Tag Archives: insurrection

Mark Meadows said National Guard would be ready to ‘protect pro Trump people’ before Capitol insurrection, House investigators say

It was just one of several new details in the report about Meadows’ actions before and during January 6, as well as his role in attempting to overturn the 2020 election. The resolution comes after the panel informed Meadows last week that it had “no choice” but to advance criminal contempt proceedings against him given that he had decided to no longer cooperate.

The committee notes that in one email Meadows sent to an individual about January 6, he said that “the National Guard would be present to ‘protect pro Trump people’ and that many more would be available on standby,” according to the report. The new documents come as Meadows’ role is under renewed scrutiny following his decision to cease cooperating with the committee last week.

Committee chairman Bennie Thompson appeared to allude to this January 5 email about having the National Guard on standby in a letter to Meadows’ attorney last week informing him that the panel would move forward with contempt proceedings.

Thompson also referred to a November 7, 2020, email discussing the appointment of alternate slates of electors as part of a “direct and collateral attack” and a January 5 email that had a 38-page PowerPoint briefing titled “Election Fraud, Foreign Interference & Options for 6 JAN” to be provided “on the hill.”

Meadows, according to the report, “received text messages and emails regarding apparent efforts to encourage Republican legislators in certain States to send alternate slates of electors to Congress, a plan which one Member of Congress acknowledged was ‘highly controversial’ and to which Mr. Meadows responded, ‘I love it.'”

“Mr. Meadows responded to a similar message by saying ‘[w]e are’ and another such message by saying ‘Yes. Have a team on it,'” the report said.

Additionally, the committee notes that Meadows “exchanged text messages with, and provided guidance to, an organizer of the January 6th rally on the Ellipse after the organizer told him that ‘[t]hings have gotten crazy and I desperately need some direction.'”

If Meadows was still cooperating, the committee also said it would inquire about a text exchange with a media personality “who had encouraged the presidential statement asking people to, quote, ‘peacefully leave the Capitol,'” as well as a text sent “to one of— by one of the President’s family members indicating that Mr. Meadows is, quote, ‘pushing hard,’ end quote, for a statement from President Trump to, quote, ‘condemn this shit,’ end quote, happening at the Capitol.”

The committee has previously sought communications between Meadows and certain rally organizers as the panel remains focused on identifying any level of coordination with the Trump White House. The report goes on to note that Meadows was directly involved in efforts to overturn the election results in key swing states Trump lost and helped push unfounded claims about voter fraud.

“Mr. Meadows participated in meetings and calls during which the participants reportedly discussed the need to ”fight” back against ”mounting evidence” of purported voter fraud after courts had considered and overwhelmingly rejected Trump campaign claims of voter fraud and other election irregularities,” it says.

“He participated in one such meeting in the Oval Office with Mr. Trump and Members of Congress, which he publicly tweeted about from his personal Twitter account shortly after. He participated in another such call just days before the January 6 attack with Mr. Trump, Members of Congress, attorneys for the Trump re-election campaign, and ‘some 300′ State and local officials to discuss the goal of overturning certain States’ electoral college results on January 6, 2021,” the report adds.

In response to the panel’s push for criminal contempt proceedings, Meadows filed a lawsuit against House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and select committee members, asking a federal court to block enforcement of the subpoena the committee issued him as well as the subpoena it issued to Verizon for his phone records.

Meadows alleges that the subpoenas are “overly broad and unduly burdensome,” while claiming that the committee “lacks lawful authority to seek and to obtain” the information requested.

Still, prior to Meadows’ decision to halt cooperation with the committee, he had turned over approximately 6,000 pages worth of documents. That includes information from his personal email account and personal cell phone that are relevant to the committee’s investigation.

This story has been updated with additional information Sunday.

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CNN anchor Jim Acosta calls Tucker Carlson’s documentary on the January 6 Capitol insurrection ‘Proud Boy porn’

In this Jan. 6, 2021, file photo insurrectionists loyal to President Donald Trump rally at the U.S. Capitol in Washington. AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana, File

  • “Patriot Purge” is a three-part series that will stream on Fox Nation starting Monday.

  • Tucker Carlson received backlash after releasing a trailer for the documentary earlier this week.

  • CNN anchor Jim Acosta said Carlson is inciting more right-wing violence in the US.

On Saturday, CNN anchor Jim Acosta criticized Fox News, its owners, and Tucker Carlson’s upcoming documentary on the January 6 Capitol insurrection, “Patriot Purge,” which he dubbed as a “propaganda flick” and “Proud Boy porn,” referencing an alt-right, white nationalist hate group.

“The reason why federal investigators and millions of Americans are terrified by right-wing violence in this country is because it keeps happening, and Tucker Carlson is inciting more of it,” Acosta said.

Earlier this week, Carlson received immediate backlash after releasing a trailer for the upcoming series, which baselessly suggests that the Federal Bureau of Investigation was behind the January 6 riot. He even received criticism from one of his Fox News colleagues, Geraldo Rivera, who said in a tweet that the “false flag” conspiracy theory pushed in the documentary is “bullshit.”

The three-part series is slated to air on streaming service Fox Nation starting Monday. Acosta said the Murdoch family, which helms a media empire that comprises Fox News and other outlets, is “cashing in as American democracy is being set ablaze.”

“The Murdochs and Tucker Carlson, their primetime pyromaniac, appear to be hell-bent on dragging this country into a civil war,” Acosta said.

Insider has reached out to Fox News and CNN for comment.

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Amid the Capitol riot, Facebook faced its own insurrection

WASHINGTON (AP) — As supporters of Donald Trump stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6th, battling police and forcing lawmakers into hiding, an insurrection of a different kind was taking place inside the world’s largest social media company.

Thousands of miles away, in California, Facebook engineers were racing to tweak internal controls to slow the spread of misinformation and inciteful content. Emergency actions — some of which were rolled back after the 2020 election — included banning Trump, freezing comments in groups with a record for hate speech, filtering out the “Stop the Steal” rallying cry and empowering content moderators to act more assertively by labeling the U.S. a “Temporary High Risk Location” for political violence.

At the same time, frustration inside Facebook erupted over what some saw as the company’s halting and often reversed response to rising extremism in the U.S.

“Haven’t we had enough time to figure out how to manage discourse without enabling violence?” one employee wrote on an internal message board at the height of the Jan. 6 turmoil. “We’ve been fueling this fire for a long time and we shouldn’t be surprised it’s now out of control.”

It’s a question that still hangs over the company today, as Congress and regulators investigate Facebook’s part in the Jan. 6 riots.

New internal documents provided by former Facebook employee-turned-whistleblower Frances Haugen provide a rare glimpse into how the company appears to have simply stumbled into the Jan. 6 riot. It quickly became clear that even after years under the microscope for insufficiently policing its platform, the social network had missed how riot participants spent weeks vowing — on Facebook itself — to stop Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s election victory.

The documents also appear to bolster Haugen’s claim that Facebook put its growth and profits ahead of public safety, opening the clearest window yet into how Facebook’s conflicting impulses — to safeguard its business and protect democracy — clashed in the days and weeks leading up to the attempted Jan. 6 coup.

This story is based in part on disclosures Haugen made to the Securities and Exchange Commission and provided to Congress in redacted form by Haugen’s legal counsel. The redacted versions received by Congress were obtained by a consortium of news organizations, including The Associated Press.

What Facebook called “Break the Glass” emergency measures put in place on Jan. 6 were essentially a toolkit of options designed to stem the spread of dangerous or violent content that the social network had first used in the run-up to the bitter 2020 election. As many as 22 of those measures were rolled back at some point after the election, according to an internal spreadsheet analyzing the company’s response.

“As soon as the election was over, they turned them back off or they changed the settings back to what they were before, to prioritize growth over safety,” Haugen said in an interview with “60 Minutes.”

An internal Facebook report following Jan. 6, previously reported by BuzzFeed, faulted the company for having a “piecemeal” approach to the rapid growth of “Stop the Steal” pages, related misinformation sources, and violent and inciteful comments.

Facebook says the situation is more nuanced and that it carefully calibrates its controls to react quickly to spikes in hateful and violent content, as it did on Jan 6. The company said it’s not responsible for the actions of the rioters and that having stricter controls in place prior to that day wouldn’t have helped.

Facebook’s decisions to phase certain safety measures in or out took into account signals from the Facebook platform as well as information from law enforcement, said spokeswoman Dani Lever. “When those signals changed, so did the measures.”

Lever said some of the measures stayed in place well into February and others remain active today.

Some employees were unhappy with Facebook’s managing of problematic content even before the Jan. 6 riots. One employee who departed the company in 2020 left a long note charging that promising new tools, backed by strong research, were being constrained by Facebook for “fears of public and policy stakeholder responses” (translation: concerns about negative reactions from Trump allies and investors).

“Similarly (though even more concerning), I’ve seen already built & functioning safeguards being rolled back for the same reasons,” wrote the employee, whose name is blacked out.

Research conducted by Facebook well before the 2020 campaign left little doubt that its algorithm could pose a serious danger of spreading misinformation and potentially radicalizing users.

One 2019 study, entitled “Carol’s Journey to QAnon—A Test User Study of Misinfo & Polarization Risks Encountered through Recommendation Systems,” described results of an experiment conducted with a test account established to reflect the views of a prototypical “strong conservative” — but not extremist — 41-year North Carolina woman. This test account, using the fake name Carol Smith, indicated a preference for mainstream news sources like Fox News, followed humor groups that mocked liberals, embraced Christianity and was a fan of Melania Trump.

Within a single day, page recommendations for this account generated by Facebook itself had evolved to a “quite troubling, polarizing state,” the study found. By day 2, the algorithm was recommending more extremist content, including a QAnon-linked group, which the fake user didn’t join because she wasn’t innately drawn to conspiracy theories.

A week later the test subject’s feed featured “a barrage of extreme, conspiratorial and graphic content,” including posts reviving the false Obama birther lie and linking the Clintons to the murder of a former Arkansas state senator. Much of the content was pushed by dubious groups run from abroad or by administrators with a track record for violating Facebook’s rules on bot activity.

Those results led the researcher, whose name was redacted by the whistleblower, to recommend safety measures running from removing content with known conspiracy references and disabling “top contributor” badges for misinformation commenters to lowering the threshold number of followers required before Facebook verifies a page administrator’s identity.

Among the other Facebook employees who read the research the response was almost universally supportive.

“Hey! This is such a thorough and well-outlined (and disturbing) study,” one user wrote, their name blacked out by the whistleblower. “Do you know of any concrete changes that came out of this?”

Facebook said the study was an one of many examples of its commitment to continually studying and improving its platform.

Another study turned over to congressional investigators, titled “Understanding the Dangers of Harmful Topic Communities,” discussed how like-minded individuals embracing a borderline topic or identity can form “echo chambers” for misinformation that normalizes harmful attitudes, spurs radicalization and can even provide a justification for violence.

Examples of such harmful communities include QAnon and, hate groups promoting theories of a race war.

“The risk of offline violence or harm becomes more likely when like-minded individuals come together and support one another to act,” the study concludes.

Charging documents filed by federal prosecutors against those alleged to have stormed the Capitol have examples of such like-minded people coming together.

Prosecutors say a reputed leader in the Oath Keepers militia group used Facebook to discuss forming an “alliance” and coordinating plans with another extremist group, the Proud Boys, ahead of the riot at the Capitol.

“We have decided to work together and shut this s—t down,” Kelly Meggs, described by authorities as the leader of the Florida chapter of the Oath Keepers, wrote on Facebook, according to court records.

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Lindsey Graham: Police need ‘to take a firm line’ with Sept. 18 rally attendees

Sen. Lindsey GrahamLindsey Olin GrahamOvernight Defense & National Security — Milley becomes lightning rod Joint Chiefs Chairman Milley becomes lightning rod on right GOP senators unveil bill designating Taliban as terrorist organization MORE (R-SC) said he expects to see law enforcement take a zero-tolerance approach in response to any violent behavior during a right-wing rally slated for Washington, D.C., this weekend. 

The rally, in support of rioters arrested in connection with the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol, is scheduled for Saturday afternoon and is expected to draw hundreds of people to the nation’s capital. 

“They need to take a firm line, buddy,” Graham told the New York Times of the local police presence at the event. “If anybody gets out of line, they need to whack ’em.”

The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) reportedly expects bout 700 people to attend the weekend rally, and crews began constructing Security fencing and barriers around the Capitol Complex in anticipation of the large crowd’s arrival. 

Local police departments and federal officials say they remain on high alert ahead of the event, dubbed “Justice for J6”, which some Republican lawmakers have either not acknowledged or downplayed the significance of. 

“I don’t expect a lot of people there,” Sen. Tommy Tuberville (R-Ala.) told the Times. “I haven’t heard anything about it. I will not be there.”

The rally comes as some Republican leaders work to move on from the violent events of the Jan. 6 Capitol riot. 

“Republicans want the midterms to be a referendum on Biden,” GOP strategist Alex Conant told The Hill this week. “The Democrats will want it to be about Donald TrumpDonald TrumpFormer Sen. Heller to run for Nevada governor Overnight Defense & National Security — Milley becomes lightning rod Joint Chiefs Chairman Milley becomes lightning rod on right MORE. It’s clear that every Democrat is going to do what Newsom did in California and try to make their own reelection about the former president.”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnellAddison (Mitch) Mitchell McConnellCEOs urge Congress to raise debt limit or risk ‘avoidable crisis’ Capito grills EPA nominee on ‘#ResistCapitalism’ tweet Hassan launches first ad of reelection bid focusing on veterans’ issues MORE (R-Ky.) said he is confident police will be “equipped to handle” any scenario that plays out on Saturday. 

Graham, once a close all of Trump, voted to certify President BidenJoe BidenOvernight Defense & National Security — Milley becomes lightning rod Democrats hope Biden can flip Manchin and Sinema On The Money — Presented by Wells Fargo — Democrats advance tax plan through hurdles MORE‘s victory following the attack on the Capitol and the day after the insurrection said Trump’s legacy was “tarnished” by the incident. 

“The president needs to understand that his actions were the problem, not the solution,” Graham said at the time. “The rally yesterday was unseemly, it got out of hand.” 



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Fourth police officer who responded to Jan. 6 attack dies by suicide

A fourth law enforcement officer who responded to the Capitol on Jan. 6 has died by suicide, the Metropolitan Police Department confirmed to The Hill on Monday.

A department spokesman said Officer Kyle DeFreytag, who had been with the department since November 2016, was found dead on July 10. He was 26 years old. Police confirmed DeFreytag was among a host of MPD officers who were sent to the Capitol in response to the riot.

WUSA9, a CBS affiliate in Washington, D.C. was the first to report that DeFreytag died by suicide last month. 

“I am writing to share tragic news that Officer Kyle DeFreytag of the 5th District was found deceased last evening,” Chief Robert J. Contee III wrote in a message to the department in mid-July, according to WUSA9. “This is incredibly hard news for us all, and for those that knew him best.”

The news comes on the same day that  MPD officials confirmed a third police officer death by suicide in the wake of the riot. Earlier on Monday, it was reported that Gunther Hashida was found dead in his home Thursday.

Hashida died two days after the House select committee probing the Jan. 6 attack held its first hearing, during which four police officers from MPD and Capitol Police delivered dramatic testimony about the riot and their experiences defending the Capitol. 

Officers testified that the attack had left a profound toll on the law enforcement officials who responded. 

Capitol Police officer Howard Liebengood and MPD officer Jeffrey Smith both died of suicide in the days following the January incident.



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McCarthy Names GOP Members of Committee Investigating Insurrection

  • Rep. Kevin McCarthy has named GOP members to the House group set to investigate the Capitol riot.
  • Three of the members voted against certifying some of the 2020 election results.
  • House Speaker Nancy Pelosi could veto McCarthy’s selections, though it’s unclear whether she will.

House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy has named five Republicans to serve on the January 6 House select committee set to investigate the January 6 attack on the US Capitol.

According to the Washington Post reporter Marianna Sotomayor, Rep. Jim Banks was chosen to serve as the ranking member, joined by Reps. Jim Jordan, Rodney Davis, Kelly Armstrong, and Troy Nehls.

Banks, Jordan, and Nehls voted against certifying the 2020 election results in Arizona and Pennsylvania, two states where Joe Biden won, even after a pro-Trump mob stormed the Capitol in an attempt to disrupt the results’ certification.

The legislation that established the committee is worded in a way that would allow House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to veto any of McCarthy’s selections. It wasn’t immediately clear whether she planned to do so.



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DOJ charges 5 Floridians accused of attacking 7 police officers during Capitol insurrection

Prosecutors say the defendants, all from the Tampa Bay area, repeatedly attacked members of Washington, DC’s police force. They allegedly used stolen riot shields and flagpoles to assault officers in the head and neck, and later resorted to punching, kicking, and elbowing the officers.

The indictment includes 19 criminal counts, which is among the most for a Capitol riot case.

Four of the defendants were arrested last week, and they pleaded not guilty Thursday in DC federal court. Three were released and a fourth is in jail while a judge considers a request from prosecutors to keep him detained before trial. The fifth defendant hasn’t been located and “remains at large,” the Justice Department said in a press release.

Prosecutors say Jonathan Pollock charged at police with a flagpole, dragged two officers down a set of stairs, kneed a police officer, punched two officers in the face, grabbed at one officer’s neck and pinned them to the ground, and rammed a stolen police shield into an officer’s throat.

He wore tactical gear and a military outfit and was at the Capitol with his sister, Olivia Pollock. Prosecutors say she elbowed a police officer and repeatedly tried to rip away officers’ batons.

The charging documents say that Michael Perkins threw a flagpole at the police line, and later “thrust[ed] the flagpole into the chest of a police officer.” After that happened, Perkins allegedly raised the flagpole over his head and swung it at an officer, either hitting their head or back.

Prosecutors say Joseph Hutchinson helped breach a fence and kicked officers that were trying to prevent rioters from further breaching the Capitol. Hutchinson was also wearing tactical gear.

This was “a coordinated group of individuals who stuck with each other and facilitated each other’s assaults,” federal prosecutor Benet Kearney said Thursday at a court hearing.

A fifth man, Joshua Doolin, was charged with the group but isn’t accused of assaulting anyone. Prosecutors said he was spotted near the Capitol carrying “zip tie handcuffs tucked in his belt” and that he had a canister of chemical irritants that “appear to belong” to police, for use in riot control situations. Prosecutors didn’t say how Doolin obtained the canister or the handcuffs.

The case highlights the violence that police faced at the hands of the pro-Trump mob, which many officers have described as a harrowing life-or-death experience. Nonetheless, many of former President Donald Trump’s allies have whitewashed the events of January 6, downplayed the violence, and claimed that the crowd basically resembled a routine tourist visit at the Capitol.

Nearly 530 people have been charged with crimes stemming from the Capitol attack. All five defendants in this case hail from Florida, which has the most defendants of any state in the country, with 62 in total. The states with the next-most defendants are Pennsylvania and Texas.

Doolin, Hutchinson and Olivia Pollock pleaded not guilty at a court hearing Thursday. All three are out of jail — Hutchinson is on home detention, the other two are getting GPS monitoring. Perkins is still in jail, and prosecutors say he is too dangerous to release. A judge will decide next week whether to keep him detained. He pleaded not guilty.

Authorities still haven’t located Jonathan Pollack.

This story has been updated with additional developments Thursday.

CNN’s Hannah Rabinowitz contributed to this report.

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Liz Cheney will serve on committee that will investigate January 6 insurrection

“We are very honored and proud she has agreed to serve on the committee,” Pelosi said at a news conference on Thursday.

Pelosi announced that the committee will be chaired by Rep. Bennie Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat and chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, which has already been probing the January 6 Capitol riots. But Pelosi’s decision to name Cheney among her eight selections for the select committee underscored the speaker’s desire for the investigation into January 6 to have a bipartisan imprimatur amid Republican attacks that the endeavor is simply an effort to score political points against Trump.

The appointment comes after Cheney was removed from GOP House leadership in the wake of her vote to impeach Trump and her continued criticism of his lies about the election being stolen from him. It also follows a warning issued this week from House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, who backed the effort to push Cheney out of House leadership, for Republicans not to accept an appointment from Pelosi.

“I’m honored to have been named to serve on the January 6th select committee. Congress is obligated to conduct a full investigation of the most serious attack on our Capitol since 1814. That day saw the most sacred space in our Republic overrun by an angry and violent mob attempting to stop the counting of electoral votes and threatening the peaceful transfer of power,” Cheney said in a written statement.

“Those who are responsible for the attack need to be held accountable and this select committee will fulfill that responsibility in a professional, expeditious, and non-partisan manner,” she added.

Under the House’s resolution, Pelosi appoints eight members to the commission and McCarthy has five slots “in consultation” with Pelosi — meaning the House speaker could veto his selections.

McCarthy told reporters at his weekly press conference he was shocked Cheney had accepted a committee assignment from Pelosi.

“It would seem to me, since I didn’t hear from her, that maybe she’s closer to (Pelosi) than us,” McCarthy said.

On Wednesday, McCarthy threatened members of his own party that he would strip any Republican member of their committee assignments if they accepted an offer from Pelosi.

McCarthy said Thursday he wasn’t threatening anyone with committee assignments, but suggested it was unprecedented for a lawmaker to accept assignments from the leader of the opposing party.

“I don’t know in history where someone would go get their committee assignments from the speaker and expect them to have them from the conference as well,” he said.

McCarthy once again declined to say Thursday whether he would appoint Republicans to the select committee. Two GOP sources told CNN they believe he won’t.

If he does not do so, Cheney’s appointment means there will be at least some GOP representation on the select committee.

A senior Democratic aide responded to McCarthy’s statement by countering, “No one can recall an example, but when was the last time the Capitol was sacked and one of the parties (tried) to whitewash it?”

The select committee is expected to investigate the circumstances leading up to the deadly January 6 insurrection and the security failures that followed when pro-Trump supporters breached the Capitol and disrupted Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s November election victory. That’s likely to include an examination of how the rioters were influenced by Trump’s repeated lies about the election being stolen from him, and it also could touch on the role that lawmakers played, including McCarthy’s phone conversation with Trump as the attack was unfolding.

In addition to Thompson and Cheney, Pelosi named Democratic Reps. Zoe Lofgren of California, Adam Schiff of California, Pete Aguilar of California, Stephanie Murphy, of Florida, Jamie Raskin of Maryland and Elaine Luria of Virginia.

The roster of Democrats includes a mix of committee chairs like Lofgren and Schiff as well as moderate Democrats Murphy and Luria. Raskin was the House’s lead impeachment manager following Trump’s second impeachment over his role in the January 6 attack.

Asked by CNN how she approached Cheney to serve on the committee, Pelosi said, “The conversation resembled Congresswoman Cheney’s public statements.”

Asked about McCarthy’s threat of removing Cheney from her committees, Pelosi said: “That’s a matter for the Republican caucus.”

Pelosi moved forward with a select committee after Senate Republicans blocked the creation of a bipartisan commission to investigate the January 6 attack.

Cheney and Illinois Rep. Adam Kinzinger were the only Republicans to vote in favor of the select committee on Wednesday, after 35 House Republicans had backed the independent commission. Afterward, Cheney had harsh words for her fellow Republicans who had blocked the committee.

“Since January 6th, the courage of my party’s leaders has faded. But the threat to our Republic has not,” Cheney wrote in a statement. “On an almost daily basis, Donald Trump repeats the same statements that provoked violence before. His attacks on our Constitution are accelerating. Our responsibility is to confront these threats, not appease and deflect.”

Cheney, the former No. 3 House Republican, was the highest-ranking Republican who supported the impeachment of Trump on the charge “incitement of insurrection” in January.

After her vote for the committee on Wednesday, Cheney hugged Gladys Sicknick, the mother of fallen Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick.

Pelosi did not have a time frame for when the select committee would start its work, as the next step is for McCarthy to announce his selections — if he does so.

When asked when the committee would start working, Pelosi said, “When we have a quorum.”

This story has been updated with additional reporting.

CNN’s Jamie Gangel contributed to this report.

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Jayapal asks for investigations into three GOP members for their role in instigating the Capitol Insurrection

Jayapal asks the two groups to “thoroughly investigate” the activity of the three members of Congress — Republican Reps. Lauren Boebert of Colorado, Mo Brooks of Alabama and Paul Gosar of Arizona — in the time leading up to the insurrection and refer all potential criminal wrongdoing to the Department of Justice.

For each member, Jayapal lists examples of their conduct in the weeks before January 6. Many of the examples have been frequently reported on, such as Boebert filming herself carrying a concealed firearm around the Capitol Grounds, the fiery speech Brooks gave at the Trump rally on the day of the insurrection and Gosar’s ties to extremist groups. The letter also makes note of Boebert’s tweets regarding House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s location on the day of the insurrection.

“It’s clear what I believe to be clear violation of our ethical standards and our responsibilities as members of Congress. That is what the House Ethics Committee can look at,” Jaypal said in an interview with CNN. “But I also think that there are other pieces here that are even beyond just service in the House that are federal statutes. And so that’s why we asked for the referrals to the Department of Justice.”

All three Republican members have all denied responsibility for instigating the riot.

“Rep. Jaypal needs to spend more time investigating the insurrection that took place in her own district over the summer and less time trying to connect me to the attack on our Capitol that I have repeatedly condemned,” said Rep. Boebert in a statement to CNN. Separately, in a tweet on January 18, Boebert wrote, “All claims of my involvement with the attacks on January 6th are categorically false. These lies are irresponsible and dangerous.”

Brooks, for instance, previously released a lengthy statement explaining what the purpose of his speech was on the day of the rally. He claims it was about fighting at the ballot box, not aimed at provoking actual violence.

In a tweet on January 18, Boebert wrote “All claims of my involvement with the attacks on January 6th are categorically false. These lies are irresponsible and dangerous.”

Gosar’s denials have been less clear. In a tweet on that day he posted a photo of rioters scaling a wall of the Capitol “let’s not get carried away.” He also did encourage those approaching the Capitol to “come back.” However in subsequent posts on the defunct social media platform Parler he referenced the rioters and said “Americans are upset.”

In the days following the deadly insurrection, Democrats were quick to point fingers at some their Republican colleagues for their close association with former President Donald Trump’s false claims that the election was stolen. Their criticism ranged from accusing their colleagues of playing an indirect role in contributing to the violence to others claiming that they could be criminally responsible. Rep. Mikie Sherrill, a New Jersey Democrat, claimed that unnamed Republican members were giving “reconnaissance” tours to potential insurrectionists the day before.

Federal authorities have said they are investigating the possibility that some of those that participated in the riot may have been given tours ahead of time, but have stopped short of saying any lawmakers did so with the express purpose of helping the rioters prepare to attack the Capitol.

Democratic Rep. Steve Cohen of Tennessee specifically accused Boebert of being among those giving tours ahead of the riot, a claim she has strenuously denied. Though she has acknowledged giving tours to family members in the days before the riot

While investigations into the January 6 continue, Jayapal fears her Republican colleagues have not been held accountable for the role they played.

“These three members seem to be emboldened by the fact that there hasn’t been really any accountability for them. There hasn’t been any accountability at all,” she said. “And that is unacceptable I think and that’s why I’m asking for these investigations.”

Federal investigators are currently examining records of communication between members of Congress and some of the suspects involved in the riot on January 6. One official told CNN last week that no members of Congress are considered targets of their probe, but should probable cause be discovered that could lead to warrants to learn more about what was in that communication.

According to Jayapal, the Office of Congressional Ethics, which is an independent nonpartisan panel, will conduct a review of her claim and has thirty days to see if cause exists for full-fledged investigation. If that investigation draws a conclusion that a substantial reason to believe wrongdoing occurred they will submit a recommendation to the House Committee on Ethics which will decide on a course of action. Separately, Jayapal is also directly asking the Committee, which is made of members of Congress, to conduct its own investigation. Both the Office of Congressional Ethics and the House Committee on Ethics do not comment on pending investigations.

Jayapal said that part of her motivation to seek these investigations is the continued unease by many members about their own personal safety within the halls of Congress. The House Chamber currently has metal detectors stationed outside each entrance and the security posture throughout the Capitol Campus remains intense with razor wire adorned fencing patrolled by thousands of National Guard troops.

Part of her worry is that the threat to her security may come from her fellow member of Congress.

“I still worry about my safety and my security when I’m inside Congress, not just when I leave,” Jaypal said. “And that is very troubling. I’ve only been here for four years, but I’ve not felt that before. And, and I feel it from my colleagues. I don’t know, who my colleagues are engaging with, I don’t know what their role was. And I do think that that is part of the reason these letters are so important.”

Jayapal is not the only Democrat looking into the role her colleagues may have played in the events leading up to January 6th. Rep. Zoe Lofgren recently released a 2,000-page report that outlined the social media activity of several GOP members ahead of the insurrection.

This story has been updated with additional developments Wednesday.

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US Capitol riot: House Democrat sues Donald Trump under post-Civil War era law for conspiracy to incite insurrection

The lawsuit, filed by Mississippi Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson in his personal capacity, is the first civil action filed against the former President related to the attack at the US Capitol and comes days after the Senate acquitted Trump in his impeachment trial.

If it proceeds, it would mean the former President and others would be subject to discovery and depositions, potentially exposing details and evidence that weren’t released during the Senate impeachment trial.

Thompson points to Trump’s words and tweets in the months leading up to the insurrection to accuse Trump and Giuliani of mobilizing and preparing their supporters for an attack to prevent Congress from certifying the 2020 election results on January 6.

The lawsuit cites a scarcely used federal statute passed after the Civil War that was intended to combat violence from the Ku Klux Klan; it allows civil actions to be brought against people who use “force, intimidation, or threat” to prevent anyone from upholding the duties of their office.

The NAACP is backing the lawsuit and helping to represent Thompson in court.

“As part of this unified plan to prevent the counting of Electoral College votes,” the lawsuit states, “Defendants Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, through their leadership, acted in concert to spearhead the assault on the Capitol while the angry mob that Defendants Trump and Giuliani incited descended on the Capitol. The carefully orchestrated series of events that unfolded at the Save America rally and the storming of the Capitol was no accident or coincidence. It was the intended and foreseeable culmination of a carefully coordinated campaign to interfere with the legal process required to confirm the tally of votes cast in the Electoral College.”

READ: Former President Donald Trump’s January 6 speech

The former President and many Republicans argued the impeachment trial was unconstitutional because he is no longer in office. As such, Thompson notes Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell’s speech Saturday where the Kentucky Republican seemed to encourage litigation against Trump.

“We have a criminal justice system in this country. We have civil litigation,” McConnell said after voting to acquit Trump. “And former presidents are not immune from being accountable by either one.”

CNN has reached out to attorneys for Trump and Giuliani for comment on this lawsuit.

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi has been briefed on the lawsuit, a source tells CNN.

Says Trump’s words spurred the riots

Thompson’s lawsuit ties Trump’s repeated refusal to accept the election results in the weeks after November 3 to the threats of violence against elected officials like Michigan Secretary of State Jocelyn Benson, accusing Trump of endorsing the threats rather than denouncing them. The lawsuit also alleges that Trump’s refusal to directly condemn the Proud Boys during the first Presidential debate in September encouraged their violent plans leading up to January 6.

The lawsuit links the hours-long standoff at the Capitol directly to Trump’s rally earlier in the day where the former President told his supporters, “…if you don’t fight like hell, you’re not going to have a country anymore.”

Trump also said, “You have to show strength, and you have to be strong.”

Giuliani, the lawsuit alleges, also riled up the crowd by continuing to talk about unfounded allegations of widespread voter fraud and telling supporters on January 6: “Let’s have trial by combat.”

The lawsuit accuses Trump of delaying the delivery of his speech to the crowd at the Ellipse on January 6 as a way to give the Proud Boys time to get to the Capitol and overcome the police presence there, though there is no evidence provided that Trump’s speech was delayed or that any delay was intentional.

In addition to Trump and Giuliani, the lawsuit names the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers as defendants.

Several members of these far-right groups have been charged for their involvement in the riot. The Justice Department has charged more than a dozen Proud Boys so far for storming the Capitol, and recently brought conspiracy charges against a group of five people associated with the group. DOJ also indicted three members of the Oath Keepers in late January, including one member, Jessica Watkins, whose attorney told the judge last week that she believed she was following directions from Trump.

KKK statute

The legal underpinnings of the lawsuit could face an uphill battle in court, since the KKK statute has not been widely used.

“It was specifically meant to provide federal civil remedies for federal officers who were prevented from performing their duties by two or more individuals, whether federal marshals in the post-Civil War South, federal judges in un-reconstructed lower courts; or federal legislators,” University of Texas Law professor and Supreme Court analyst Stephen Vladeck explained.

“It’s not at all hard to see how that provision maps onto what happened on January 6 — where, quite obviously, two or more people conspired to prevent the Joint Session of Congress from performing its constitutional function of certifying President Biden’s Electoral College victory. The harder question is whether Trump himself can be connected to that conspiracy,” Vladeck said.

Attorney Joseph Sellers, who is representing Thompson, said that the specific purpose of the statute was to provide a remedy against efforts to interfere with Congress’ duties.

“The fact that there’s very little precedent [involving this section of the statute] is a reflection of how extraordinary the events were that give rise to this lawsuit,” Sellers said.

Other members of Congress, including Democratic Reps. Hank Johnson of Georgia and Bonnie Watson Coleman of New Jersey intend to join the lawsuit as plaintiffs, according to a statement that accompanied the lawsuit.

“While the majority of Republicans in the Senate abdicated their responsibility to hold the President accountable, we must hold him accountable for the insurrection that he so blatantly planned,” Thompson said in the statement. “Failure to do so will only invite this type of authoritarianism for the anti-democratic forces on the far right that are so intent on destroying our country.”

This story has been updated with additional details of the lawsuit.

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