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A text exchange between Ivanka Trump’s chief of staff Julie Radford and White House adviser Hope Hicks revealed their outrage over then-President Donald Trump’s actions on January 6, 2021, Professionally hurt them. Capitol Hill Riot.
On January 6, 2021, Hicks wrote to Radford, writing, “One day he ended all future opportunities not including speaking at the local Proud Boys chapter. I am unemployed. I am very Angry and upset, we look like domestic terrorists now.”
Hicks added: like the untouchables. God I’m so angry
Radford responded by texting, “I know I have no chance of finding a job,” indicating that he had already lost his job opportunity from Visa, and sent a “blow-off email.”
The new release is part of a constant stream of documents from the Commission and complements the release of a massive 845-page report. The latest comes when the House majority is set to change from Democrat to Republican on Tuesday at the start of the new Congress, and the panel will scale back its work.
In a text message, Hicks said, “Alyssa looks like a genius.” This is a clear reference to Alyssa Her Farrah Her Griffin resigning from her post as White House aide a month before her attack on the US Capitol.
Hicks and Radford then discussed Karlie Kloss, the supermodel stepmother of Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump, and tweeted that Trump’s reaction to the election was anti-American.
“Unreal,” Radford texted.
The commission has also released transcripts of calls for days ending Jan. 6, 2021, revealing who the former president and his allies were talking to as they plotted to stay in office. more fully understood. Whole house call log.
Logs are important for investigating panels that stitch together the timeline of events. There is a gap of seven hours in his log on January 6, but the Commission has made great efforts to fill that part of the timeline through witness interviews and other records.
The day before the US Capitol attack, Trump spoke with then-Vice President Mike Pence. After that conversation, Trump spoke with Pennsylvania Senator Doug Mastriano, who helped spread Trump’s election lies across the state. He left a note that said,
Trump also spoke with a number of members of Congress on Jan. 5, including Sen. Rand Paul, Sen. Lindsey Graham, and House Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy. The senator repeatedly tried to call, but was unsuccessful. Trump also spoke with John Eastman, who helped Trump create a fake election plan that day.
A Jan. 2 call transcript shows what happened shortly after Trump’s infamous hour-long call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger. Trump then zoomed in with then-attorney Rudy Giuliani and spoke on the phone with Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and later Steve Bannon.
On Jan. 3, Trump made multiple phone calls with former Justice Department official Jeffrey Clarke and Pennsylvania Republican Rep. Scott Perry.Call logs include Attorney General Jeffrey Rosen and Deputy Richard Donoghue. Reflects a series of calls with Department of Justice officials.
At 4:22 p.m. ET that day, Clark was listed as Acting Attorney General, but earlier in the day he wasn’t.
Newly released documents also show that the Secret Service dispatched a security team to the Capitol on January 6, 2021. This comes just minutes after Trump unexpectedly announced during his speech at Ellipse that he would join the marchers there.
At about 1:10 p.m. ET, Trump asked for help to “walk down Pennsylvania Avenue” to the Capitol. According to an internal communication released by the House Select Committee, the Secret Service’s Joint Operations Center Counter Observation Unit sent an email at about 1:15 p.m. He warned that he announced on LIVE TV that he was planning to
“A response team is dedicated to the Capitol, according to an (REDACTED) announcement to the Capitol,” the agent wrote in an email. Published internal communications frequently redact the codename agents use to refer to the president.
Newly released documents offer fresh insight into how the Secret Service responded to the chaos that unfolded that day. Emails from the Joint Operations Center show the agency rushed to provide more security to the Capitol as a direct result of the former president’s comments.
Secret Service leadership is concerned about Trump’s sudden plans to go to the Capitol, and his chief of detail has been told the idea is “not recommended,” the commission said. The document shows. They also detailed how the agency ran into technical problems and seized dozens of weapons on January 6th, and as early as December 27th the Proud He Boys warned of the violent intentions of
Multiple units within the Secret Service had reported technical problems, and agents had been warned “not to rely” on their technology, according to emails. The timeline shows that some Secret Service radios died during the chaos, but it’s not clear which protection team was most affected.
Another document describes how the Secret Service seized hundreds of weapons, including hundreds of pepper spray cans, bulletproof vests, and knives and blunt weapons, from some 28,000 people who passed through the magnetometer on their way to the ellipse. It is detailed what happened.
In the wake of Jan. 6, 2021, Trump’s former deputy chief of staff and social media director at the White House, Dan Scavino, told rally organizers to discuss the now infamous “it’s going to go wild.” Trump later texted that he was “tweeting himself.” Tweet on December 19th, according to documents released by the selection committee.
Panels and security experts said that tweet from the Trump account that facilitated the mass protests planned for Jan. 6 was the catalyst for the day’s violence.
In a text exchange between Scavino and Katrina Pearson, who helped organize the elliptical rally ahead of the attack on the U.S. Capitol, the pair discussed a news story linking right-wing rally organizer Alexander Ali to the former president. We were talking.
“I have never spoken to Ali. …he is a fraudster and DJT’s December 19th tweet had absolutely nothing to do with Ali or his men.”
This story was updated with additional developments on Monday.