January 6th hearings on Trump's failed insurrection.

DIY-HP-LED

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Woodward: Telephone-addict Trump likely used phone during Jan. 6 gap in phone record

CNN’s John King speaks with Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward about his report that official White House phone records show a more than seven-hour gap in phone calls to and from then-President Donald Trump on January 6, 2021.
 

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DOJ's Jan. 6 probe expands to rally preparations, conspiracies: report
The Department of Justice is expanding its probe of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack to include the events leading up to the preceding rally, and the wider conspiracies that fueled the violence, people familiar with the issue told The Washington Post.

Before supporters of former President Trump attacked the Capitol, many participated in a rally that had multiple speakers, including Trump himself.

Sources told The Post the DOJ is now looking to the planning of the rally and the conspiracy theories that surrounded the event.

The rally was based around the false claims that Trump won the 2020 presidential election and that election fraud was the reason President Biden won.

DOJ has begun issuing subpoenas to investigate the funding, planning and who was involved in the event. People familiar with the issue told The Post the subpoenas were issued against those in Trump’s circle, but would not say what they requested or who received them.

Investigations into the rally could include how protesters got the money to go to Washington, D.C. and who was behind the planning of the incident.

Hundreds have been arrested over their roles in Jan. 6 riot, which led to multiple deaths and destruction of the Capitol building, in one of the largest criminal investigations in the U.S.
 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
DOJ's Jan. 6 probe expands to rally preparations, conspiracies: report
The Department of Justice is expanding its probe of the Jan. 6 Capitol attack to include the events leading up to the preceding rally, and the wider conspiracies that fueled the violence, people familiar with the issue told The Washington Post.

Before supporters of former President Trump attacked the Capitol, many participated in a rally that had multiple speakers, including Trump himself.

Sources told The Post the DOJ is now looking to the planning of the rally and the conspiracy theories that surrounded the event.

The rally was based around the false claims that Trump won the 2020 presidential election and that election fraud was the reason President Biden won.

DOJ has begun issuing subpoenas to investigate the funding, planning and who was involved in the event. People familiar with the issue told The Post the subpoenas were issued against those in Trump’s circle, but would not say what they requested or who received them.

Investigations into the rally could include how protesters got the money to go to Washington, D.C. and who was behind the planning of the incident.

Hundreds have been arrested over their roles in Jan. 6 riot, which led to multiple deaths and destruction of the Capitol building, in one of the largest criminal investigations in the U.S.
Google is their friend. Much information that they are looking for already exists because it's been reported on by Media.
 

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Official review found Jan. 6 White House phone records complete: report

An official review found that the White House phone records for Jan. 6, 2021, are complete, CNN reported Thursday, citing a source familiar with the matter, following reports earlier in the week that the call logs given to the House select committee investigating the attack on the Capitol had a gap of more than seven hours that day.

The source told CNN that no pages were found to be missing from the six-page White House phone logs from Jan. 6.
The outlet also reported, citing multiple sources familiar, that the Jan. 6 phone records appear typical based on former President Trump’s habits. Trump often opted to have staff use landlines or cellphones to place calls for him while he was in the Oval Office, which would not be recorded in the White House switchboard records, sources told CNN.

Meanwhile, Axios reported on Thursday, citing three sources with knowledge on the matter, that Trump’s executive assistant, Molly Michael, was absent most of Jan. 6 for personal reasons. Michael’s duties included keeping notes on Trump’s unscheduled calls and meetings, per the outlet.

This comes after The Washington Post and CBS News reported on Tuesday, citing documents they had obtained, that White House logs given to the committee by the National Archives earlier this year show a gap of 7 hours and 37 minutes between 11:17 a.m. and 6:54 p.m. on Jan. 6, 2021.
During the gap in the White House logs that day, Trump allegedly spoke with then-Vice President Mike Pence, House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy (R-Calif.) and Sen. Mike Lee (R-Utah); he reportedly called Lee in order to get in touch with Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.), among others.

In response to reporting that the committee is investigating whether Trump used personal disposable phones to communicate that day, the former president reportedly said in a statement on Monday that he had “no idea what a burner phone is, to the best of my knowledge I have never even heard the term.” His former national security adviser John Bolton has pushed back on that claim.

A spokesperson for Trump told multiple outlets the records were not controlled by Trump and he believed all his communications were logged that day.
 

DIY-HP-LED

Well-Known Member
That's just elected officials, there were other unelected republicans involved too. There was as much law breaking going on in the statehouses, as in the capitol on 1/6
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'Nearly 300' GOP state legislators may be implicated in Trump's coup attempt
 
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