Kimberly Guilfoyle subpoenaed by House Jan. 6 committee
WASHINGTON — The House committee investigating the U.S. Capitol insurrection subpoenaed Kimberly Guilfoyle, the fiancee of former President Trump’s eldest son, on Thursday after she abruptly ended a voluntary interview with lawmakers last week.
The panel is seeking testimony and additional records from Guilfoyle, who they say was in direct contact with key participants and organizers in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack. Lawmakers say she raised funds for Trump’s rally earlier that day; she also spoke at that event.
In a federal court filing, the committee suggested the emails it is trying to obtain will show Trump himself violated multiple laws.
“Ms. Guilfoyle met with Donald Trump inside the White House, spoke at the rally that took place before the riot on January 6th, and apparently played a key role organizing and raising funds for that event,” Rep. Bennie Thompson (D-Miss.), the committee chairman, said in a statement.
Guilfoyle, who is engaged to Donald Trump Jr., initially complied with the committee’s request to voluntarily come in and talk to lawmakers, but at their virtual interview last Friday she objected to the presence of lawmakers and cut off the questioning.
A request for comment from Guilfoyle’s lawyer was not immediately returned.
The committee is now using its subpoena powers to get Guilfoyle to cooperate, a move they have avoided using for many in the Trump family, as they hope to bring them in on a voluntary basis. The committee has received a number of documents it had requested from Guilfoyle but is now looking to learn more about her meetings with the former president and members of his family in the Oval Office the morning of the attack.
It was in that room that morning when Trump last spoke with then-Vice President Mike Pence prior to the joint session of Congress to certify the results of the presidential election. Congressional investigators have released testimony that Trump pressured Pence in that phone call to intervene in, delay or even halt the counting of the electoral college tally, a power he did not have in his ceremonial role.
The U.S. Supreme Court rejects President Trump’s effort to block release of documents from his administration to the Jan. 6 House Select Committee.
The nine-member panel is also looking to talk to Guilfoyle because she was one of a few in Trump’s orbit who spoke to the crowd at the rally held on the Ellipse outside the White House in support of the former president and his false allegations of election fraud.
The committee said that based on the evidence it has gathered, “Guilfoyle also has claimed to have been involved in raising funds to pay for the Ellipse rally.”
“She also apparently communicated with others about the decision by the then-president about who was and was not allowed to speak at the rally, including concerns raised about him sharing the stage with individuals including Ali Alexander, Alex Jones, and Roger Stone,” the statement continued.
The subpoena to Guilfoyle comes a day after the committee issued a filing in federal court that suggested crimes may have been committed by Trump and his associates in the failed effort to overturn his defeat in the 2020 presidential election.
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