Final report to be 8 chapters long, out by Christmas
WASHINGTON >> The chairman of the House panel investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol said the body of the final report is nearly complete and should be released before Christmas.
Rep. Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., told reporters that the committee’s report will not be completed before Congress is scheduled to leave for the month on Dec. 16, but that there is a “good possibility” it will be out before Christmas.
Interviews for the more than yearlong investigation wrapped up this week after the panel heard from Wisconsin Assembly Speaker Robin Vos; Kellyanne Conway, senior adviser to then-President Donald Trump; and Tony Ornato, the former Secret Service agent who served as White House deputy chief of staff.
It has not been decided whether the committee will hold another full hearing with witnesses and video presentations, but the committee does have to meet publicly to approve the report, which could be a vehicle for a discussion of the findings.
The committee dissolves at the end of this year and is not expected to be reconstituted when Republicans take control of the House in January. House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-Calif., refused to participate after House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., denied his recommendations for Republican committee members.
The report will be eight chapters long and the panel could release hundreds of depositions, namely those for which the committee didn’t promise privacy, along with other raw information, Thompson said. The committee collected more than 1,000 depositions and hundreds of thousands of other documents, including emails, text messages and cellphone records.
Thompson has said he expects a large dump of evidence all at once, rather than a slow rollout.
The committee hasn’t indicated whether text or video from the depositions will be made available, or whether it will make public the reams of footage collected during the investigation and used during the hearings.
The depositions and video could provide a wealth of information for the FBI’s investigations into the actions of Trump and the people around him on Jan. 6, 2021, and into the more than 1,000 additional rioters the agency has predicted it will charge. Despite requests for access, the committee refused to share information with the Justice Department while conducting its investigation.
Citizen sleuths helping to identify people who illegally entered the Capitol and journalists attempting to provide context for the attack are also eager to comb through the raw materials.