- Trump’s lawyers are concerned that the DOJ’s Capitol riot investigation is looming over Trump’s inner circle, CNN reported.
- They are reportedly in discussions with the Justice Department about whether Trump can exercise executive privilege in some conversations.
- They also advised Trump not to contact the former aide, but he ignored their warnings and concerns.
A lawyer for former President Donald Trump worries that a sprawling Justice Department investigation into the deadly Capitol siege is closing in on his inner circle and indictment is imminent. has so far dismissed their concerns.
Trump’s attorneys reportedly are in discussions with the State Department about whether Trump can claim executive privileges over conversations he had with aides and advisers when he was president, according to CNN.
The Justice Department is gearing up for a legal battle with Trump over the issue of presidential privilege, the report said Chief of Staff Mark Short and former Supreme Counsel Greg Jacobs are investigating events related to the siege of the Capitol. It has been subpoenaed by a grand jury to investigate.
Cipollone previously exercised executive privilege when testifying before a House Select Committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021 attacks. However, as Insider C. Ryan Barber reported, Cipollone and other White House officials could have a harder time hiding information from the federal government, given that the Justice Department belongs to the executive branch. There is a nature.
The former president has asked his lawyers if they think criminal charges will be filed in connection with the Capitol riot investigation, but he is also skeptical about being charged. I’m more obsessed with elections and the possibility of a 2024 presidential election.
Trump’s attorneys reportedly warned him not to contact former aides and advisers who were trapped in a Jan. 6 congressional probe and may be involved in the Justice Department’s criminal investigation. They have expressed particular concern about former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, according to CNN.
Meadows’ attorney, George Terwilliger, dismissed the idea as “lazy and uninformed speculation.” A Trump spokesperson also leveled accusations of “partisan and political persecution,” and said in a statement to CNN, “The future president will seek to ensure that lawyers, counselors, and other senior advisers and How can I have a private conversation if forced to do so? Forced to reveal privileged and confidential discussions before selection committees or other bodies during or after the president’s term? do you?”
No one in Trump’s inner circle has been directly indicted in connection with the attack on the Capitol. But former White House chief strategist Steve Bannon was convicted last month of contempt of Congress after refusing to cooperate with lawmakers’ investigations into the riots. Former White House trade adviser Peter Navarro is also set to face a contempt trial in November for similarly refusing to cooperate.
After Cassidy Hutchinson, Meadows’ former chief of staff, testified in vivid detail to lawmakers about his efforts to incite protesters on January 6, leading up to and on the day of the siege. Trump’s own actions have come under renewed scrutiny. As his supporters stormed Congress, Trump urged an enthusiastic crowd to “fight like hell” to stop Congress from proving Joe Biden’s victory in the 2020 election.
Hutchinson told lawmakers that day he heard President Trump ordering the removal of metal detectors used to keep armed protesters away from the president. She also warned that several top White House aides warned Trump that crowds were dangerous and refused to calm supporters despite desperate pleas from advisers, and at one point He testified that he wanted to join the mob surrounding the Houses of Parliament.
Hutchinson testified when a slew of Trump supporters began calling for “hang Mike Pence,” and Trump said the vice president deserved the call.
“If we felt so bad, why would she want to go with us?” Trump wrote for Truth Social last month following Hutchinson’s testimony. “I understand she was very upset and angry that I didn’t want her to go or be part of the team. Bad news for her!”
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