Here are the laws Trump allegedly broke, according to the Jan 6 committee

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The House committee investigating the Jan 6 attack on the US Capitol by Donald Trump supporters voted unanimously to ask the Justice Department to prosecute the former president for alleged crimes – including inciting an insurrection.

The committee’s nine members agreed Monday that their 17-month probe found enough evidence to urge that Trump and others face four federal criminal charges linked to efforts to overturn the 2020 election, which Joe Biden won.

The referrals do not carry any legal weight. The Justice Department has its own investigation and is free to disregard the lawmaker referrals. Trump and his allies have maintained their innocence and claimed the Jan 6 committee was politically motivated.

Even so, a summary spells out what the committee believes prosecutors can prove at trial, based on interviews and other evidence.

Obstruction of an Official Proceeding

Evidence showed that “Trump was attempting to prevent or delay the counting of lawful certified Electoral College votes” and was “personally involved” through his pressure on then vice-president, Mike Pence, to derail the meeting, the panel said.

Trump’s alleged obstruction was corrupt, the committee said, because he’d been told by his own experts that his theory on staying in power was unconstitutional, and his election fraud claims repeatedly failed in court. The fake electors scheme was also a violation, the lawmakers said.

Conspiring to Defraud the US

It’s a crime for two or more people to coordinate to defraud the US, if at least one of the people does some act to carry out the conspiracy.

“Trump entered into an agreement with individuals to obstruct a lawful function of the government,” through a “multipart plan” to obstruct the certification that involved lawyer John Eastman “and several other individuals”, the committee said.

Conspiracy to Make a False Statement

The committee said Trump broke this law when he used other individuals to submit “slates of fake electors” to Congress and the National Archives.

“The certifications signed by Trump electors in multiple states were patently false” because Mr Biden won those states, the panel said. “Nothing can be more material to the Joint Session of Congress to certify the election than the question of which candidate won which States,” the committee said.

Notably, the panel said Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel testified that Trump and Eastman asked the RNC to organize the effort to have fake electors meet and cast their votes. The maximum sentence is five years.

Incite,” “Assist” or “Aid and Comfort” an Insurrection

This law is violated when one “incites, sets on foot, assists, or engages in any rebellion or insurrection against the authority of the US or the laws thereof, or gives aid or comfort thereto.”

The evidence shows Trump summoned the mob, provoked them after the threat of violence was clear and inflamed their anger at Pence, the committee said.

Trump “refused to condemn the violence or encourage the crowd to disperse despite repeated pleas from his staff and family that he do so,” the committee held.

 

 

SOURCE: NEWS AGENCIES

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