Former Trump White House attorneys appear before grand jury probing Jan.
6
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[September 03, 2022]
By Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The two former top
lawyers for the Trump White House appeared at federal court on Friday to
testify before a grand jury probing events surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021,
attack on the U.S. Capitol, after they were subpoenaed earlier this
year.
Pat Cipollone, the former White House counsel, and his attorney Michael
Purpura arrived at the federal courthouse shortly after 9:30 a.m. on
Friday, where they were greeted in the hallway by Thomas Windom, the
lead prosecutor investigating a failed bid by former President Donald
Trump's allies to overturn the results of the 2020 election by
submitting alternative slates of fake electors to the U.S. National
Archives.
They proceeded to the third floor, where the grand jury meets each
Friday, according to a Reuters witness.
Cipollone remained in the grand jury room for more than two hours before
exiting the courthouse without answering questions.
Shortly after his departure, Reuters witnesses spotted former White
House Deputy Counsel Pat Philbin arrive at the federal courthouse in
Washington.
Philbin was inside the courthouse for approximately two hours, before
exiting with Purpura without speaking to reporters.
The two men are the two most high-profile witnesses to date to appear
before the grand jury. Others who have appeared to testify include
former Vice President Mike Pence's chief of staff, Marc Short, and Greg
Jacob, who was Pence's top counsel.
The grand jury, which convenes each Friday in the federal courthouse in
Washington, is known to be specifically probing the fake electors plot.
Electors are people chosen to formally cast a state's electoral votes in
the U.S. Electoral College system used in presidential elections.
The fake elector plot has featured prominently in multiple hearings of
the Democratic-led House of Representatives committee probing the attack
on the U.S. Capitol.
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Former Trump White House counsel Pat
Cipollone departs following his testimony before a grand jury
investigating events surrounding the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S.
Capitol and efforts to overturn the 2020 election, at U.S. District
Court in Washington, U.S., September 2, 2022. REUTERS/Leah Millis
Rusty Bowers, the Arizona state House Republican speaker, told the
panel that Trump and his close aides, including his personal lawyer
Rudy Giuliani and adviser John Eastman, urged him to reject the
election results. Bowers refused their request.
The Justice Department has since seized Eastman's phone and searched
its contents, as part of the ongoing probe.
It has also seized the phones of Republican congressman Scott Perry,
a Trump ally, and Jeffrey Clark, a former top Justice Department
lawyer who also tried to promote a plan which entailed urging
Georgia state lawmakers to convene a new session and submit
alternate slates of electors on the false premise of voter fraud.
In recent months, the Justice Department has delivered grand jury
subpoenas to numerous individuals who may have knowledge about the
bid to submit the phony slates, as well as some of the individuals
who signed the bogus certificates themselves.
The subpoenas ask for copies of documents 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 or any employees or
agents of Trump, as well as communications with a long list of
people including Giuliani, who promoted Trump's bogus claims of
election fraud, and Eastman.
(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; additional reporting by Leah Millis,
Greg Savoy and Doina Chiacu; editing by Susan Heavey and Jonathan
Oatis)
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