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The Guardian - US
The Guardian - US
World
Guardian staff and agencies

National Archives turns over Trump White House logs to January 6 panel

Trump had tried to block the release of the visitor logs, but Joe Biden rejected his claim that they were subject to executive privilege.
Donald Trump had tried to block the release of the visitor logs, but Joe Biden rejected his claim that they were subject to executive privilege. Photograph: Carlos Barría/Reuters

The US National Archives has delivered White House visitor logs from Donald Trump’s administration to the congressional committee investigating the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol by extremist supporters of the then president, the committee said on Friday.

The National Archives also turned over records from former vice-president Mike Pence, meeting a 3 March deadline.

“Yesterday, the select committee received additional production of records from the National Archives,” a House of Representatives select committee aide said. “This included records that the former president attempted to keep hidden behind claims of privilege.”

Trump had tried to block the release of the visitor logs, but Joe Biden rejected his claim that they were subject to executive privilege “in light of the urgency” of the committee’s work and Congress’s “compelling need”.

Several courts, including the US supreme court, have also ruled against the Republican ex-president’s efforts to block the release of various records to the committee.

So far, more than 725 people have been charged with playing a role in the attack on the Capitol by mobs of Trump supporters, which left five people dead and more than 100 police officers injured, as, at Trump’s urgings at a rally that morning, they tried to prevent the US Congress certifying Biden’s win for the Democrats in the 2020 presidential election.

Another four police officers involved in defending the Capitol later killed themselves.

The bipartisan January 6 committee chaired by Representative Bennie Thompson of Mississippi has been investigating the events surrounding the attack – and the former president’s role in it – for more than seven months, as well as allegations of a political conspiracy by Trump and key allies to get the results overturned.

The committee has made more than 80 subpoenas public, including many issued to top Trump aides and allies, and interviewed more than 560 witnesses. It has also gathered records from social media and other telecommunications firms.

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