Ex-Pence top aide Short says he testified before Capitol attack grand
jury
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[July 26, 2022]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -Marc
Short, who was a top staffer to Republican former Vice President Mike
Pence, on Monday confirmed he had testified before a federal grand jury
investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and efforts
to overturn the 2020 presidential election.
"I did receive a subpoena for the federal grand jury and I complied with
that subpoena," Short told CNN. He declined to provide any details on
his testimony.
ABC News first reported that Short, who served as Pence's chief of
staff, had testified on Friday afternoon. Both ABC's cameras and Reuters
cameras captured footage of Short leaving the federal courthouse in
Washington, D.C., alongside his attorney Emmet Flood.
Short is the most high-profile official known to have appeared before
the grand jury, which is also probing the effort by former President
Donald Trump's allies to submit slates of fake electors to overturn the
2020 election.
Short's appearance is a sign the U.S. Justice Department's investigation
into the attack on the Capitol and the fake elector plot is heating up.
In the interview with CNN, Short said it was unfair to characterize the
pro-Trump mob as simply exercising their First Amendment free speech
rights.
"Certainly there were probably some people who foolishly got caught up
in the events that were happening on the sixth, but I think it's unfair
to describe the rioters as patriots who were merely expressing their
First Amendment rights," he said.
Short said although the Secret Service wanted to evacuate Pence from the
Capitol, where he was preparing to certify the presidential election
results, the vice president wanted to stay.
"The vice president didn't want the image of a 15-car motorcade fleeing
the hallmark of democracy for the world to see," he told CNN.
In an interview with CNN earlier this year, Deputy Attorney General Lisa
Monaco confirmed the Justice Department had received referrals about
slates of alternative fake electors that were sent to the National
Archives, and said prosecutors were reviewing them.
Copies of the phony electoral slates submitted to the National Archives
by pro-Trump Republicans in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, New Mexico,
Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin were made public in March by the
non-profit watchdog group American Oversight, which obtained them
through a public records request.
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White House director of legislative affairs Marc Short takes part in
a daily briefing at the White House in Washington, U.S., March 22,
2018. REUTERS/Leah Millis
The Office of the Federal Register, part of the National Archives,
coordinates some functions of the Electoral College between the
states and Congress, including receiving the certificates from the
states that identify their electors and receiving the certificates
of votes by the electors.
The fake elector plot has featured prominently in multiple hearings
of the Democratic-led U.S. House of Representatives committee
probing the attack on the U.S. Capitol.
Rusty Bowers, the Arizona state House Republican speaker, testified
in June that Trump and his close aides, including his personal
lawyer Rudy Giuliani and adviser John Eastman, urged Bowers to
reject the election results.
In recent months, the U.S. Attorney's office in Washington, D.C.,
has started issuing grand jury subpoenas to electors, including some
who signed the bogus certificates.
According to one subpoena seen by Reuters that is focused on the
phony slate of electors in Georgia, investigators are seeking copies
of documents from October 2020 related to "any effort, plan or
attempt to serve as an elector in favor of Donald J. Trump and/or
Mike R. Pence."
They are also seeking copies of communications between would-be
electors and any federal government employees, any employees or
agents of Trump, as well as communications with a long list of
people including Giuliani and Eastman.
Arizona's Republican party chair, Kelli Ward, and her husband,
Michael Ward, who both signed their names on one of the slates of
alternate electors for Trump, have also received subpoenas.
Alexander Kolodin, an attorney for the Wards, told Reuters earlier
this month that the DOJ's investigation is "based on allegations
that our clients engaged in core First Amendment-protected activity,
namely petitioning Congress for redress of grievances."
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch and Tim Ahmann in Washington and Karen
Freifeld in New York; Editing by Scott Malone and Leslie Adler)
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