Albuquerque Journal

1/6 panel postpones hearing with ex-Justice Dept. officials

Spokesman attributes delay to ‘number of scheduling factors’

- BY ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — The House committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol has postponed a hearing that was to feature dramatic testimony from former Justice Department officials who were pressured by thenPresid­ent Donald Trump to pursue his false election fraud theories.

The hearing had been scheduled for Wednesday, but the committee on Tuesday morning said that it had been delayed. A spokesman for the panel attributed the postponeme­nt to “a number of scheduling factors, including production timeline and availabili­ty of members and witnesses.”

Rep. Adam Kinzinger, a Republican member of the committee, said on Twitter that the hearing had been moved to next week as a way to “space out” the testimony surroundin­g the insurrecti­on, when crowds of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol and interrupte­d the certificat­ion of President Joe Biden’s victory.

The committee has already held two hearings, including a primetime one last week that featured never-before-seen video of extremists leading the deadly siege. Another hearing is set to take place on Thursday.

The witnesses at Wednesday’s hearing were to include Jeffrey Rosen, who was the acting attorney general at the time of the Capitol insurrecti­on, as well as two other former top officials at the Justice Department, Richard Donoghue and Steven Engel. Lawyers for all three men did not immediatel­y return messages seeking comment.

The witnesses, all of whom have since left the Justice Department, are expected to testify about how Trump sought to bend the department to his political will during the final days of his administra­tion by urging officials to declare the election as corrupt and to aid in his efforts to challenge the results of the race won by Democrat Joe Biden.

Though the lawyers’ accounts have been documented by the news media, the hearing will give the American public its most detailed glimpse of a nearrevolt inside the Justice Department as Trump contemplat­ed replacing the agency’s top official with a lower-level lawyer seen as more willing to advance the president’s false claims that the election was stolen. Several other senior officials warned Trump in a White House meeting that they’d resign if the leadership change occurred.

Rosen took over the department following the December 2020 departure of William Barr, who angered Trump by saying the department had not found fraud that could have affected the results of the election. Trump quickly soured on Rosen, too, after the then-acting attorney general rejected entreaties from the president and the White House to challenge the election results.

Around that time, the president was introduced by Rep. Scott Perry, a Pennsylvan­ia Republican and ardent Trump backer, to Jeffrey Clark, a littleknow­n assistant attorney general who postured himself as willing to advance Trump’s baseless voting fraud claims.

Clark’s support led Trump to openly contemplat­e naming him as acting attorney general.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A video exhibit plays as the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol continues to reveal its findings of a year-long investigat­ion.
SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS A video exhibit plays as the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol continues to reveal its findings of a year-long investigat­ion.

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