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Jan 6 Committee releases 34 testimonies from Trump supporters hours before 800-page report is due

Jan. 6 Committee releases 34 testimonies from Trump supporters just hours before release of its bombshell 800-page report: Alex Jones and Roger Stone among witnesses who plead the fifth
- Jan. 6 committee released transcripts of interviews with 34 Trump allies
- High-profile figures – Alex Jones, Nick Fuentes and Roger Stone – plead the Fifth and refused to answer questions examining potential involvement in the assault
- The committee will release its 800-page final report on Thursday after delays
The January 6 committee has released transcripts of interviews it conducted with 34 Trump supporters just one day before it will unveil its highly anticipated 800-page final report.
Those 34 interviews were conducted as part of its investigation into the 2021 assault on the Capitol and saw numerous high-profile Trump allies – including Alex Jones, Nick Fuentes, Roger Stone and Charlie Kirk – invoke their Fifth Amendment right to not answer questions.
The transcripts were made public as the publishing of the final report was delayed until this Thursday.
According to an executive summary the report is set to find Donald Trump culpable for the 2021 following his election defeat and will accuse him of putting ‘the lives of American lawmakers at risk’ with false claims of widespread voter fraud.
Transcripts of interviews with 34 Trump allies and supporters were released by the January 6 committee on Wednesday

In the 34 interviews many prominent figures avoided answering questions by invoking the Fifth Amendment, allowing them to remain silent
Others that chose not to answer questions included Garrett Ziegler, a former White House aide, and Phil Waldron, a former Army colonel who spread theories about voting machines being defunct.
A transcript of the interview with Alex Jones released on Wednesday revealed that he plead the Fifth nearly 100 times, telling those interviewing again and again: On the advice of my counsel, I’m exerting my Fifth Amendment right to remain silent.’
When asked to spell out his name for the court reporter he told the committee member asking him questions that he was too stressed to be able to do so.
He also told the interviewer asking for his name: ‘You know what my name is. It’s on the record.’

Republican campaign manager Roger Stone would not answer questions pertaining to his name

Alex Jones said he was too ‘stressed’ to be able to spell his name
White supremacist Nick Fuentes, on the other hand, indulged certain questions relating to where he grew up, studied, and lived, but when asked about possible associations with the America First Foundation, Fuentes ‘most respectfully’ refused to answer since doing so ‘might tend to incriminate’ him.
Prominent interviewee subpoenaed by the court was Roger Stone, Republican campaign strategist and longtime friend of Trump, also invoked the Fifth to simple questions such as those asking his name as part of a defensive strategy.

Mike Flynn, retired US Army lieutenant who served as Trump’s first national security advisor, was another of the 34 people interviewed

Garrett Ziegler, a former White House aide, stopped asking questions when asked how he got his job at the White House Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy
Mike Flynn, retired US Army lieutenant who served as Trump’s first national security advisor, was another of the 34 people interviewed and yet again used his right to remain silent.
He responded to initial questions examining his military background, including when and where he served.
It was when asked about a ‘Cyber Ninjas’ audit in Arizona that he ceased to co-operate. The Cyber Ninjas are a Florida-based firm that commissioned an audit of Arizona’s election.
Audio files obtained by CBS News earlier this week revealed a congressional investigator probed Flynn on whether he was involved in an effort to overturn the 2020 election result and whether he pressured military and intelligence officials to assist.
Garrett Ziegler, a former White House aide, stopped asking questions when asked how he got his job at the White House Office of Trade and Manufacturing Policy.
