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US Capitol riot panel moves to hold Trump aide in contempt

Washington, United States鈥揕awmakers investigating the assault on the US Capitol prepared Monday to vote on recommending criminal contempt charges against Donald Trump鈥檚 former chief of staff for refusing to testify.

Mark Meadows has made clear he has no intention of complying with a subpoena to appear before聽the cross-party January 6 congressional select committee and missed a scheduled deposition for the second time last week.

Members are investigating Trump鈥檚 efforts to聽overturn his defeat in the 2020 presidential election through a campaign that led to the deadly Capitol riot 鈥 and the help he got from Meadows.

Trump鈥檚 fourth and final White House chief told the panel he would withhold testimony until courts resolve his former boss鈥檚 claim of 鈥渆xecutive privilege,鈥 which allows presidents to keep certain conversations private.

Investigators maintain Meadows has undermined any right to refuse testimony, as the ultra-conservative former congressman is promoting a new memoir that includes detailed accounts of January 6 and his conversations with Trump.

Many of the questions they want to ask him concern 6,600 pages of records taken from personal email accounts and about 2,000 text messages that he turned over before he stopped cooperating.

鈥楿niquely situated鈥

鈥淭here鈥檚 no way to sustain the argument that 鈥業 can鈥檛 come in and testify because that would be privileged but here are all these documents on this very subject, which I admit are not privileged. I can鈥檛 come in and testify before Congress, but I can write about it in my book,'鈥 panel member Adam Schiff told MSNBC.

鈥淵ou can鈥檛 have it both ways. And so we will proceed and, I believe, hold him in criminal contempt.鈥

An appeals court last week rejected Trump鈥檚 effort to stop the committee accessing documents and testimony from former White House aides, agreeing with a lower court that the defeated ex-president had provided no reason for secrecy. He was given two weeks to appeal.

Meadows was Trump鈥檚 most senior aide at the time of the riot and was reportedly with the then-president in the White House as the rioters breached the Capitol.

The committee says he is 鈥渦niquely situated to provide key information, having straddled an official role in the White House and unofficial role related to Mr. Trump鈥檚 re-election campaign.鈥

The probe released a 51-page document Sunday describing some of Meadows鈥 communications, including a January 5 email in which he told an unidentified person the National Guard was on standby to 鈥減rotect pro-Trump people.鈥

鈥楿nwise, unjust and unfair鈥

The committee will green-light the contempt citation Monday evening and the Democratic-controlled House of Representatives is expected to vote Tuesday to refer Meadows to the Justice Department.

A timetable for a charging decision has yet to be revealed. If convicted, Meadows could face a six-month prison term for each contempt charge, but more likely would be fined.

Accusing the select committee of abusing its powers, Meadows sued its nine members and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi last week, asking a federal court to block enforcement of the subpoenas issued to him and to Verizon for his phone records.

His lawyer George Terwilliger wrote to the panel on Monday to denounce the proposed prosecution as 鈥渕anifestly unwise, unjust and unfair.鈥

Thousands of Trump supporters, many associated with ultra-nationalist and white supremacist groups, stormed the Capitol 11 months ago in an effort to overturn President Joe Biden鈥檚 election victory.

In a fiery speech earlier that day, Trump repeated false claims of election fraud that he had been making for months and called on supporters to march on the Capitol and 鈥渇ight like hell.鈥

The House voted to recommend charges against ex-White House strategist Steve Bannon in October. He faces trial in July on two counts of contempt.

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