The Sun (San Bernardino)

Witness details pressure push from Trump allies

- By Eric Tucker

Former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson described to the House Jan. 6 committee a wide-ranging pressure campaign from Donald Trump’s allies aimed at influencin­g her cooperatio­n with Congress and stifling potentiall­y damaging testimony about him.

In extraordin­ary closeddoor testimony made public Thursday, Hutchinson recounted how those in the former president’s circle dangled job opportunit­ies and financial assistance as she was cooperatin­g with the committee investigat­ing the Capitol riot and how her own lawyer — a former ethics counsel in the Trump White House — advised her against being fully forthcomin­g with lawmakers and told her “the less you remember, the better.”

The nine-member committee released two neverbefor­e-seen transcript­s of Hutchinson’s testimony as it tries to wrap up its investigat­ion and make its work public. The committee, which will dissolve when Republican­s take over the House on Jan. 3, was also expected to release its final report Thursday.

The transcript­s provide previously unknown details about what Hutchinson called the “moral struggle” — torn between the desire to speak the truth and to remain loyal to Trump — that she says she endured on the way to becoming one of the most memorable witnesses of the committee’s investigat­ion.

In a televised hearing in June, Hutchinson went public about Trump’s actions on Jan. 6, 2021. She described his directive

DOWN

that magnetomet­ers be removed from a rally of his supporters that day and detailed his angry — and ultimately rebuffed — demands to be taken by the Secret Service to the Capitol to join the crowd trying to disrupt the congressio­nal certificat­ion of Democrat Joe Biden’s election as president.

“In my mind this whole time I felt this moral struggle,” she said, according to the transcript­s. She described a first interview with the committee in which she concealed testimony about Trump that, months later, she would deliver to a rapt hearing room.

Looking back now, she added, “It feels ridiculous, because in my heart I knew where my loyalties lied, and my loyalties lied with the truth. And I never wanted to diverge from that. You know, I never wanted or thought that I would be the witness that I have become, because I thought that more people would be willing to speak out too.”

But to hear her tell it, that testimony was never a sure thing.

Like other aides whose proximity to Trump entangled them in investigat­ions, Hutchinson scrambled to find a lawyer after receiving a subpoena from the committee last year. Former White House officials and Trump allies worked to line up a lawyer for her despite her own discomfort at being represente­d by someone in “Trump world” — an affiliatio­n she feared would make her “indebted to these people.”

She said she was contacted in February by Stefan Passantino, a former White House ethics counsel, who told her he would be her lawyer. He said she would not have to pay for his services but demurred when she asked from where the money was coming. She later learned that it was from Trump allies.

“If you want to know at the end, we’ll let you know,” she described him as saying, “but we’re not telling people where funding is coming from right now. Don’t worry, we’re taking care of you. Like, you’re never going to get a bill for this.”

As Hutchinson prepared for her first interview with the committee later that month, she said Passantino advised her to “keep your answers short, sweet, and simple, seven words or less. The less the committee thinks you know, the better, the quicker it’s going to go.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States