At Jan. 6 hearing, GOP state election officials detail emotional pushback to Trump's pressure
The committee said he was directly involved in the 'fake electors" scheme.
The House select committee investigating the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol held another hearing Tuesday on the pressure campaign it says former President Donald Trump and allies put on state election officials as part of a larger "seven-part scheme" to overturn the results of the 2020 election.
Here is how the hearing unfolded:
- Schiff calls Trump's action 'unpatriotic' but punts to DOJ on whether criminal
- Mother-daughter election duo describe impact of 'hateful' attacks
- Former elections worker describes moment she learned about threats against her
- Committee plays audio of Trump's call to Raffensperger to 'find' votes
- Audio of Trump pressuring Georgia official aired in hearing
Committee subpoenas filmmaker for new footage of Trump
The House select committee has subpoenaed a British documentary filmmaker who had substantial access to Trump, his family and closest aides both before and after the Jan. 6 attack, according to a statement from the filmmaker obtained by ABC News.
A spokesperson for filmmaker Alex Holder, who began filming Trump for a project in September 2020, confirmed the subpoena, first reported by Politico.
Holder said he has "fully complied with all of the committee’s requests" and handed over footage which includes interviews with Trump, Donald Trump Jr., Ivanka Trump, Eric Trump, son-in-law Jared Kushner and Vice President Mike Pence, shot in the weeks around the Jan. 6 attack.
-ABC News' Ali Dukakis and Benjamin Siegel
Former election worker to describe threats against her, family
Shaye Moss, a former election worker in Georgia, will testify Tuesday about the threats she said she and her family received in the aftermath of the 2020 race, according to a copy of her opening statement obtained by ABC News.
"Ever since December 2020, I have been under attack for just doing my job," the statement reads. "My mom too."
Moss will describe how they were the target of lies spread by Trump and Rudy Giuliani, including false accusations that they brought ballots into the State Farm Arena in a suitcase.
"People showed up at my grandmother's home trying to bust the door down and conduct a citizen's arrest of my mom and me," her statement reads. "The threats followed me to work. People would email the general email address for our office so everyone could see their threats and the hateful messages directed at me."
4th June hearing to include 4 live witnesses
Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, whom Trump asked to "find" just one vote over the margin by which he trailed President-elect Joe Biden in a now-infamous phone call on Jan. 2, 2021, will testify before the committee this afternoon, along with his blunt-spoken deputy, Gabe Sterling, after facing backlash from their own party for pushing back on Trump's claims of election fraud in Georgia.
Joining them will be Arizona House Speaker Rusty Bowers, who was pressured by Ginni Thomas, the wife of Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, to decertify Biden's victory in the state, according to emails reviewed by ABC News. Bowers previously described to The Arizona Republic that Rudy Giuliani also called him after the election to pressure him to involve the state legislature to manipulate results in his state.
Former Fulton County election worker Shaye Moss, who was falsely accused by Giuliani and other Republicans of election fraud and smuggling "suitcases" of illegal ballots in Atlanta on election night, will testify on a second panel. She's said that she and her mother, another election worker, were subject to harassment and threats online even after Georgia election officials debunked fraud allegations.
What to expect at Tuesday's hearing
The committee's afternoon hearing will focus on what it says was then-President Donald Trump's "unprecedented" effort to push key state officials to reject the election results and his central role in the plot to create "fake" slates of electors to overturn Joe Biden's victory.
Trump "drove a pressure campaign bases on lies" about the election, an aide told reporters on a briefing call Monday, and was "warned that his actions risked inciting violence" but "did it anyway."
Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Calif., will lead the 1 p.m. ET hearing that the aide said will reveal new information obtained by the committee detailing Trump's involvement and feature live witness testimony from Arizona and Georgia officials.