Global Times

US Capitol attack probe to push forward with new witnesses

Secret Service not showing expected cooperatio­n: Cheney

- Reuters

The panel probing the January 6, 2021, assault on the US Capitol plans to push its investigat­ion further in the coming weeks, interviewi­ng additional members of Donald Trump’s cabinet and his campaign, as well as US Secret Service members, the committee’s vice chair said on Sunday.

“We’re not finished yet,” Representa­tive Liz Cheney, one of two Republican­s on the US House of Representa­tives’ select committee, told CNN’s “State of the Union.”

In eight hearings over six weeks featuring testimony from former White House officials and Trump associates, the panel painted the former president as responsibl­e for the attack on the Capitol in a bid to stay in power following his 2020 election loss. The hearings have also outlined efforts by Trump and his allies to overturn the election results.

The committee has yet to decide whether to make a criminal referral concerning Trump’s conduct to the US Justice Department, Cheney said, “but that’s absolutely something we’re looking at.”

Cheney said testimony from Trump aides had opened doors to new evidence as others in the administra­tion have come forward. The committee also continues to seek an interview with Virginia “Ginni” Thomas, the wife of US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, over her role in Trump’s efforts to overturn the election and may subpoena her if necessary, Cheney said.

Cheney said the panel will look into the deletion of text messages by the Secret Service, adding that the agency had not shown the kind of cooperatio­n that was expected.

“The extent to which there are no text messages from the relevant period of time, the extent to which we have not had the kind of cooperatio­n that we really need to have, those are all the things the committee is going to be looking at in more detail in the coming weeks,” Cheney said in a separate interview on “Fox News Sunday.”

Earlier this month, the committee subpoenaed the Secret Service, seeking text messages from January 5 and January 6, 2021, as it investigat­ed accusation­s by a watchdog that they had been erased.

The Secret Service had said that data from some phones had been lost during a system migration that was initiated prior to the watchdog’s request. It handed over some records to the panel on Wednesday and the committee said it wanted more data.

The committee has yet to decide whether to make a criminal referral concerning Trump’s conduct to the US Justice Department, Cheney said, “but that’s absolutely something we’re looking at.”

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