.

Mr Smith is a former prosecutor in New York and most recently served as a chief prosecutor in The Hague where he investigated war crimes in Kosovo.

He will be returning to the US to begin his work immediately, Mr Garland said. To pre-empt claims of partisan bias, the justice department said Mr Smith was a registered political independent.

BBC
 
Now the GOP hold the Senate, will the Trump inquiry come to a halt?

And will impeachment of Biden begin regarding Hunter’s business links?
 
Oath Keepers: Two members of far-right militia guilty of US sedition

The leader of a far-right militia has been found guilty of plotting to stop US President Joe Biden from taking office after the 2020 election.

A jury found Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes guilty of the rare charge of seditious conspiracy following a two-month trial.

He plotted an armed rebellion to stop the transfer of power from Donald Trump to Mr Biden, prosecutors said.

Four more were on trial with him related to the 2021 Capitol riots.

Three of the group - Jessica Watkins, Kelly Meggs and Kenneth Harrelson - went inside the building during the attack.

Meggs was also found guilty of seditious conspiracy on Tuesday. Both Rhodes and Meggs now face a maximum 20-year sentence on the charges.

Harrelson, Watkins and a fifth member, Thomas Caldwell - were found not guilty of seditious conspiracy.

All five of the group members were found guilty of obstruction of an official proceeding.

Rhodes, who prosecutors say acted as a "battlefield general" during the riots, was also found guilty of tampering with documents or proceedings. He was acquitted of two other conspiracy counts.

Supporters of then-President Trump, a Republican, stormed Congress on 6 January 2021 in a bid to thwart certification of Joe Biden's White House election victory.

So far around 900 people in nearly all 50 states have been arrested for taking part in the riot.

The verdict comes after three full days of jury deliberation. The panel in Washington DC met once before taking a weekend break for the Thanksgiving holiday, before meeting for two more days this week.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-63802649
 
Now the GOP hold the Senate, will the Trump inquiry come to a halt?

And will impeachment of Biden begin regarding Hunter’s business links?

Not Senate, but House of representatives (lower house). But yeah, that is were the select committee is set up in House of reps.

From post #179
If Republicans retake control of the House of Representatives after November's midterm elections - which is widely expected - the 6 January committee's work will come to an end and the panel will be disbanded.

Repubs have already stated they will be investigating Hunter Biden as #1 Priority.
 
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Oath Keepers: Two members of far-right militia guilty of US sedition

The leader of a far-right militia has been found guilty of plotting to stop US President Joe Biden from taking office after the 2020 election.

A jury found Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes guilty of the rare charge of seditious conspiracy following a two-month trial.

He plotted an armed rebellion to stop the transfer of power from Donald Trump to Mr Biden, prosecutors said.

Four more were on trial with him related to the 2021 Capitol riots.

Three of the group - Jessica Watkins, Kelly Meggs and Kenneth Harrelson - went inside the building during the attack.

Meggs was also found guilty of seditious conspiracy on Tuesday. Both Rhodes and Meggs now face a maximum 20-year sentence on the charges.

Harrelson, Watkins and a fifth member, Thomas Caldwell - were found not guilty of seditious conspiracy.

All five of the group members were found guilty of obstruction of an official proceeding.

Rhodes, who prosecutors say acted as a "battlefield general" during the riots, was also found guilty of tampering with documents or proceedings. He was acquitted of two other conspiracy counts.

The verdict comes after three full days of jury deliberation.

Speaking outside the courthouse following the verdict, lawyers for Rhodes said they were not pleased with the outcome, but that it isn't a clear-cut victory for the prosecution either.

"It's a mixed bag," said lawyer Edward Tarpley, adding he is grateful the jury found the defendants not guilty on some counts.

They intend to appeal the convictions.

This was the first conviction of seditious conspiracy in the US since 1995, when 10 Islamist militants were convicted for trying to plant bombs at New York City landmarks.

The Civil War-era charge was first enacted to stop residents of southern states from fighting against the US government.

In order to be convicted of seditious conspiracy, prosecutors must prove that two or more people conspired to "overthrow, put down or to destroy by force" the US government, or that they planned to use force to oppose US authority.

Alan Rozenshtein, a law professor at the University of Minnesota and a former US Department of Justice lawyer, said the conviction of Rhodes is significant because it shows that a seditious conspiracy charge is "a viable and legal path for punishing the most serious anti-democratic conduct" in the country.

He added the mixed verdict proves that juries are able to apply the conviction responsibly.

The verdict is also a confidence boost for the justice department, Mr Rozenshtein said, in their quest to prosecute more people in relation to the Capitol riots.

Supporters of then-President Donald Trump, a Republican, stormed Congress on 6 January 2021 in a bid to thwart certification of Joe Biden's White House election victory.

So far around 900 people in nearly all 50 states have been arrested for taking part in the riot.

Another famous storming of the US Capitol also led to successful seditious conspiracy convictions.

In 1954, four nationalists from the US island territory of Puerto Rico fired shots onto the floor of the House of Representatives, wounding several lawmakers.

The attackers, as well as more than a dozen other members of the group, were found guilty of sedition.

During the Oath Keepers trial, the court heard the defendants stashed dozens of weapons in a hotel room in Virginia, just across the Potomac River from Washington DC, and planned to bring them into the city in the event of mass civil disorder.

Defence lawyers argued that the fact the weapons were never used - or even brought into the city - bolstered their argument that the Oath Keepers were on a purely defensive mission, intending to protect protesters and keep the peace inside and outside the Capitol.

The jury also heard that Rhodes was taking phone calls and messages outside the Capitol while the riots were ongoing. Some messages seen by the court show Rhodes telling his followers to "rise up in insurrection".

The Oath Keepers were founded by Rhodes, a former US Army paratrooper and Yale-educated lawyer. Over the past decade, members have shown up at a number of protests and armed standoffs across the country.

Among the defendants, two, Meggs and Harrelson, are from Florida, Watkins is from Ohio and Caldwell is from Virginia. Rhodes is from Texas.

More Oath Keepers members, along with members of another far-right group, the Proud Boys, will go on trial on seditious conspiracy charges later this year.

BBC
 
The congressional inquiry into last year's Capitol riot will reportedly recommend three criminal charges against former President Donald Trump.

The House of Representatives select committee will seek an unprecedented charge of insurrection against a former US president, according to US media.

The panel is expected to publish its final report next week.

Trump supporters stormed Congress on 6 January 2021 in a bid to stop Joe Biden's certification as president.

The justice department - which is already investigating Mr Trump's role in the unrest - is not obliged to consider referrals from any congressional panel.

Mr Trump denies wrongdoing. On Friday his spokesman, Steven Cheung, said in a statement: "The January 6th un-Select Committee held show trials by Never Trump partisans who are a stain on this country's history."

The select committee is scheduled to hold its final meeting on Monday when any charging recommendations would be unveiled.

As well as insurrection, according to various outlets, the panel will suggest Mr Trump be charged with obstructing an official proceeding and conspiracy to defraud the United States.

The nine panellists are expected to approve the final eight-chapter report, drawing on interviews with more than 1,000 witnesses, and submit it to the Department of Justice (DoJ).

The full report will be made public on Wednesday, said chairman Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat who is helming the select committee.

California congresswoman Zoe Lofgren, another member of the panel, told CNN on Friday that the lawmakers have "been very careful in crafting these [charging] recommendations and tethering them to the facts that we've uncovered".

The House select committee has argued Mr Trump spread claims that he knew were false about the 2020 presidential election being stolen, before pressuring state officials, the justice department and his own vice-president to help subvert his defeat. The panel accuses him of inciting the Capitol riot in a last-ditch bid to remain in power.

The DoJ is already investigating the then-Republican president's actions surrounding the riot.

Seven days after the raid on Congress, the House impeached Mr Trump for a second time on the grounds of incitement of insurrection.

Mr Trump, who is the only president to ever be impeached twice, was cleared by the US Senate.

Last month, Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed a former war crimes prosecutor to decide whether Mr Trump should be prosecuted.

Jack Smith is tasked with determining if the 2024 presidential candidate should be put on trial for mishandling classified files that were recovered during an FBI search of Mr Trump's Florida estate in August, or for encouraging the violent mob on 6 January 2021.
 
Representative Jamie Raskin confirms the committee is recommending four criminal charges against former President Donald Trump.

It is seeking charges of obstructing an official proceeding, conspiracy to defraud the United States, conspiracy to make a false statement, and insurrection.

This does not mean official criminal charges - as it’s up to the justice department to charge individuals - it's a recommendation.

"Ours is not a system of justice where the foot soldiers go to jail and the ringleaders get a free pass," Raskin, a Democrat from Maryland, says.
 
Donald Trump should be charged with crimes related to the assault on the US Capitol, according to the congressional committee investigating the 6 January, 2021 attack.

The committee claimed the former president instigated the attack by his supporters and provided "aid and comfort" to the rioters. That was a violation of multiple federal laws involving support for an insurrection, defrauding the federal government, conspiracy to make a false statement and obstructing the congressional certification of Joe Biden's presidential victory.

The vote provided a dramatic finale to an 18-month inquiry into the chaotic last days of Mr Trump's presidency - but the implications for him will be mostly political, not legal.

If Mr Trump were convicted of the crimes the committee has accused him of committing, he could face sizeable fines, more than 10 years in prison and be prohibited from running for future political office. The committee's vote, however, is largely symbolic.

Congress does not have the ability to charge Mr Trump with any of the listed federal crimes. That power lies solely in the hands of the US Justice Department, which is part of President Joe Biden's administration.

With its vote, the congressional committee members have, in effect, recommended the Justice Department act. They have laid out the case - the means, the motive and the opportunity - as they see it. And, perhaps most importantly, they have provided a trove of the supporting evidence gathered over nearly two years of interviews, subpoenas, document reviews and legal battles.

What the Justice Department does with all this, however, is entirely out of the committee's control.

While the January 6 committee's recommendations may have little legal weight, there are plenty of indications that the Justice Department is already well into the kind of investigation of possible criminal conduct by the former president that the committee desires.

A grand jury convened by federal attorneys has already issued subpoenas to dozens of Mr Trump's administration and campaign officials and requested many of the same Trump administration documents reviewed by the congressional committee.

Last month, US Attorney General Merrick Garland appointed a special counsel, Jack Smith, to handle all aspects of the inquiry into the former president. He cited Mr Trump's announcement of his 2024 presidential bid, and the possibility that Mr Trump could face off against Mr Biden in the general election, as grounds for separating the investigation from the Justice Department's day-to-day operations.

Since then, Mr Smith's office has issued its own subpoenas to officials in seven states who had been contacted by Mr Trump or his advisers during their attempts to dispute the 2020 presidential election results. The independent council investigation appears to be wasting little time picking up where career Justice Department lawyers left off.

The Capitol attack is not Mr Trump's only source of legal concern, either. Mr Smith is also investigating the former president's handling of classified material at his Mar-a-Lago estate after he left office. A Georgia district attorney continues to dig into whether Mr Trump's contact with state officials violated Georgia election law. And there are a host of civil cases too.

Political fallout

Mr Trump has long attempted to paint the entirety of the criminal and civil investigations and lawsuits directed at him as part of a partisan "witch hunt" whose ultimate goal is to thwart his return to political power.

The nature of the congressional committee's criminal referral - voted on by seven Democrats and two vehemently anti-Trump Republicans - will do little to counter these claims, and may in fact be cited by Mr Trump as further evidence of the partisan nature of the allegations if and when they turn into actual criminal charges.

The referrals, however, will generate days of negative coverage for Mr Trump, as newspaper and television headlines recount the nature of the recommended charges and remind Americans of the violence of 6 January and Mr Trump's months-long efforts to challenge his election defeat.

Already, there are indications that Mr Trump may be facing increasingly stiff political headwinds as he tries to gear up another bid for the presidency in 2024. Recent polls show that he continues to be unpopular with vast swaths of the American public, and that his support is dropping even among Republican voters. Hypothetical head-to-head election matchups show him losing ground to Florida Governor Ron DeSantis for the Republican presidential nomination and trailing Mr Biden in a general election contest.

Since announcing his presidential bid just a week after the Republican Party and Mr Trump's handpicked candidates underperformed in the November 2022 midterm congressional elections, Mr Trump has taken few visible steps to advance his campaign efforts. While there are rumours of hirings and talk of new policy announcements, the biggest news came from the former president's touting of Trump-themed action-hero digital collector cards, sold for $99 apiece.

As the calendar turns to 2023, and the Republican presidential nomination contest comes into focus, Mr Trump may require some remarkable feats of political strength to regain his political footing.

BBC
 
The congressional panel investigating last year's attack on the US Capitol has accused former President Donald Trump of a "multi-part conspiracy" to overturn his election defeat three months earlier.

The panel has released its final 845-page report on the attack.

It places the blame for the 6 January 2021 storming of Congress squarely on the former president.

It also recommends barring Mr Trump from public office in the future.

He did not co-operate with the panel and declared the final report a "witch hunt" after its release.

Over 18 months, the committee held 10 public hearings and interviewed more than 1,000 witnesses, including Trump administration officials and staff, Trump family members, Capitol police officers, rioters, militia members, and more.

On Monday, the panel of seven Democrats and two Republicans recommended the justice department investigate Mr Trump - who is mounting another White House campaign - for aiding an insurrection and three other federal crimes.

The Democratic chairman of the select committee, Bennie Thompson of Mississippi, wrote in a foreword to the eight-chapter report that it was once "unimaginable" the president of the United States would incite a mob to march on the Capitol.

Here are the six key findings, which were released on Thursday night:

Far-right groups had racism rift before Capitol riot

1) Trump made false claims which aides told him were untrue

The committee said that Mr Trump's decision to falsely declare victory on election night 2020 was "premeditated", and that only his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, supported this action. The former president soon began making unfounded claims of widescale voter fraud, and continued to do so with more frequency after the election was called for Joe Biden.

The committee points to their interviews with several advisers and lawyers close to Mr Trump, who say they did not believe these claims of fraud or could find no evidence of the phenomenon.

Most notable among those voices was former Attorney General William Barr, who told the committee during a deposition: "I made it clear that I did not agree with the idea of saying the election was stolen and putting out this stuff, which I told the president was [expletive.]"

The president continued to sow election conspiracies over the coming weeks, though top Trump administration officials testified they informed him the claims were not true.


2) Trump's rhetoric brought rioters to Washington

The committee makes the argument that the attack on the Capitol was sparked by Mr Trump himself.

In addition to Mr Trump's repeated fraud claims, the committee points to a 19 December 2020 tweet, in which the then-president wrote: "Big protest in DC on January 6th. Be there, will be wild!"

In depositions and court documents, rioters and militia members who were present at the Capitol that day cited Mr Trump's tweet as their rationale for coming to Washington. The committee cited men like Robert Morss, who was found guilty of assaulting officers during the Capitol breach. Mr Morss "believed January 6th stood for the moment when '1776 Will Commence Again' because President Trump asked them to 'Be there, Will be Wild'", the report states.

The committee also cites Secret Service warnings that people were planning to come to Washington on January 6 and threatening to "be wild".


3) Trump failed to act during the riot

The committee argues that Mr Trump did not take action as the January 6 attack commenced, and that he ignored warnings coming from Congress that a serious attack was unfolding.

Some of their conclusion rests on the testimony of former White House staffer Cassidy Hutchinson, who appeared in a blockbuster hearing earlier this year and also gave depositions about the chaos she says she witnessed in the White House that day.

According to a transcript of her testimony released on Thursday, a former White House ethics lawyer had attempted to coach Ms Hutchinson before she gave evidence to the committee: "The less you remember, the better."

The committee also cites communications between lawmakers trapped in the Capitol and White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, who was receiving an increasingly desperate barrage of pleas from members of Congress who were forced into hiding.

Texts from Hop Hicks, one of Mr Trump's most loyal aides, summed up the dismay among staff at the White House.

Ms Hicks texted Ivanka Trump's chief of staff, Julie Radford, after the riot saying "we all look like domestic terrorists now".

She also texted a White House lawyer: "I'm so upset. Everything we worked for wiped away."


4) Far-right groups planned - then acted

Tips about armed groups targeting Washington and even the Capitol specifically started coming in December 2020. The report notes that the FBI was sent messages circulating on groups run by the far-right Oath Keepers and Proud Boys.

"There is only one way. It is not signs. It's not rallies. It's [expletive] bullets," said one.

Capitol Police and Secret Service agents - who are responsible for protecting the president - received similar messages from insiders and others. Some specifically named the Capitol as a focus for potentially violent activity.

Some of the chatter came from private encrypted chat apps, but other messages were publicly visible on pro-Trump websites and Twitter.

Members of the far-right groups ended up among the crowds inside the Capitol on 6 January.

Alongside the report, the committee released dozens of raw transcripts of testimony provided by witnesses in closed-door sessions. Several of Mr Trump's biggest supporters on the far-right fringes - such as Alex Jones and white nationalist Nick Fuentes - refused to answer questions, citing their constitutional right to avoid self-incrimination.

But testimony from others - including Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes and Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio - indicated mutual suspicion, infighting, and conspiratorial thinking among the far-right factions involved in the riot.

Rhodes was convicted of seditious conspiracy and other charges last month and potentially faces decades in prison, while Mr Tarrio is currently on trial.


5) Trump tried to pressure his vice-president to overturn the results

Part of Mr Trump's plan to remain in office revolved around a controversial reading of the US Constitution, which he believed allowed Vice-President Mike Pence, who would preside over the election certification, to declare him the victor.

On 6 January, Mr Trump attempted to call Mr Pence, shouting at aides to get him on the phone, the report states. The former president then falsely told Mr Pence he had the power to intervene in the certification.

Witnesses told the committee that at one point, Mr Trump called the vice-president a "wimp" and said he was "not tough enough".

Addressing a crowd on 6 January, Mr Trump said he hoped Mr Pence would "do the right thing". Later, in the midst of the attack, rioters would chant "Hang Mike Pence" as they stormed the Capitol.


6) Trump should be barred from holding public office

The panel has made 11 recommendations as a result of its investigation.

One cites the constitution, which states an individual who has taken an oath to support the US Constitution but has "engaged in an insurrection" or given "aid or comfort to the enemies of the Constitution" can be disqualified from office.

Mr Trump was referred to the Department of Justice for assisting or aiding an insurrection.

BBC
 
A Capitol Hill rioter who posed with his feet on US Democrat Nancy Pelosi's desk during the attack on Congress has been found guilty of all charges.

Richard "Bigo" Barnett was among the crowd of Trump supporters who stormed the building in attempt to overturn the 2020 presidential election result.

He posed for cameras after breaking into Mrs Pelosi's office and boasted of swiping an envelope before leaving.

He was armed with a stun gun and could have harmed Mrs Pelosi, officials say.

BBC
 
US Justice Department says Trump can be sued for January 6

The United States Justice Department has issued a brief saying former President Donald Trump can be sued by injured Capitol Police officers and Democratic legislators over the insurrection at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021.

The announcement comes as a federal court case tests Trump’s legal vulnerability and the limits of executive power.

The department wrote that, although a president enjoys broad legal latitude to communicate to the public on matters of concern, “no part of a President’s official responsibilities includes the incitement of imminent private violence. By definition, such conduct plainly falls outside the President’s constitutional and statutory duties”.

The brief was filed by lawyers from the Justice Department’s civil division and has no bearing on a separate criminal investigation by a department special counsel into whether Trump can be criminally charged over efforts to undo Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 presidential election.

In fact, the lawyers note that they are not taking a position with respect to potential criminal liability for Trump or anyone else.

The Justice Department wrote that it also takes no view on a lower court judge’s conclusion that those who sued Trump have “plausibly” alleged that his speech caused the riot. Nevertheless, the department said that an appeals court should reject Trump’s claim that he is immune from the lawsuits.

The Justice Department cautioned said the “court must take care not to adopt rules that would unduly chill legitimate presidential communication” or saddle a president with meritless lawsuits.

“In exercising their traditional communicative functions, Presidents routinely address controversial issues that are the subject of passionate feelings. Presidents may at times use strong rhetoric. And some who hear that rhetoric may overreact, or even respond with violence,” the department wrote.

Trump is appealing a decision by a federal judge in Washington, DC, who last year rejected efforts by the former president to toss out the civil lawsuits filed by legislators and two Capitol police officers. US District Judge Amit Mehta ruled that Trump’s words during a rally before the violent storming of the Capitol were likely “words of incitement not protected by the First Amendment”.

The lawsuits – filed by Democratic Representative Eric Swalwell and officers James Blassingame and Sidney Hemby, and later joined by other House Democrats – argue that Trump and others made “false and incendiary allegations of fraud and theft”.

The lawsuits also allege that “in direct response to the Defendant’s express calls for violence at the rally, a violent mob attacked the US Capitol”.

They cite a federal civil rights law that was enacted to counter the Ku Klux Klan’s intimidation of officials. The suits describe in detail how Trump and others spread baseless claims of election fraud, both before and after the 2020 presidential election was declared, and charge that the former president and his allies helped to rile up thousands of rioters before they stormed the Capitol.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2023/3/2/us-justice-department-says-trump-can-be-sued-for-january-6
 
Former US President Donald Trump and a group of men jailed for their role in the deadly January 6 riots have collaborated on a charity single.
The song called "Justice for All", which is available on streaming platforms like Spotify, Apple Music and YouTube, is an attempt at raising funds to support the families of Trump supporters in jail on charges related to the riots on the US Capitol in 2021.

In the track, the twice-impeached former president recites the Pledge of Allegiance.

His words are cut with the national anthem sung by the inmates who call themselves the J6 Prison Choir.

The song ends with the inmates chanting "USA!".

Trump recorded his part at his Mar-a-Lago resort in Florida, according to Forbes. The inmates recorded their singing on a jailhouse phone.

The song is listed in the "devotional & spiritual" section on Apple Music. On YouTube, Trump is credited as the composer of the track.

The song has struck a sour note with critics.

NDTV
 
Senate Republicans and Capitol police have criticised Fox News after one of its hosts aired previously unseen clips of the riot two years ago at Congress, and played down the violent disorder.

Host Tucker Carlson showed the video on Monday night, arguing it "does not show an insurrection or a riot in progress", but rather "mostly peaceful chaos".

A top congressional Republican gave Mr Carlson exclusive access to the video.

But some Republicans say the Fox host mischaracterised the raid on Congress.

The top-rated host on Fox News, a conservative network, has long insisted that other media outlets exaggerated violence at the Capitol on 6 January 2021, when Trump supporters stormed the complex as lawmakers met to certify Joe Biden's victory in the presidential election.

He has also suggested without evidence that government agents could have instigated the riot.

In the roughly 45-minute segment, Mr Carlson said the video showed that while a minority of protesters did commit violence, most were "sightseers".

His show on Tuesday night included an interview with Tarik Johnson, a former Capitol Police officer who said he donned a pro-Trump red hat during the riot in order to help fellow officers escape the melee.

Mr Carlson questioned why intelligence about possible violence that day wasn't relayed to rank-and-file officers, but he did not broadcast much new video from the riot.

Tucker Carlson said he hates Trump 'passionately'

Criticism of Monday's segment came from Democrats as well as top Republicans in Washington, the head of the Capitol police, and the family of a police officer whose death was mentioned by Mr Carlson in the show.

Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell said on Tuesday it had been a "mistake for Fox News to depict this in a way that's completely at variance with what our chief law enforcement official here at the Capitol thinks" about the riot.

Mr McConnell pointed to an internal memo by Capitol Police Chief Tom Manger, whose agency is responsible for protecting the buildings where the lawmakers meet.

BBC
 
Former US Vice-President Mike Pence has testified as part of a criminal investigation into alleged efforts by Donald Trump to overturn his defeat in the 2020 election.

Mr Pence, 63, sat for more than seven hours before a federal grand jury in Washington DC, sources told the BBC'S US partner CBS News.

He was issued with a subpoena to testify under oath earlier this year.

The questioning by prosecutors took place behind closed doors.

His appearance on Thursday came just hours after an appeals court rejected a last-ditch bid by Mr Trump's legal team to stop Mr Pence from testifying.

Mr Pence's lawyers had also sought unsuccessfully to challenge the subpoena, arguing that his role as president of the Senate during his time in office meant he had congressional immunity.

His eventual testimony, which had been sought for months, is a major milestone in the two-year investigation which is being led by special counsel Jack Smith, a former war crimes prosecutor who was appointed to the role by Attorney General Merrick Garland.

The investigation has been gathering evidence about whether former US President Donald Trump and his allies broke federal law in their efforts to challenge the result of the 2020 election, which was won by President Joe Biden.

It is also investigating the US Capitol riot on 6 January 2021, when Mr Trump's supporters stormed the building in an effort to prevent the election result from being certified.

Mr Pence, who like all vice-presidents was also president of the Senate - a mostly ceremonial role - could in theory have derailed the final certification of the election result and delayed the transfer of power.

Mr Trump publicly pressured his vice-president to do so, and his refusal led him to lash out at Mr Pence.

Trump supporters then chanted "hang Mike Pence" as they stormed Congress and marauded through the corridors of the Capitol building as politicians sheltered inside.
BBC
 
Former US Vice-President Mike Pence has testified as part of a criminal investigation into alleged efforts by Donald Trump to overturn his defeat in the 2020 election.

Mr Pence, 63, sat for more than seven hours before a federal grand jury in Washington DC, sources told the BBC'S US partner CBS News.

He was issued with a subpoena to testify under oath earlier this year.

The questioning by prosecutors took place behind closed doors.

His appearance on Thursday came just hours after an appeals court rejected a last-ditch bid by Mr Trump's legal team to stop Mr Pence from testifying.

Mr Pence's lawyers had also sought unsuccessfully to challenge the subpoena, arguing that his role as president of the Senate during his time in office meant he had congressional immunity.

His eventual testimony, which had been sought for months, is a major milestone in the two-year investigation which is being led by special counsel Jack Smith, a former war crimes prosecutor who was appointed to the role by Attorney General Merrick Garland.

The investigation has been gathering evidence about whether former US President Donald Trump and his allies broke federal law in their efforts to challenge the result of the 2020 election, which was won by President Joe Biden.

It is also investigating the US Capitol riot on 6 January 2021, when Mr Trump's supporters stormed the building in an effort to prevent the election result from being certified.

Mr Pence, who like all vice-presidents was also president of the Senate - a mostly ceremonial role - could in theory have derailed the final certification of the election result and delayed the transfer of power.

Mr Trump publicly pressured his vice-president to do so, and his refusal led him to lash out at Mr Pence.

Trump supporters then chanted "hang Mike Pence" as they stormed Congress and marauded through the corridors of the Capitol building as politicians sheltered inside.
BBC

i bet Pence really let loose when provided closed doors hearing. He must have ripped the cheeto to shreds. i wonder if we will ever see a transcript of his deposition.
 
BBC News
Four members of the far-right Proud Boys, including former leader Enrique Tarrio, have been found guilty of seditious conspiracy for their role in the US Capitol riot.

The jury was unable to come to a decision on two charges against a fifth co-defendant.

The verdicts came after a trial lasting nearly four months.

The seditious conspiracy charge alone carries a penalty of up to 20 years in prison.

All five defendants were convicted on a range of lesser charges stemming from their activities on 6 January, 2021.
 
The leader of a far-right militia has been sentenced to 18 years in prison for his role in the US Capitol riot.

Stewart Rhodes, the founder of the Oath Keepers, was convicted on charges of seditious conspiracy and other crimes.

Rhodes stayed outside the Capitol on 6 January 2021, but co-ordinated with militia members who stormed the building.

The sentence is the longest yet given to a Capitol rioter. Prosecutors had asked for 25 years.

Rhodes was also convicted last year of obstruction of an official proceeding and tampering with documents or proceedings in one of the highest-profile Capitol riot trials.

At a hearing on Thursday, the militia leader showed little remorse, claiming he was a political prisoner and insisting the Oath Keepers only intended to protect other protesters.

Judge Amit Mehta rejected those claims and expressed concern about Rhodes' violent rhetoric, including a threat to hang former US House Speaker Nancy Pelosi.

The sentence given to Rhodes is the longest handed out so far for the riot, where thousands of supporters of Donald Trump who objected to the result of the 2020 presidential election stormed the US legislature.

Rhodes, a former US Army paratrooper and Yale-educated lawyer, founded the Oath Keepers in 2009.

Armed members of the anti-government group showed up at a number of protests and standoffs, and eventually became staunch supporters of Donald Trump. Dozens were present at the riot.
 
Court rules Donald Trump can be sued for allegedly inciting Capitol riot

A federal appeals court has ruled that Donald Trump can be sued in civil court for his role in allegedly inciting the riot on Capitol Hill in January 2021.

It comes after two injured Capitol Police officers sued Mr Trump for telling the crowd to "fight like hell" shortly before the violence began.

Mr Trump had sought to claim immunity stemming from his role as president.

But the three-judge panel found that Mr Trump was not acting in an official role when he made the remarks.

Lawyers for Mr Trump had argued that he is protected from lawsuits related to anything he did as part of his official duties. The Supreme Court has previously ruled that presidents can only be held liable for anything falling beyond "the outer perimeter" of their responsibilities.

But the judges found that Mr Trump was acting as a candidate when he addressed the crowd, noting that he had produced no reason why the speech "should be treated more like the State of the Union than [a] campaign ad".

"When a first-term President opts to seek a second term, his campaign to win re-election is not an official presidential act," wrote Chief Judge Sri Srinivasan. "The Office of the Presidency as an institution is agnostic about who will occupy it next. And campaigning to gain that office is not an official act of the office."

The judge added that a president "does not spend every minute of every day exercising official responsibilities".

But the decision only finds that Mr Trump was acting outside his official duties at the time, and does not go so far as to say he should be found liable in the lawsuits.

Mr Trump can still argue in future cases that he was acting as president, not as a candidate. He could also challenge the ruling at the conservative-leaning US Supreme Court.

Nonetheless, the unanimous decision could pave the way for further lawsuits against Mr Trump over his part in allegedly inciting the violence.

A spokesman for Mr Trump told Politico that Friday's ruling is "limited, narrow and procedural".

The riot broke out as lawmakers were meeting inside Congress to certify President Joe Biden's victory in the 2020 election. In the hours beforehand, Mr Trump had addressed a rally in Washington DC where he urged supporters to march to the Capitol.

"You'll never take back our country with weakness," he said at the time. "You have to show strength and you have to be strong."

During the violence, at least 138 Capitol and Metropolitan Police officers were injured by rioters. Four police officers died from suicide in the months after the attack.

Capitol Police officers James Blasingame and Sidney Hemby subsequently filed lawsuits against Mr Trump for his actions.

The officers are seeking compensatory damages and an undisclosed amount in punitive damages from the former president, citing emotional and physical injuries.

"Today's ruling makes clear that those who endanger our democracy and the lives of those sworn to defend it will be held to account," Patrick Malone, a lawyer for the officers, said in a statement.

Mr Trump is currently leading the pack of Republicans seeking the party's nomination for the 2024 election against Mr Biden.

Meanwhile, his legal problems continue to mount. On Thursday, the judge overseeing his New York civil trial reinstated a gag order banning him from making disparaging comments about court staff.



 
Google location data was used to find Jan. 6 rioters. It’s disappearing.

Special counsel Jack Smith has a plan for how to illustrate Donald Trump’s influence over the rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. Prosecutors will show a map of people gathered around the Ellipse to hear Trump say, “we’re going to the Capitol” to “fight like hell,” then follow those supporters in real time as they head down Pennsylvania Avenue to where lawmakers were certifying President Biden’s victory.

That visualization, detailed in court filings in Trump’s federal election subversion case in D.C., was created with data from Google. But the tool that has pitted law enforcement investigative priorities against personal privacy concerns soon won’t be so accessible. The company will no longer store location history that was used to identify hundreds of people who stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6 and to prosecute the man those rioters hoped to keep in power.

Since 2016, law enforcement has used geofence warrants to pull information from smartphone owners who use “Google location history,” which regularly records a person’s location through a combination of cell tower, internet protocol, wireless, GPS and Bluetooth data. Police can also approximate locations through pings to cell towers. But the Google data is far more precise — making it possible in many cases, for instance, to discern whether someone was in the Capitol or right outside it.

The use of the data is still under debate. The chief judge in D.C. has yet to rule on a challenge to the geofence warrant from Israel Easterday, an Amish teen from Kentucky who helped rioters breach the Capitol Rotunda by pepper spraying a police officer. The neighboring U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit, which covers Virginia, Maryland and other neighboring states, is weighing whether this kind of warrant is constitutional, with stark disagreement over whether the data collection was voluntary sharing, fascist overreach or something in between.

“In the physical world, we have the scope of what’s allowed in a warrant,” said Orin Kerr, a professor at Berkeley Law who has tracked the legal debate over geofence warrants. “But we don’t have a sense in the open world” of online data.

A Google representative said the change was part of an ongoing effort to give people more control over their data.

Richard Salgado, Google’s Director of Law Enforcement & Information Security for 13 years and a former Justice Department attorney, said that the warrants were seen initially as potentially useful in “exceptional” situations but quickly “evolved into this routine strategy” investigators used even when other techniques were more likely to be effective.

“In the vast majority of cases this turns out not to be a useful technique,” he said. And he said these warrants can “evade oversight” since the government can just withdraw a warrant if the provider objects, thus avoiding a court ruling. Gag rules mean that users will never know their data was searched or exposed. “There is some discomfort that judges don’t really understand the limited value of the searches at the outset, and challenges don’t reach them.”

On Jan. 6 three years ago, the Justice Department sent a letter to Google directing it to preserve a copy of its data as it existed that day. Then two search warrants were sent to the company asking for a list for all devices Google registered in “Location History” as in or around the Capitol that afternoon. The government threw out phones shown as in the building before 12:50 p.m. or after 6:10 p.m., assuming those represented people working inside the Capitol. They also threw out any phone where the margin of error could place the user outside the grounds — unless that person had deleted their location history after the 6th, which the FBI took as a sign of culpability.

After that culling, the Justice Department obtained a court order for Google to “unmask” or name 9,341 users.

Judge James E. Boasberg said at an October hearing in Easterday’s case that he would probably side with the government. But he wanted more information about why so few Capitol staff were identified even though many were in the building: “The numbers need to make more sense.”

The government was following procedures developed by Google after consultation with the Justice Department, according to court records. The company would produce a list of the devices in the area and time requested. If asked, Google would provide more travel history for a smaller group deemed of interest to the government. With a court order, the company would then unmask the users of devices chosen from that list.

Geofence warrants became popular very quickly for law enforcement in the past 8 years because they could possibly pinpoint someone at or near the scene of a crime. In the first half of 2023, Google said it received more than 63,000 requests for disclosure of user information in the United States, covering 110,000 accounts, and handed over at least some data 85 percent of the time. The company did not break out location-data requests specifically, but Google said in 2021 that geofence warrants constituted more than a quarter of all warrants they received in the U.S.

The Jan. 6 case — the largest investigation in U.S. history that has to date netted more than 1,200 people charged — is unusual in that the government could plausibly argue everyone within the geofence had committed or witnessed a crime. “Those are really the exceptions that prove the rule,” said Brett Max Kaufman of the ACLU, which is involved in the Fourth Circuit challenge related to a Virginia robbery. But Jennifer Lynch of the Electronic Frontier Foundation argues that the Capitol warrants are as bad as other geofences.

“The January 6 example is a really tough one,” she said. “But it’s still not targeted. The whole reason we don’t have mass warrants is that then we have to trust the government to make the right decisions."

Turning on location history is optional; as of 2019 Google said a third of users had the feature enabled. A user can also edit the “timeline” of past trips Google creates from the data. To respond to a geofence warrant, Google has to search data from every device using location history — approximately 592 million people. Now, Google says the data will only be stored for three months and only on the device itself, making it impossible to access remotely by law enforcement. That aligns Google with Apple, which does not store location data in a way that is open to a geofence warrant.

While the warrants might be disappearing, legal battles over their constitutionality will keep going for years. Experts disagree about whether data aggregation companies — also served warrants in Jan. 6 cases — could successfully replicate Google’s data.

“For now I think that does sort of end the practice,” Kaufman said, but “there are other types of databases where the same legal arguments could apply.”

The question is whether such warrants are unreasonable searches invading the privacy of people who just happen to be near the scene of a crime. In the Fourth Circuit case, people in nearby buildings, including a church, were within the parameters of the search for a bank robber in Richmond. “Police cannot act like the prince in Cinderella, knocking on local doors to order occupants to try on a slipper left at the ball,” Alexandria federal defender Geremy Kamens wrote in Easterday’s case.

Google itself described the searches in court as “broad and intrusive” and said that “users have a reasonable expectation of privacy” in their location history, which is akin to “a virtual journal.” Location history can remind you where you’ve been before and how long it took you to get there, and recommend stops and real-time traffic information on your regular commutes. It’s also used for advertising — businesses can show ads to everyone in a particular location, and Google can say how many people visited a store after seeing an ad.

The location data varies in accuracy depending on whether and how the phone is being used, along with the strength of various signals.

The government has emphasized the voluntary, opt-in nature of the product and says no federal court has thrown out evidence obtained through a geofence warrant. (A state court in California has). In the Richmond case, a district court judge ruled that the warrant used to identify the bank robber was far too broad, but that the officers who used it were acting in “good faith.” She also said the Jan. 6 warrants were different in “crucial” ways, including more judicial oversight.

Her decision was argued over at the Fourth Circuit last month. Judge Julius Richardson suggested there was no need for geofence warrants, because “if I didn’t opt into the service … it would not be searching my data.” Judge James A. Wynn said the warrants would pave the way for “Nazi techniques” as technology evolved. “And at the end of the day,” he said, “there’s no privacy at all.”

Source: Washington Post

 

Biden: what would Trump have done if the Capitol riots had been led by Black Americans?​


Joe Biden has launched one of his most scathing attacks yet on Donald Trump’s record of racism, suggesting that the former US president would have acted differently to the January 6 2021 insurrection if was led by Black people.

The remarks, at a dinner hosted by a civil rights organisation in a critical swing state, pointed to an intensifying battle between Biden and Trump for African American voters ahead of November’s presidential election.

“Let me ask you,” Biden said during an address to an NAACP (National Association for the Advancement of Colored People) dinner in Detroit. “What do you think he would have done on January 6 if Black Americans had stormed the Capitol?”

There was a collective gasp and murmur in the cavernous convention centre, where an estimated 5,000 guests had gathered. The president insisted: “No, I’m serious. What do you think? I can only imagine.”

The great majority of Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol on January 6 in an attempt to overturn his election defeat were white. One was pictured carrying the flag of the Confederacy, which fought the 1861-65 civil war to in a failed effort to preserve slavery in the south.

But as a congressional panel investigating the attack chronicled, Trump remained at the White House and took no action for hours, even as the mob threatened to hang his vice-president, Mike Pence. He eventually released a video calling for the rioters to stand down and go home.

More than 1,265 defendants have been charged and hundreds imprisoned for their role in January 6. But Trump has described them as “patriots” and “hostages” and, as Biden noted in his remarks, suggested that he will pardon them if reelected.

Biden was speaking during a campaign swing through Georgia and Michigan, two battlegrounds where the Black vote will be crucial. Opinion polls suggest that a small but significant percentage are turning from Biden to Trump.

The president told the audience in Detroit: “You’re the reason Donald Trump was defeated for president. You’re the reason Donald Trump is going to be a loser again.”

Biden touted his own record but kept returning to Trump and the threat he poses to democracy. He highlighted his own appointment of the first Black female supreme court justice, Ketanji Brown Jackson.

“Let me ask you, who do you think he’ll put on the supreme court?” he asked. “Do you think he’ll pick anybody who has a brain?”

Biden also accused Republicans of banning books and undermining African American history. “Extremists close the doors of opportunity, strike down affirmative action, attack the values of diversity, equality and inclusion,” he said.

“They don’t see you in the future of America, but they’re wrong. We know Black history is American history.”

The president also warned: “The threat that Trump poses in a second term is greater than the first.” He said “something snapped in Trump” after his 2020 election defeat and “he’s clearly unhinged”.

The president received one of the biggest cheers of the night when he proclaimed himself a “union guy”, adding: “I walked the picket line with union workers here in Michigan. At the same time, Trump went to a non-union stop to show his disrespect for union workers.”

Other speakers included Gretchen Whitmer, the governor of Michigan, tipped as a potential presidential candidate in 2028.

 
Trump visits Capitol Hill for first time since Jan 6 riot

Donald Trump has returned to Capitol Hill to meet Republicans in his first visit to the area since the 6 January riot of 2021.

The presumptive Republican nominee in November's presidential election delivered a message of unity, promising to "work out" any lingering differences within the party.

Later in the day, the former president was also scheduled to meet an association of 200 corporate leaders.

Nancy Pelosi, the former Democratic House Speaker, said in a statement that Trump was the "instigator of an insurrection... returning to the scene of the crime".

The visit comes weeks after Trump's criminal conviction for falsifying business records in his hush-money trial in New York.

He arrived at a Republican office building near the US Capitol building on Thursday morning, passing a small crowd of protesters holding signs with slogans including "failed coup" and "Democracy Forever, Trump Never".

In a brief news conference early on Thursday afternoon, Trump said there was "great unity" in the party, and vowed to stand by fellow Republicans, even those he disagreed with.


 
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