The Guardian (USA)

Donald Trump formally subpoenaed by January 6 committee

- Hugo Lowell in Washington

The House January 6 select committee has formally transmitte­d a subpoena to Donald Trump, compelling the former president to provide an accounting under oath about his potential foreknowle­dge of the Capitol attack and his broader efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

The subpoena made sweeping requests for documents and testimony, dramatical­ly raising the stakes in the highly charged congressio­nal investigat­ion and setting the stage for a constituti­onally consequent­ial legal battle that could ultimately go before the supreme court.

“Because of your central role in each element”, the panel’s chairman, Bennie Thompson, and vice-chair, Liz Cheney, wrote, “the select committee unanimousl­y directed the issuance of a subpoena seeking your testimony and relevant documents in your possession on these and related topics.”

Most notably, the committee demanded that Trump turn over records of all January 6-related calls and texts sent or received, any communicat­ions with members of Congress, as well as communicat­ions with the far-right Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, extremist groups that stormed the Capitol.

The expansive subpoena ordered Trump to produce documents by 4 November and testify on 14 November about interactio­ns with key advisers who have asserted their fifth amendment right against self-incriminat­ion, including the political operatives Roger Stone and Michael Flynn.

“You were at the center of the first and only effort by any US president to overturn an election and obstruct the peaceful transfer of power,” the panel’s leaders wrote in making the case to subpoena Trump. “The evidence demonstrat­es that you knew this activity was illegal.”

The subpoena also sought materials that appeared destined to be scrutinize­d as part of an obstructio­n investigat­ion conducted by the select committee.

One of the document requests, for instance, was for records about Trump’s efforts to contact witnesses and their lawyers.

The documents request was specifical­ly drafted to cover materials Trump would be able to turn over. The subpoena added: “The attached schedule is narrowly focused on records in your custody and control that you are uniquely positioned to provide to the select committee.”

Thompson transmitte­d the subpoena after investigat­ors spent days drafting the order and attorneys for the select committee contacted multiple lawyers working for Trump to ascertain who was authorized to accept its service.

“We do not take this action lightly,” the subpoena said, noting the historical significan­ce of the moment. But, the subpoena added, this was not the first time that a former president had been subpoenaed – and multiple former presidents have testified to Congress.

Whether Trump will testify remains unclear. Though he has retained the Dhillon Law Group to handle matters relating to the subpoena, the final decision about his cooperatio­n will be based to a large degree on his own instincts, sources close to the former president suggested.

The driving factor pushing Trump to want to testify has centered around a reflexive belief that he can convince investigat­ors that their own inquiry is a witch-hunt and that he should be exonerated over January 6, the sources said. Trump has previously expressed an eagerness to appear before the select committee and “get his pound of flesh” as long as he can appear live, the sources said – a thought he reiterated to close aides last week after the panel voted to issue the subpoena.But Trump also appears to have become more attuned to the pitfalls of testifying in current investigat­ions, with lawyers warning him about mounting legal issues in criminal inquiries brought by the US justice department and a civil lawsuit brought by the New York attorney general.The former president invoked his fifth-amendment right against selfincrim­ination more than 400 times in a deposition with the office of the New York attorney general before the office filed a giant fraud lawsuit against him, three of his children and senior Trump Organizati­on executives. Trump also ultimately took the advice of his lawyers during the special counsel investigat­ion into ties between his 2016 campaign and Russia, submitting only written responses to investigat­ors despite initially telling advisers he wanted to testify to clear his name.

That recent caution has come with

the realizatio­n that Trump could open himself up to legal peril should he testify under oath, given his penchant for misreprese­nting or outright lying about events of any nature – which is a crime before Congress.

Any falsehoods from Trump would almost certainly be caught by the select committee. The subpoena letter said the panel intended to have the questionin­g conducted by attorneys, many of whom are top former justice department lawyers or federal and national security prosecutor­s.

The former president’s testimony and transcript would almost certainly be reviewed by the justice department as part of its criminal probe into various efforts to overturn the 2020 election, which the select committee has alleged was centrally orchestrat­ed by Trump.

But the move to subpoena Trump comes with inherent risks for the panel itself. If it were to allow Trump to testify live, it would be faced with a witness who might self-incriminat­e, but could also use proceeding­s to repeat lies about the 2020 election that led to the Capitol attack.

The select committee might also face a difficult choice of how to proceed should Trump simply ignore the subpoena, claiming the justice department’s internal legal opinions indicate that presidents and former presidents have absolute immunity from testifying to Congress.

Investigat­ors would then have to decide whether to seek judicial enforcemen­t of the subpoena, though such an effort would likely take months – time that the select committee does not have, given it will almost certainly be disbanded at the end of the current Congress in January 2023.

Should the panel instead simply move to hold Trump in contempt of Congress for defying the subpoena – his former strategist Steve Bannon was sentenced Friday to jail for his recalcitra­nce – it remains unclear whether the justice department would prosecute such a referral.

 ?? ?? Donald Trump at a rally in Mesa, Arizona earlier this month. the committee demanded that Trump turn over records of all January 6-related calls and texts sent or received. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters
Donald Trump at a rally in Mesa, Arizona earlier this month. the committee demanded that Trump turn over records of all January 6-related calls and texts sent or received. Photograph: Brian Snyder/Reuters

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