The Evening Leader

Committee sets date for findings

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WASHINGTON (AP) — The House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 insurrecti­on at the Capitol will go public with its findings in a prime-time hearing next week, the start of what lawmakers hope will be a high-profile airing of the causes and consequenc­es of the domestic attack on the U.S. government.

Lawmakers plan to hold a series of hearings in June that they promise will lay out, step-by-step, how former President Donald Trump and his allies worked feverishly to overturn his loss in the 2020 presidenti­al election, spreading lies about widespread voter fraud — widely debunked by judges and his own administra­tion — that fueled a violent assault on the seat of democracy.

The six hearings, set to begin June 9 and expected to last until late June, will be the first time the committee discloses “previously unseen material” about what it has discovered in the course of a sprawling 10-month investigat­ion that has touched nearly every aspect of the insurrecti­on.

The committee, which has called Jan. 6 “one of the darkest days of our democracy,” was formed in the aftermath to “investigat­e the facts, circumstan­ces, and causes relating to the domestic terrorist attack on the Capitol.”

Unlike any other congressio­nal committee in recent times, the panel’s work has been both highly anticipate­d by Democrats and routinely criticized by Trump and the former president’s allies, including some Republican­s in Congress, who complain it is partisan.

More than 1,000 people have been interviewe­d by the panel, and only brief snippets of that testimony have been revealed to the public, mostly through court filings. The hearings are expected to showcase a series of witnesses but the committee has not yet publicly released the names.

The investigat­ion has focused on every aspect of the insurrecti­on, including the efforts by Trump and his allies to cast doubt on the election and halt the certificat­ion of President Joe Biden's victory; the financing and organizing of rallies in Washington that took place before the attack; security failures by Capitol Police and federal agencies; and the actions of the rioters themselves.

The hearings are expected to be exhaustive, but not the final word from the committee, which plans to released subsequent reports on its findings, including recommenda­tions on legislativ­e reforms, ahead of the midterm elections.

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