The Arizona Republic

Jan. 6 committee wraps up probe

Inquiry to conclude with report, possible referrals

- Farnoush Amiri

WASHINGTON – The House committee investigat­ing the Capitol riot will make its final public presentati­on Monday about the unpreceden­ted effort by Donald Trump to overturn the results of the presidenti­al election he lost in 2020. The committee has called it an “attempted coup” that warrants criminal prosecutio­n from the Justice Department.

That is expected to be the committee’s closing argument as it wraps up a year-and-a-half-long inquiry and prepares to release a final report detailing its findings about the insurrecti­on in the nation’s capital on Jan. 6, 2021. The committee of seven Democrats and two Republican­s is set to dissolve at the end of the year.

Monday’s meeting will be the committee’s 11th public session since forming in July 2021. One of the first hearings, on June 9, was viewed by more than 20 million people.

What to watch for in Monday’s meeting at 1 p.m. EST:

Referring a president

The committee is expected to make both criminal and civil referrals against the former president and his allies, who, according to lawmakers, broke the law or committed ethical violations.

“We are focused on key players where there is sufficient evidence or abundant evidence that they committed crimes,” Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., told reporters last week. “We’re focused on crimes that go right to the heart of the constituti­onal order, such that the Congress can’t remain silent.”

The committee’s chairman, Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said the referrals may include criminal, ethics violations, legal misconduct and campaign finance violations.

It will fall to federal prosecutor­s to decide whether to bring charges. Lawmakers have suggested their recommende­d charges against Trump could include conspiracy to defraud the United State, obstructio­n of an official proceeding of Congress and insurrecti­on.

Even though they are non-binding, the recommenda­tions by the committee would add to the political pressure on the Justice Department as special counsel Jack Smith conducts an investigat­ion into Jan. 6 and Trump’s actions.

A record for history

Lawmakers have promised that Monday’s session will include a preview of the committee’s final report, expected to be released Wednesday. The panel will vote on adopting the official record, effectivel­y authorizin­g the release of the report to the public.

The eight-chapter report will include hundreds of pages of findings about the attack and Trump’s efforts to subvert democracy, drawing on what the committee learned through its interviews with more than 1,000 witnesses.

It will roughly mirror the series of public hearings the committee held in the summer that detailed the various facets of the investigat­ion, including the role of extremist groups in the violence on Jan. 6, Trump’s attempt to enlist the Justice Department in his schemes and Trump’s coordinati­on with GOP lawmakers to overturn the election results.

Additional evidence, including some of the massive trove of video footage and testimony the committee collected, is expected to be released publicly before the end of the year.

Anticipati­on for the final report is high. Book publishers are already offering prerelease versions for sale to the public.

Legislativ­e changes

As the committee convenes one final time, a major legislativ­e response to the insurrecti­on could be on the fast-track to passage.

Lawmakers are expected to overhaul the arcane election law that Trump tried to subvert after his 2020 election defeat by including legislativ­e changes in a year-end spending bill.

The proposed overhaul of the Electoral Count Act is one of the many byproducts of the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol. A bipartisan group of lawmakers has been working on the legislatio­n since the insurrecti­on. Trump and his allies tried to find loopholes in that law before the congressio­nal certificat­ion of the 2020 vote as the former president worked to overturn his defeat to Biden and unsuccessf­ully pressured Pence to go along.

The bill, if passed, would amend the 19th-century law that, along with the Constituti­on, governs how states and Congress certify electors and declare presidenti­al election winners, ensuring the popular vote from each state is protected from manipulati­on and that Congress does not arbitraril­y decide presidenti­al elections.

The committee is also expected to release its own legislativ­e proposals in its final report, with ideas for how to strengthen and expand the guardrails that protected the Electoral College certificat­ion in 2021.

Closing arguments

Since its formation, the Jan. 6 committee has strived to build a record for history and deepen the public’s understand­ing of what led to the Capitol attack and the individual­s involved in it.

“We obviously want to complete the story for the American people,” Raskin said. “Everybody has come on a journey with us and we want a satisfacto­ry conclusion, such that people feel that Congress has done its job.”

After conducting thousands of interviews – ranging from Trump Cabinet secretarie­s to members of his own family – and obtaining tens of thousands of documents, congressio­nal investigat­ors say they have created the most comprehens­ive look at the worst attack on the Capitol in two centuries.

But the 16-month investigat­ion has also provided a road map of sorts for criminal investigat­ions, influencin­g the probes of Trump and Jan. 6 that are progressin­g at the local, state and federal level.

Monday’s session will be the last word for the committee as its temporary, or “select,” committee status expires at the end of the current Congress.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP FILE ?? Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., speaks at an Oct. 13 hearing of the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. “We obviously want to complete the story for the American people,” Raskin said of the panel’s work.
JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP FILE Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., speaks at an Oct. 13 hearing of the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. “We obviously want to complete the story for the American people,” Raskin said of the panel’s work.

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