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Jan. 6 panel asks Georgia House Republican to testify about previous-day tour

Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Georgia) listens to a speaker at a press conference
Rep. Barry Loudermilk (R-Georgia) is the latest GOP lawmaker to be asked to cooperate with the House select committee investigating the Capitol riot on Jan. 6, 2021.
(Ron Harris / Associated Press)
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The congressional committee investigating the U.S. Capitol insurrection is asking a House Republican for more information about a tour of the building that the panel says he led the day before the deadly attack.

The committee’s letter to Georgia Rep. Barry Loudermilk on Thursday is the latest attempt by House investigators to obtain cooperation from GOP lawmakers in the probe of the Jan. 6, 2021 attack, when supporters of Donald Trump violently broke into the Capitol and interrupted the certification of President Biden’s victory.

“Based on our review of evidence in the Select Committee’s possession, we believe you have information regarding a tour you led through parts of the Capitol complex on January 5, 2021,“ wrote Reps Bennie Thompson and Liz Cheney, the chairman and vice chairwoman of the committee, wrote Loudermilk.

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“Public reporting and witness accounts indicate some individuals and groups engaged in efforts to gather information about the layout of the U.S. Capitol, as well as the House and Senate office buildings” in advance of the insurrection, they wrote.

A request for comment from Loudermilk was not immediately returned.

The voluntary request comes as the panel has already conducted more than 1,000 interviews about the insurrection and as it prepares for a series of hearings in June. The questions about tours of the Capitol ahead of the attack have lingered since the days afterward, when Democrats suggested that some Republican members may have helped the rioters. But so far there has been no public evidence of that assistance.

Authorities say Brian Ulrich participated in encrypted chats with other people affiliated with the Oath Keepers days before the Jan. 6 insurrection at the U.S. Capitol.

The letter to Loudermilk said that Republicans on a separate panel, the House Administration Committee, had previously said they reviewed security footage from Jan. 5 and said there were “no tours, no large groups, no one with MAGA hats on.” Loudermilk is a member of that panel.

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But the Jan. 6 committee’s review of the evidence “directly contradicts that denial,” Thompson and Cheney wrote.

That assessment by GOP members came after three dozen Democrats sent a letter to the committee days after the attack citing alleged sightings of “unusually large” groups led by either Republican lawmakers or their staff in the days leading up to the attack

The House Committee on Thursday subpoenaed five representatives who refused to voluntarily testify before Congress.

The request to Loudermilk comes a week after the seven Democrats and two Republicans on the Jan. 6 panel issued subpoenas to five of their Republican colleagues, including Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy.

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The decision to issue subpoenas to McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) and Reps. Jim Jordan of Ohio, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, Andy Biggs of Arizona and Mo Brooks of Alabama was a dramatic show of force by the panel, which has already interviewed nearly 1,000 witnesses and collected more than 100,000 documents as it investigates the worst attack on the Capitol in two centuries.

The five Republicans, all of whom have repeatedly downplayed the investigation’s legitimacy, have yet to say whether they will comply.

In total, the committee has now publicly requested cooperation from at least eight lawmakers it believes have information crucial to the planning and execution of the attack and Trump’s potential role in inciting it.

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