Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Mastriano cuts interview with Jan. 6 panel short

- By Lisa Mascaro and Mark Scolforo

WASHINGTON » Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican governor nominee Doug Mastriano appeared briefly Tuesday before the Jan. 6 committee investigat­ing the U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on but shared little as the panel probes Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election.

Meanwhile, the panel interviewe­d former Secretary of State Mike Pompeo , who is among several of Trump’s former Cabinet officials the committee wanted to talk to after it was disclosed that some of them raised concerns about former president’s actions — going so far as having considered invoking the 25th Amendment process to remove Trump from office after the riot. Pompeo’s appearance was confirmed by a person familiar with the situation but unauthoriz­ed to discuss it publicly.

Mastriano, who was outside the Capitol that day and helped organize efforts in Pennsylvan­ia to submit alternate presidenti­al electors beholden to Trump, cut the interview short. He disputed the validity of the committee and the terms of the appearance, his attorney said.

Mastriano’s attorney, Timothy Parlatore, said his client wanted to be able to record the interview and said little during the brief session, which was over in less than 15 minutes. Parlatore said they plan to challenge the committee in court.

“Because he’s currently in a general election, we just want some protective measures,” Parlatore said in a phone interview, “to prevent them from putting out

a false or misleading quote that would potentiall­y impact the election.”

Committee chairman Rep. Bennie Thompson issued the subpoena for Mastriano in February as the panel intensifie­d its probe of the “fake electors” scheme, seeking documentat­ion from him and others potentiall­y involved and in close contact with Trump.

The committee “is seeking informatio­n about efforts to send false slates of electors to Washington and change the outcome of the 2020 election,” Thompson wrote. “We’re seeking records and testimony from former campaign officials and other individual­s in various states who we believe have relevant informatio­n about the planning and implementa­tion of those plans.”

Mastriano, who organized two buses from central Pennsylvan­ia for the Trump speech that preceded the violent siege and himself had VIP seating at the rally, walked to the Capitol afterward. He had been scheduled to speak on the Capitol steps that afternoon.

Parlatore said Mastriano “knows nothing about any

insurrecti­on” and did not witness any violence or see any firearms. He said his client would be willing to testify publicly before the panel.

A retired Army officer who beat out several candidates to emerge as the GOP nominee for governor in Pennsylvan­ia, Mastriano has previously been willing to talk to the committee. He also spoke with the FBI last year and said he did not know about a planned insurrecti­on, his lawyer has said.

Mastriano has said he had regular calls with thenPresid­ent Donald Trump in the months between Trump’s reelection defeat and the Jan. 6 Capitol riot.

His attorney sought to shield Mastriano from testifying over the alternativ­e electors plan because it was undertaken when his client was a state senator.

Parlatore said much of Mastriano’s contacts with Trump in the lead-up to Jan. 6 involved Mastriano’s capacity as a state lawmaker — a status that complicate­s the committee’s efforts to interview him about what the lawyer described as “alternativ­e electors” to the Electoral College.

Parlatore said he planned to file a court action in Washington, D.C., federal court, seeking to have a judge determine if the Jan. 6 committee’s makeup and procedures violate House rules.

The committee is working through August, deepening its work after blockbuste­r public hearings this summer that began to outline its investigat­ion into Trump’s multiprong­ed effort to reverse his election loss to Joe Biden and the subsequent storming of the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

The scheme to compile alternativ­e electors emerged as a last-ditch plan by Trump’s team to stop Biden’s victory when Congress met for the typical routine job of certifying the state election results.

Growing from Trump’s false claims of voter fraud, the fake electors strategy relied on having several battlegrou­nd states that Biden won submit their tally for the defeated Republican president, rather than the Democratic winner, Biden.

Federal authoritie­s earlier this summer issued subpoenas in several key battlegrou­nd states across the nation to individual­s in Arizona, Pennsylvan­ia, Nevada, Georgia and other Republican officials potentiall­y involved in the strategy to submit electors for Trump.

Prosecutor­s in Georgia are similarly probing Trump’s attempt to subvert the election results in that state.

The Justice Department has charged more than 800 people in the deadly Capitol riot and is investigat­ing Trump’s actions in the run up and aftermath of the insurrecti­on.

 ?? MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Doug Mastriano appeared Tuesday before the Jan. 6 committee investigat­ing the U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on as the panel probes Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election.
MARC LEVY — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Doug Mastriano appeared Tuesday before the Jan. 6 committee investigat­ing the U.S. Capitol insurrecti­on as the panel probes Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election.

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