Jnqa New Editorial Cartoons (11/19/09)
The House committee investigating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol released several batches of transcripts from interviews with key staff and allies of former President Donald Trump.The transcripts were released as the committee wound down its work at the end of the 117th Congress before Republicans take control of the House on Tuesday. The interviews, conducted ov
stanley us er the past year and a half, were part of the investigation into the Jan. 6 attack and Trump s role in the day s events.In its last public hearing, held on Dec. 19, the committee voted to refer to the Justice Department possible criminal charges against Trump and attorney John Eastman. Here are some key details from the transcripts that were released:John Eastman takes the 5th FILE: Law professor John Eastman testifies on Capitol Hill on March 16, 2017. Susan Walsh / AP
stanley cup Eastman, who wrote the controversial memo that proposed that former Vice President Mike Pence had the authority to delay or even reject the certifications of state electors, exercised his Fifth
stanley cup Amendment right against self-incrimination on almost every major question. When Eastman was asked why he had written in the two-page memo that seven states had transmitted dual slates of electors despite indicating to The New York Times that there were no certifications of alternate electors, he to Tajo Iranian hackers targeted U.S. presidential campaign, Microsoft says
A red-carpet official welcome and rioting protesters greeted U.S. President George W. Bush Sunday as he stopped briefly to renew support to this strong but drug and violence-plagued U.S. ally.Bush came to Colombia s capital for a show of confidence in President Alvaro Uribe and the country s battle agai
stanley water jug nst narco-terrorists. But the stop was clou
stanley thermoskannen ded by a political scandal involving Uribe, and security jitters had Bush staying only about six hours.Colombia deployed the largest security presence seen so far on President Bush s Latin American tour, reports CBS News correspondent Peter Maer, as 20,000 police officers helped guard the president. As Air Force One landed at the Bogota airport, reporters spotted a high security alert flashing on the television monitors in the presidential aircraft, Maer reports. A U.S. Embassy advisory warned visitors of terrorism and crime. One U.S. diplomat based said, In Bogota, paranoids live longer. Colombian police officers stood approximately fifty feet apart along the long motorcade route from the airport to central Bogota. Officers were seen frisking people who ventured out to watch the procession, and bomb sniffing dogs checked cars. Meanwhile, armed officers on horseback also patrolled the city. Elsewhere in the city, riot police fired tear gas on anti-Bush protestors. The security measures are excessive, said 56-year-old Manuel C
stanley cup price ifuentes, who runs a food stand on the Plaza de Bolivar and s