US Capitol riot hearing: Former aide Cassidy Hutchinson's testimony highlights legal risks for Trump

Former US President Donald Trump at a rally in front of the White House in Washington, on Jan 6, 2021. PHOTO: NYTIMES

WASHINGTON (NYTIMES) - It was one of the most dramatic moments in a presentation filled with them: Just before President Donald Trump went onstage near the White House last year and urged his supporters to "fight like hell" and march on the Capitol, an aide testified on Tuesday (June 28), he was told that some of them were armed.

It was also a potentially consequential moment for any prosecution of Mr Trump, legal experts said. Knowing that his crowd of supporters had the means to be violent when he exhorted them to march to the Capitol - and declared that he wanted to go with them - could nudge Mr Trump closer to facing criminal charges, legal experts said.

"This really moved the ball significantly, even though there is still a long way to go," said Mr Renato Mariotti, a legal analyst and former federal prosecutor in Illinois.

The extent to which the Justice Department's expanding criminal inquiry is focused on Mr Trump remains unclear. But the revelations in the testimony to the House select committee by Ms Cassidy Hutchinson, a former White House aide, both provided new evidence about Mr Trump's activities before the Jan 6, 2021, assault on the Capitol and chipped away at any potential defence that he was merely expressing well-founded views about election fraud.

"There's still a lot of uncertainty about the question of criminal intent when it comes to a president, but what just happened changed my bottom line," said Mr Alan Rozenshtein, a former Justice Department official who teaches at the University of Minnesota Law School. "I have gone from Trump is less than likely to be charged to he is more than likely to be charged."

A spokesman for Attorney General Merrick Garland declined to comment on Ms Hutchinson's testimony - although one of Mr Garland's predecessors did weigh in.

"The department is clearly looking into all this, and this hearing definitely gave investigators a lot to chew on," said Mr William Barr, who resigned as attorney general under Mr Trump after saying publicly weeks after Election Day that there was no evidence of fraud widespread enough to have changed the race's outcome.

During her testimony to the panel, Ms Hutchinson recounted a conversation she had on Jan 3, 2021, with Mr Pat Cipollone, the top lawyer in the White House. Ms Hutchinson described how Mr Cipollone worriedly pulled her aside that day after learning that Mr Trump was considering marching with his supporters to the Capitol after his speech near the White House on Jan 6 - a decision, he suggested, that could have major consequences.

"We're going to get charged with every crime imaginable," Mr Cipollone said, by Ms Hutchinson's account.

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One of the crimes Mr Cipollone was concerned about, Ms Hutchinson recounted, was the same one the committee had accused Mr Trump of committing in a court filing this spring: the obstruction of a congressional proceeding - namely, the certification of the Electoral College vote inside the Capitol on Jan 6.

A federal judge in a civil suit related to the House committee's work also concluded this year that Mr Trump and one of his legal advisers, Mr John Eastman, most likely had committed felonies, including obstructing the work of Congress and conspiring to defraud the United States, through their efforts to block certification of the Electoral College results.

According to Ms Hutchinson, another potential crime that worried Mr Cipollone was incitement to riot. That offence, while simpler in theory than obstruction, requires prosecutors to reach a high threshold of evidence and prove that a defendant's words presented an immediate threat of lawlessness or danger.

Some legal scholars said Ms Hutchinson's testimony made the best case to date that Mr Trump had in fact incited the crowd.

"Until this point, we had not seen proof that he knew about the violence," said Mr Daniel Goldman, a former federal prosecutor who served as the lead counsel during Trump's first impeachment. "The testimony made very clear he was not only entirely aware of the threat, but wanted armed people to march to the Capitol. He was even willing to lead them."

Ms Cassidy Hutchinson testifies during a public hearing of the House Select Committee in Washington, DC, on June 28, 2022. PHOTO: EPA-EFE

After 18 months, the Justice Department's investigation of the Capitol attack has resulted in more than 840 criminal cases being filed against rioters on charges ranging from misdemeanor trespass to seditious conspiracy.

In recent days, the inquiry has accelerated with a flurry of search warrants and subpoenas going out, implicating some of Mr Trump's top allies in key swing states and at least two lawyers, Mr Jeffrey Clark and Mr Eastman, who worked on separate but related plans to stave off his defeat in the 2020 election.

Still, it remains unknown if prosecutors are looking directly at Mr Trump's own involvement in subverting the election or inspiring the mob that wreaked havoc at the Capitol.

The Justice Department has already charged more than 220 rioters with the obstruction count, which requires proving that a defendant knowingly and corruptly interfered with the work of Congress.

Some legal scholars have suggested that Mr Trump could defend himself against the charge by arguing that he did not intend to disrupt the work of Congress through any of his schemes, but rather was acting in good faith to address what he sincerely believed was fraud in the election.

But even those experts who once gave credence to this defence felt that the new accounts revealed on Tuesday chipped away at the possibility that Mr Trump could claim wilful blindness.

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