WASHINGTON – The House committee investigating the Capitol attack on Jan. 6, 2021, will vote Monday on recommending the Justice Department charge former President Donald Trump for his role, in keeping with Politico, The Guardian, ABC News, CNN and the Latest York Times.
The reports carried some different numbers of charges.
The fees to be voted on allege revolt, obstruction of Congress and conspiracy to defraud the US, in keeping with Politico, ABC News and the Latest York Times, which reported the committee is considering “no less than” those three referrals.
The Guardian and CNN reported there can be no less than two charges — obstruction of Congress and conspiracy to defraud the US, matching claims the panel made against Trump and certainly one of his attorneys, John Eastman, in a previous court proceeding.
Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat who sits on the committee, had no comment when reached by USA TODAY Friday.
But she told CNN Friday that the panel has “been very careful in crafting these recommendations and tethering them to the facts that we’ve uncovered.”
“We spent an enormous period of time not only on what the code sections are and the underside line advice, however the facts,” Lofgren said. “And I feel it’s really vital once we discuss whatever it’s we’re going to do and we’ll have a vote on it, that folks understand the facts behind the conclusions we reach.”
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Tim Mulvey, a committee spokesman, declined to comment to USA TODAY on the reports.
“I don’t leak information and I don’t do course corrections when something that’s leaked is inaccurate,” Mulvey said. “Sorry but I won’t have anything to say about it.”
A sprawling conspiracy?
The panel’s recommendations expected Monday – and the final word release of the panel’s final report – will culminate the congressional investigation into the worst attack on the Capitol in 200 years. About 140 cops were injured within the riot and five later died.
Through a series of nine hearings this yr, the committee found the riot was a part of a sprawling conspiracy moderately than a spontaneous event. Witnesses testified that Trump knew he lost the 2020 election and continued to pressure state officials, the Justice Department and Vice President Mike Pence to overturn the outcomes. And Trump directed the armed mob from his rally near the White House to the Capitol constructing.
U.S. District Judge David Carter has already ruled in a civil lawsuit that Trump and certainly one of his personal lawyers, John Eastman, “more likely than not” acted unlawfully by corruptly attempting to obstruct Congress from counting Electoral College votes. “The illegality of the plan was obvious,” Carter wrote.
Trump, who’s running for president again in 2024, has said he did nothing mistaken Jan. 6, 2021. He has criticized the committee as a partisan hoax.
The panel’s criminal recommendations are non-binding and the Justice Department already has a special counsel, Jack Smith, investigating potential charges against Trump and others. But legal experts said the recommendations would lay out a roadmap for where the evidence leads to potential criminal charges.
Contributing: Ledge King, Ella Lee