US House Panel Recommends Criminal Charges Against Trump
Donald Trump

The House Jan 6 committee is currently putting finishing touches together on its investigation of the violent 2021 U.S. Capitol insurrection, after lawmakers on Monday declared that they have assembled a ‘roadmap to justice’ to bring criminal charges against former President Donald Trump and his allies.

The panel’s seven Democrats and two Republicans are recommending criminal charges against Trump and those who assisted him in starting a multifaceted pressure campaign to try to overturn his loss in the 2020 election as they wrap up one of the most thorough and aggressive congressional investigations in recent memory.

In its recommendation to the Justice Department to prosecute the former president, the committee claimed that Trump had broken four felony laws both before and during the uprising. The committee suggests filing charges for rebellion, obstruction of a congressional hearing, conspiracy to make false statements, and conspiracy to defraud the United States.

While a criminal referral is mostly symbolic, with the Justice Department ultimately deciding whether to prosecute Trump or others, it is a decisive end to a probe that had an almost singular focus from the start.

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Chairman Bennie Thompson, D-Miss., said the criminal justice system can provide accountability, adding, ‘We have every confidence that the work of this committee will help provide a roadmap to justice.’

Thompson said Trump ‘broke the faith’ that people have when they cast ballots in a democracy. ‘He lost the 2020 election and knew it,’ Thompson said.

‘But he chose to try to stay in office through a multi-part scheme to overturn the results and block the transfer of power.’

Wyoming Rep. Liz Cheney, the panel’s Republican vice chairwoman, said in opening remarks that every president in American history has defended the orderly transfer of power, “except one.”

The committee also voted 9-0 to approve its final report, which will include findings, interview transcripts and legislative recommendations. The report is expected to be released in full Wednesday.

The panel, which will dissolve on Jan. 3 with the new Republican-led House, has conducted more than 1,000 interviews, held 10 well-watched public hearings and collected more than a million documents since it launched in July 2021. As it has gathered the massive trove of evidence, the members have become emboldened in declaring that Trump, a Republican, is to blame for the violent attack on the Capitol by his supporters almost two years ago.

After beating their way past police, injuring many of them, the Jan. 6 rioters stormed the Capitol and interrupted the certification of Democrat Joe Biden’s presidential election win, echoing Trump’s lies about widespread election fraud and sending lawmakers and others running for their lives.

Africa Today News, New York reports that the attack is coming just weeks of Trump’s efforts to overturn his defeat – a campaign that was extensively detailed by the committee in its multiple public hearings, and laid out again by lawmakers on the panel on Monday. Many of Trump’s former aides testified about his unprecedented pressure on states, on federal officials and on Vice President Mike Pence to find a way to thwart the popular will. The committee has also described in great detail how Trump riled up the crowd at a rally that morning and then did little to stop his supporters for several hours as he watched the violence unfold on television.

Africa Today News, New York

 

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