WASHINGTON, Dec 9, 2021 (BSS/AFP) - Donald Trump's former chief of staff
filed suit Wednesday against the congressional committee pursuing him for
criminal contempt over his refusal to testify in their probe of the deadly US
Capitol assault.
Mark Meadows specifically names Nancy Pelosi, the Democratic leader of the
House of Representatives who launched the investigation alongside all nine
members of the panel preparing a report on the January 6 insurrection by
thousands of Trump's supporters.
The lawsuit, filed a day after the panel told Meadows it was taking action
over his defiance of a subpoena to appear for a deposition on Wednesday,
challenges the legality of the "unduly burdensome" summons and asks the
Washington district court to strike it down.
Meadows, who initially failed to appear before the congressional panel last
month, is seen as a key witness to Trump's role in efforts to overturn the
election by subverting the democratic process.
He initially snubbed a subpoena to testify before the committee but later
reached an agreement on appearing in person -- before reversing course again.
Reacting to his latest about-face, the panel wrote to Meadows late Tuesday
saying it had have "no choice" but to advance criminal contempt proceedings
against him.
The letter, released by the committee on Wednesday, added to the public
record information from a trove of thousands of items of correspondence and
other documents Meadows had already voluntarily turned over.
They included a November 6, 2020, text exchange with a member of Congress
in which Meadows reportedly said "I love it" in a discussion about a plan to
disenfranchise millions of voters in a bid to overturn Joe Biden's
presidential election win.
- Threat of jail -
If the House panel goes ahead with its threat, it will likely meet in the
coming days to vote on adopting a contempt report setting out the case
against Meadows.
The Democratic-controlled House of Representatives would then vote to refer
him to the Justice Department to consider charges.
A timetable for that decision has yet to be revealed. If convicted,
Meadows would face up to 12 months in prison, but more likely a fine.
Steve Bannon, another senior aide in the Trump administration and a long-
time ally of the defeated former president, is due to be tried for contempt
in July after defying his own subpoena.
Thousands of Trump's supporters, many associated with ultra-nationalist and
white supremacist groups, stormed the Capitol eight months ago in an effort
to overturn Biden's election victory.
They had been egged on by Trump, whose fiery speech earlier that day
falsely claiming election fraud was the culmination of months of baseless
statements about a contest he lost fairly to Biden.
A comfortable majority of 57 senators -- including seven from his own party
-- voted to convict Trump after he was impeached by the House for inciting
the riot, although this fell short of the two-thirds majority required under
Senate rules to unseat a president.