INSURRECTION
FALLOUT
New details of Jan. 6 panel's mystery messages
emerge
Former Trump White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson told
the committee she was contacted by an intermediary for Mark Meadows, according
to a person familiar with her final deposition.
By BETSY
WOODRUFF SWAN and KYLE CHENEY
06/30/2022
06:54 PM EDT
https://www.politico.com/news/2022/06/30/jan-6-hutchinson-meadows-mystery-messages-00043638
The Jan. 6
select committee publicly pointed to two communications this week as potential
evidence of Trump-world’s efforts to influence witness testimony — without
revealing their origin. Both were detailed to the panel by Cassidy Hutchinson,
according to a person familiar with the last of her four depositions.
Both of the
two slides that the panel revealed at the end of its live hearing with
Hutchinson reflected conversations she described to the committee in her final
closed-door deposition, this person said. Hutchinson told the committee at the
time that, on the eve of her earlier March 7 deposition, an intermediary for
former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows contacted her to say that her
former boss valued her loyalty.
“[A person]
let me know you have your deposition tomorrow,” read a slide that the Jan. 6
committee broadcast at the end of Hutchinson’s hearing, which Vice Chair Liz
Cheney (R-Wyo.) characterized as pressure on a key witness. “He wants me to let
you know that he’s thinking about you. He knows you’re loyal, and you’re going
to do the right thing when you go in for your deposition.”
Meadows is
the person whose name was redacted in that slide. Contents of that final
deposition were described to POLITICO, which could not independently
corroborate the identity of the intermediary or that Meadows directed any
message be delivered to Hutchinson before her second deposition.
The other
slide the Capitol riot committee unveiled at the end of its hearing with
Hutchinson this week quoted an unnamed witness, now known to be the former
Trump White House aide herself, describing multiple phone calls she received
from allies of the former president.
“What they
said to me is as long as I continue to be a team player, they know I’m on the
right team,” the slide said. “I’m doing the right thing. I’m protecting who I
need to protect, you know, I’ll continue to stay in good graces in Trump World.
And they have reminded me a couple of times that Trump does read transcripts.”
Ben
Williamson, a spokesperson for Meadows, provided the following statement to
POLITICO: “No one from Meadows’ camp, himself or otherwise, has ever attempted
to intimidate or shape Ms. Hutchinson’s testimony to the committee. Any phone
call or message she is describing is at best deeply misleading.”
A lawyer
for Hutchinson did not respond to a request for comment.
Cheney,
during Tuesday’s blockbuster hearing with Hutchinson, suggested the messages
broadcast were efforts by Trump allies to dissuade key witnesses from coming
forward. Neither the sender nor the recipient of the messages were revealed at
the time.
“I think
most Americans know that attempting to influence witnesses to testify
untruthfully presents very serious concerns,” Cheney said after presenting the
messages. “We will be discussing these issues as a committee and carefully
considering our next steps.”
In a
post-hearing interview, Rep. Jamie Raskin (D-Md.) described the messages as
possibly indicative of witness tampering.
“The vice
chair released two different episodes of potential witness tampering,
anonymously, for obvious reasons. We don’t want further intimidation of the
same people,” Raskin told The Washington Post. “But we want this to be a
warning to the people who are doing it that they can’t do it. It is a crime and
this committee is taking it very seriously.”
Hutchinson’s
testimony on Tuesday has shed significant new light on former President Donald
Trump’s actions in the lead-up to the Capitol siege and sparked significant new
leads for the select committee’s investigation. During her time in the Trump
White House, she worked directly under Meadows and was sometimes called “the
chief’s chief.”
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