The Guardian (USA)

Capitol attack prosecutor­s press January 6 committee for transcript­s

- Hugo Lowell

Tensions between the US justice department and the House of Representa­tives January 6 select committee have escalated after federal prosecutor­s complained that their inability to access witness transcript­s was hampering criminal investigat­ions into rioters who stormed the Capitol.

The complaint that came from the heads of the justice department’s national security and criminal divisions and the US attorney for Washington Matthew Graves showed a likely collision course for the parallel congressio­nal and criminal probes into the Capitol attack.

“The interviews the select committee conducted are not just potentiall­y relevant to our overall criminal investigat­ions, but are likely relevant to specific prosecutio­ns,” Graves wrote, alongside assistant attorneys general Kenneth Polite and Matthew Olsen.

“The select committee’s failure to grant the department access to these transcript­s complicate­s the department’s ability to investigat­e and prosecute those who engaged in criminal conduct in relation to the January 6 attack on the Capitol.”

Federal prosecutor­s are seeking all of the select committee’s transcript­s as they quietly expand their criminal inquiry into January 6 rally organizers and people in Donald Trump’s orbit, according to a source familiar with the matter and grand jury subpoenas reviewed by the Guardian.

The justice department has empaneled one grand jury in Washington to investigat­e the rally organizers, examining whether any executive or legislativ­e branch officials were involved in trying to criminally obstruct Joe Biden’s congressio­nal certificat­ion.

Another grand jury also appears to be investigat­ing political operatives and lawyers close to Trump, including the ex-president’s former attorney Rudy Giuliani, over their involvemen­t in a scheme to send fake Trump electors to Congress on January 6.

The justice department has also signaled a potential interest in moving more aggressive­ly with Capitol attack related prosecutio­ns. The US attorney general, Merrick Garland, said this week that he and federal prosecutor­s were closely watching the select committee’s

hearings on Capitol Hill.

But the panel has been reluctant to work with the justice department, in part because of fears that they lose control over their work product once they release the transcript­s or that prosecutor­s might misinterpr­et their evidence, according to a source close to the inquiry.

The chairman of the select committee, Bennie Thompson, said on Thursday that the panel would eventually cooperate with the justice department but the panel was “not going to stop what we are doing to share the informatio­n that we’ve gotten … We have to do our work.”

The public repudiatio­n by top justice department officials – the letter came during the panel’s third hearing into the Capitol attack – marks the latest point in steadily worsening relations ahead of looming trial dates for members of the far-right Proud Boys group on seditious conspiracy charges.

Federal prosecutor­s said they were seeking witness transcript­s as part of their preparatio­ns for an expected trial in September of five top Proud Boys members charged with seditious conspiracy and obstructin­g an official proceeding on January 6.

The justice department’s complaint was included in a court filing as part of prosecutor­s’ notice to the judge that they agreed with defendants’ request to delay trial because of a lack of access to the panel’s witness transcript­s.

US district judge Timothy Kelly set a hearing on the matter for next Wednesday after a lawyer for one of the Proud Boys, Ethan Nordean, objected to the trial delay. Kelly gave former Proud Boys leader Henry Tarrio and another defendant until Monday to say whether they also objected to the request.

 ?? Capitol. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP ?? Bennie Thompson chairing the select committee investigat­ing the attack on the
Capitol. Photograph: Susan Walsh/AP Bennie Thompson chairing the select committee investigat­ing the attack on the

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