White House officials pushed Atlanta’s top federal prosecutor to resign before Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoffs because President Trump was upset he wasn’t doing enough to investigate the president’s allegations of election fraud, people familiar with the matter said.

A senior Justice Department official, at the behest of the White House, called Trump-appointed U.S. Attorney Byung J. Pak and told him he needed to step down because he wasn’t pursuing vote-fraud allegations to Mr. Trump’s satisfaction, the people said.

Mr. Pak resigned abruptly on Monday—the day before the runoffs—saying in an early morning email to colleagues that his departure was due to “unforeseen circumstances.” 

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The pressure on Mr. Pak was part of Mr. Trump’s weekslong push to try to alter presidential election results favoring President-elect Joe Biden, which included his win in Georgia. Mr. Trump this week, following the U.S. Capitol riot, said he would leave office on Jan. 20 when Mr. Biden is inaugurated.

Recently departed Attorney General William Barr has said the Justice Department hadn’t found evidence of widespread voter fraud that could reverse Mr. Biden’s victory, including claims of voter fraud, ballot destruction and voting-machine manipulation.  

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Source Article from https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/factcheck/2021/01/09/fact-check-rush-limbaugh-deactivated-his-twitter-account/6608137002/

Rep. Jamaal Bowman, a new member of the progressive “squad,” is introducing legislation to investigate whether alleged White nationalism in the U.S. Capitol Police factored into the deadly riot at the Capitol Wednesday.

Bowman, D-N.Y., is authoring the Congressional Oversight of Unjust Policing Act, or COUP Act, to establish a commission to investigate the attack and potential ties between White supremacists and Capitol Police.

“We have to stare White nationalism in the face,” Bowman said Saturday at a press conference in New York to discuss the fallout of the violent attempt to stop Congress from certifying the Electoral College vote.

“We have to deal with it directly, not only through law enforcement, but by recognizing that White nationalism lives in every American institution.”

Bowman said his proposed commission would examine how White nationalism might exist within Capitol Police and whether police assisted rioters in entering the Capitol on Jan. 6, forcing lawmakers to evacuate.

“As we experienced Wednesday’s horrible events, my first question was: ‘How the hell were they able to penetrate the Capitol? Why were Capitol Police so undermanned and overwhelmed so quickly?” Bowman said.

OBAMA ECHOES BIDEN REMARKS THAT POLICE RESPONSE TO CAPITOL RIOTS WOULD HAVE BEEN HARSHER WITH BLM

One video on social media appears to show police taking selfies with rioters who stormed into the Capitol. Other videos appear to show police letting pro-Trump rioters move past barricades.

“There’s so many unanswered questions and that’s why we need a thorough investigation,” Bowman said Saturday. “And as we’ve seen on the media, some of the Capitol Police let the rioters into the Capitol.”

Congressman elect Jamaal Bowman poses for a portrait in the 16th congressional district on June 30 in Yonkers, NY. (Michael Noble Jr. for The Washington Post via Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

Bowman’s legislation is the latest effort by the “squad” to hold people accountable for the violence at the Capitol that led to five deaths, including a Capitol Police officer.

Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., was quick to circulate new articles of impeachment against President Trump for inciting the riot. Democrats now are moving forward with a quick impeachment next week on a different version of the articles.

ARTICLE OF IMPEACHMENT AGAINST TRUMP TO BE INTRODUCED MONDAY IN HOUSE

And Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., has authored a separate resolution to expel GOP members of Congress who incited the violence at the Capitol.

Civil rights groups and lawmakers have been furious over the vastly different approach law enforcement took to Wednesday’s U.S. Capitol breach compared to last summer’s Black Lives Matter (BLM) protests.

Biden addressed the disparity on Thursday at a news conference. 

“No one can tell me that if it had been a group of Black Lives Matter protesting yesterday, they wouldn’t have been treated very, very differently than the mob of thugs that stormed the Capitol. We all know that’s true, and it is unacceptable,” Biden said. “Totally unacceptable.”

WHO IS STEVEN SUND, THE CAPITOL POLICE CHIEF RESIGNING AFTER DC RIOTS?

Bush, a BLM activist, told MSNBC Wednesday:  “We would have been shot had we tried to do all of that.”

In the wake of the riot, U.S. Capitol Police Chief Steven Sund praised the law enforcement response saying officers “responded valiantly when faced with thousands of individuals involved in violent riotous actions.”

Sund said in a statement that rioters attacked police with metal pipes, discharged chemical irritants and used other weapons against the officers in their efforts to enter the Capitol and cause great harm.

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“The violent attack on the U.S. Capitol was unlike any I have ever experienced in my 30 years in law enforcement here in Washington, D.C.,” Sund said.

The police “had a robust plan” to handle First Amendment protests, Sund said, but “these mass riots were not First Amendment activities; they were criminal riotous behavior.”

Under pressure, Sund will resign from his post on Jan. 16.

“The actions of the USCP officers were heroic given the situation they faced,” Sund said.

Fox News’ Caitlin McFall contributed to this report. 

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/bowman-coup-act-investigate-white-nationalists-capitol-police

White House officials pushed Atlanta’s top federal prosecutor to resign before Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoffs because President Trump was upset he wasn’t doing enough to investigate the president’s unproven claims of election fraud, people familiar with the matter said.

A senior Justice Department official, at the behest of the White House, called Trump-appointed U.S. Attorney Byung J. Pak and told him he needed to step down because he wasn’t pursuing vote-fraud allegations to Mr. Trump’s satisfaction, the people said.

Mr. Pak resigned abruptly on Monday—the day before the runoffs—saying in an early morning email to colleagues that his departure was due to “unforeseen circumstances.”

The pressure on Mr. Pak was part of Mr. Trump’s weekslong push to try to alter presidential election results favoring President-elect Joe Biden, which included his win in Georgia. Mr. Trump this week, following the U.S. Capitol riot, said he would leave office on Jan. 20 when Mr. Biden is inaugurated.

Recently departed Attorney General William Barr has said the Justice Department hadn’t found evidence of widespread voter fraud that could reverse Mr. Biden’s victory, including claims of fraud, ballot destruction and voting-machine manipulation.

Source Article from https://www.wsj.com/articles/white-house-forced-georgia-u-s-attorney-to-resign-11610225840

A legislative counsel member of the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) warned Friday that the suspension of President Donald Trump‘s social media accounts wielded “unchecked power,” by Twitter and Facebook.

Kate Ruane, a senior legislative counsel at the ACLU said in a statement that the decision to suspend Trump from social media could set a precedent for big tech companies to silence less privileged voices.

“For months, President Trump has been using social media platforms to seed doubt about the results of the election and to undermine the will of voters. We understand the desire to permanently suspend him now, but it should concern everyone when companies like Facebook and Twitter wield the unchecked power to remove people from platforms that have become indispensable for the speech of billions – especially when political realities make those decisions easier,” the statement read.

“President Trump can turn his press team or Fox News to communicate with the public, but others – like many Black, Brown, and LGTBQ activists who have been censored by social media companies – will not have that luxury. It is our hope that these companies will apply their rules transparently to everyone.

The ACLU warned Friday that permanently banning Trump from social media wields “unchecked power” by big tech companies. Here, the suspended Twitter account of U.S. President Donald Trump appears on an iPhone screen on January 08, 2021 in San Anselmo, California.
Getty

The ACLU isn’t the only voice in the legal community citing concern over the move to suspend Trump.

“I want a wide range of ideas, even those I loathe, to be heard, and I think Twitter especially holds a concerning degree of power over public discourse,” Gregory P. Magarian, a law professor at Washington University in St. Louis told The New York Times.

On Friday, Twitter announced that Trump would be permanently suspended from its platform “due to the risk of further incitement of violence.”

The social media site placed a temporary ban on Trump’s account Wednesday after a mob of his supporters stormed the U.S. Capitol, leaving five people dead—including a police officer—and many more injured.

After he regained access to his account, Trump wrote a tweet in which he called his supporters “American patriots,” who will have “a GIANT VOICE long into the future.” In a separate message, he said that he would not be attending President-elect Joe Biden‘s inauguration.

In response, Twitter said: “After close review of recent Tweets from the @realDonaldTrump account and the context around them — specifically how they are being received and interpreted on and off Twitter — we have permanently suspended the account due to the risk of further incitement of violence.”

Facebook has also suspended Trump from using its platform until at least the end of his presidential term.

“We believe the risks of allowing the President to continue to use our service during this period are simply too great,” Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg said in a statement on Thursday.

“Therefore, we are extending the block we have placed on his Facebook and Instagram accounts indefinitely and for at least the next two weeks until the peaceful transition of power is complete.”

On Friday, Trump condemned the tech companies for silencing him and said he will “look at the possibilities of building out our own platform in the near future.”

Newsweek reached out the ACLU for additional comment, but did not hear back in time for publication.

Source Article from https://www.newsweek.com/aclu-counsel-warns-unchecked-power-twitter-facebook-after-trump-suspension-1560248

Police charged more Capitol rioters on Saturday, including a man who carried off the House speaker’s lectern, as more graphic details of the insurrection emerged, revealing the violence and brutality of the mob that stormed a seat of American political power.

A bloodied officer was crushed in a doorway screaming in Wednesday’s siege, which forced lawmakers to go into hiding for hours and halt their voting to affirm President-elect Joe Biden’s victory. Another officer tumbled over a railing into the crowd below after being body-slammed from behind. Members of the media were cursed, shoved and punched.

A vast number of photos and videos captured the riot, which left five people dead. Many of the images were taken by the rioters themselves, few of whom wore masks that would have lowered not only their chances of contracting the coronavirus, but their chances of being identified. Some took pains to stand out.

Jacob Anthony Chansley, an Arizona man seen in photos and video of the mob with a painted face and wearing a costume that included a horned, fur hat, was taken into custody Saturday and charged with counts that include violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.

Chansley, more commonly known as Jake Angeli, will remain in custody in Arizona pending a detention hearing that will be scheduled during an initial court appearance early in the coming week, Assistant U.S. Attorney Esther Winne told The Associated Press by email. Chansley did not immediately respond to messages left via email and telephone.

Chansley, who had become a staple in his costume at pro-Trump protests across the country, is now among dozens of people arrested in the wake of the Capitol invasion by a large mob of Trump supporters enraged over his election loss.

The rioters took over the House and Senate chambers, smashed windows and waved Trump, American and Confederate flags.

A Florida man accused of making off with Pelosi’s lectern during the chaos was arrested Friday night on a federal warrant and was being held Saturday without bail in Pinellas County, Florida. Jail records do not show if Adam Johnson, 36, of Parrish, Florida, has an attorney.

Johnson was charged Saturday with theft, violent entry and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds.

The married father of five was quickly identified on social media by local residents as the man in a photo smiling as he walked through the Capitol rotunda carrying Pelosi’s lectern, The Bradenton Herald reported.

Johnson posted on social media that he was in Washington, D.C., during Wednesday’s riots and included disparaging comments about the Black Lives Matter movement, according to The Bradenton Herald. Those posts were later deleted or taken down.

During Wednesday’s violence, Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick was wounded in a confrontation with attackers and was reportedly struck by a fire extinguisher. He died Thursday night. Another officer was crushed in a doorway, but it’s unclear what happened to that officer, whose plight was captured on camera and shared by the progressive organization Status Coup. Members of media organizations, including the AP and The New York Times, were also attacked.

By Saturday, prosecutors had filed 17 cases in federal district court and 40 others in the District of Columbia Superior Court for a variety of offenses ranging from assaulting police officers to entering restricted areas of the U.S. Capitol, stealing federal property and threatening lawmakers.

Prosecutors said additional cases remained under seal, dozens of other people were being sought by federal agents, and the U.S. attorney in Washington vowed Friday that “all options were on the table” for charges, including possibly sedition.

Other notable arrests in the Capitol invasion include:

— Doug Jensen, an Iowa man, was jailed early Saturday on federal charges, including trespassing and disorderly conduct counts, for his alleged role in the Capitol riot. Jensen, 41, of Des Moines, was being held without bond at the Polk County Jail and county sheriff’s Sgt. Ryan Evans said he didn’t know if Jensen had an attorney. Video posted online during the storming of the Capitol showed a man who appears to be Jensen, who is white, pursuing a Black officer up an interior flight of stairs as a mob of people trails several steps behind. At several points, the officer says “get back,” to no avail.

— Richard Barnett, an Arkansas man who was shown in a widely seen photo sitting in House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office with his boots on a desk after the storming of the Capitol, was arrested Friday by the FBI. Barnett, 60, turned himself in to FBI agents at the Benton County Sheriff’s Office in Bentonville, Arkansas. He is jailed in the Washington County Detention Center in nearby Fayetteville, Arkansas, without bond pending an initial court appearance, FBI Little Rock spokesman Connor Hagan said. No attorney is listed in online jail records for the Gravette, Arkansas, man.

— Derrick Evans, a West Virginia state lawmaker who posted videos online showing himself pushing his way inside the Capitol, was arrested Friday by the FBI at his home and charged with entering restricted federal property. Evans, who faced bipartisan calls for him to step down, submitted a letter of resignation Saturday to West Virginia Gov. Jim Justice and apologized for his actions. Evans faces charges that he entered a restricted area of the U.S. Capitol after he livestreamed himself rushing into the building with a horde of rampaging Trump supporters. In the videos, Evans is seen fist-bumping a police officer and then milling around the rotunda as he shouted, “Our house!”

___

Callahan reported from Indianapolis. Associated Press writers Michael Balsamo and Paul Davenport contributed to this report.

Source Article from https://www.startribune.com/more-arrests-in-capitol-riot-as-more-video-reveals-brutality/600008659/

Democratic Congressman Adam Schiff, one of the lead impeachment managers during President Donald Trump‘s first impeachment, called on Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell to provide support in the latest efforts to remove the president from office after Wednesday’s Capitol riot.

In an interview with MSNBC host Rachel Maddow Fridady, the congressman said that McConnell “bear[s] the responsibility for whatever dangerous acts this president commits,” if the senator stops or delays impeachment.

Maddow asked the congressman about a memo reportedly being circulated in the Senate by McConnell, which says that the Senate wouldn’t begin a trial until after President-elect Joe Biden‘s inauguration. Schiff said that “if Mitch McConnell wants to move with expedition, he knows how to do it.”

He also warned about McConnell “drag[ging] this out,” shifting responsibility to the Senate Majority Leader for actions taken by Trump.

“He will bear the responsibility for whatever dangerous acts this president commits. For whatever abdication of responsibility, for whatever further attack on our institutions, if Mitch McConnell draws this out, delays, stonewalls, drags his heels—then he will bear the responsibility,” Schiff said.

The Democrat continued: “Given the erratic nature of this president, given how many people—the rising number of people in his own conference—who are calling for this president to leave office, I would not want the responsibility for standing in the way of upholding our constitutional duty.”

Schiff released a statement on Friday, calling for Trump’s impeachment, saying the president would likely be responsible for further acts of violence. The congressman urged Vice President Mike Pence and the Cabinet to invoke the 25th Amendment and remove Trump. He called for a swift impeachment. Part of his statement can be found below:

“The Congress should act to begin impeachment proceedings as the only instrument wholly within our power to remove a president who has so manifestly and repeatedly violated the Constitution and put our nation at grave risk. The exigency of the circumstances warrants a departure from the ordinary and lengthy process in the House; a resolution of impeachment focused on the attack should be brought to the House floor on a privileged basis and, upon passage, taken up by the Senate with equal expedition so that the President can be tried, and through conviction, the country can be protected from further harm.”

During Friday’s interview, Schiff said that the best thing Trump could do was resign, but expressed doubts that he would or that Pence would invoke the 25th.

“The president has never been concerned with what’s best for the country, only what’s best for himself. So, I don’t have a whole lot of hope or expectation that he will do the right thing,” he said.

He also said that Trump remaining in office was “a danger to the republic,” calling for a quick impeachment.

Newsweek reached out to Schiff’s office and McConnell’s press secretaries for comment.

Demonstrators hold a banner calling for impeachment of US President Donald Trump during a protest outside the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, New York on January 7, 2021 a day after pro-Trump mob stormed and trashed the Capitol.
Kena Betancur /AFP/Getty

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Twitter saw a surprising item trending on Friday night when “Hang Mike Pence” hit around 14,000 tweets, according to reports.

The social media platform announced Friday night that it was permanently suspending President Donald Trump’s Twitter account.

The decision was made “due to the risk of further incitement of violence,” according to a statement on the company’s blog.  

TWITTER SUSPENDS @REALDONALDTRUMP ACCOUNT PERMANENTLY

Many users were confused, then, to see such a violent item in the trending section.

CONSERVATIVES FLEE TO PARLER FOLLOWING TWITTER’S PERMANENT SUSPENSION OF TRUMP

Twitter appeared to notice the trend at some point: on the Twitter Trending USA site, which tracks the past 12 hours of the top 10 trending, the item does not appear. 

“We blocked the phrase and other variations of it from trending,” a Twitter spokesperson told Fox News on Saturday. “We want trends to promote healthy discussions on Twitter.”

PENCE TO OPPOSE 25TH AMENDMENT POWERS TO REMOVE TRUMP FROM OFFICE

“This means that at times, we may prevent certain content from trending. As per our Help Center, there are Rules for trends — if we identify accounts that violate these rules, we’ll take enforcement action.” 

Some users were quick to point out that the trending item was not due to fresh threats, but rather that users were circulating a video from the Wednesday riot at the U.S. Capitol.

In the video, protesters could be heard chanting the phrase repeatedly.

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No matter the reason, some users believed that allowing the item to trend at all was hypocritical after Twitter explicitly cited “violence” as the reason Trump was suspended.

Source Article from https://www.foxnews.com/politics/twitter-trending-hang-mike-pence

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One of those charged included a West Virginia Republican state lawmaker who recorded a Facebook Live video of himself entering the Capitol.

U.S. officials announced Friday that Derrick Evans, a member of the state’s House of Delegates and a Trump supporter, was charged with entering a restricted area of the Capitol and disorderly conduct. If convicted, Evans could face up to year and a half in prison.

The Justice Department also announced federal charges against 13 other individuals on Friday, including an Arkansas man who was pictured sitting with his feet up on Pelosi’s desk.

Richard Barnett, 60, was arrested and charged with entering a restricted area, disorderly conduct on the Capitol grounds and theft of public property.

FBI agents are investigating whether some of the rioters, who were seen with zip ties and firearms, entered the Capitol with the intention of killing or capturing lawmakers, according to the Washington Post.

The riots have resulted in the deaths of at least five people, including U.S. Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick. Federal prosecutors have announced they will open an investigation into Sicknick’s death.

Source Article from https://www.politico.com/news/2021/01/09/pelosi-lectern-capitol-riots-arrest-456830

The Alethea report lists events planned for Jan. 17, as well as the day before the inauguration and on Inauguration Day itself. The specified locations include the U.S. Capitol and the Mall in Washington, the Utah Capitol in Salt Lake City, and locations in Pittsburgh and Columbus, Ohio. Some events, including an “Armed March on All State Capitals,” include localized events in all 50 states.

Source Article from https://www.washingtonpost.com/technology/2021/01/09/trump-twitter-protests/