investigation and do the same as me as a president doing in 2014 when we launched international investigation team. now this is vital that every single participant of this crime would be responsible, would be guilty with a court decision. and this is help just to bringing the evidence that this is a genocide against ukrainian people because people were killed, were raped, just because they are ukrainian. just because they want to stay alive. and they want to kill us. just because we want to have our own state and they want to wipe our state from the world map. and with that situation, definitely the special criminal would be absolutely necessary. and when we talking about kramatorsk, you are right. when yesterday, during our visit with a world famous just in
it is not just in their interests. it is in the country s interests. i think the vast majority of them are honorable. they also recognize as was mentioned in the report that the vice president played an important role. that s the key. we may not have to talk to the president, the former president, but we are getting pieces of this puzzle, all these pieces right now in this box. when we put this puzzle together we ll be able to see what i think even more importantly is what was the president doing, what did he know prior to january 6th? what led to this? congresswoman murphy the vice president was not at the white house that day. he was on capitol hill with you and your colleagues. if you could ask him a question, what are some of the things you d want to know? i d like to know from him what he said to the president when the president was pressuring him both publicly and did he pressure him privately to act in a way different than he did. i actually am very impressed that he carried
help, how much collusion, how much coordination was going on between the white house, congress, and these people who ultimately became the insurrectionists who broke into the capitol and tried to stop an election that was free and fair from being certified. so that s really what it is, because right now what we have is former president trump saying of course go down to the capitol, he s saying people should be peaceful. that s the thing that s tough, former president trump has a way of saying things so that when something happens such as thousands of people breaking into the capitol, he can say, i told them to be peaceful. that s the real connection. you have to go back to the 187 minutes. what was the president doing, what was former president trump doing during that time period? lawmakers have said they were trying to reach out to the white house, they were trying to get help there quicker, there was not enough police to ward off and to keep people safe, to keep the building safe. an
the president s role? we know some of the things about what the president did certainly in propagating the big lie before that day and what he did at the rally that day but what was going on at the white house? what did he know in advance of january 6th who was coming to the rally, the presence of white nationalist groups and propensity for violence. why didn t reinforcements come in to protect the capitol more quickly? that s the biggest unknown. what was the president doing, what were the people around him doing? so then how does the committee get to the bottom of these crucial questions? look, they re doing this quite effectively. i believe as of right now, they issued with today s subpoena, they re around 19 or so and they re getting at it from different ways. look, the two justice department figures that we re talking about here, rosen and clark, that s incredibly valuable testimony for establishing what the law enforcement response would have been on that day and i note that
before that day and what he did at the rally that day but what was going on at the white house? did he know in advance of january 6th who was coming to the rally, the presence of white nationalist groups and propensity for violence. why didn t reinforcements come in to protech the capitol more quickly? that s the biggest unknown. what was the president doing, what were the people around him doing? so then how does the committee get to the bottom of these crucial questions? look, they re doing this quite effectively. i believe as of right now, they issued with today s subpoena, they re around 19 or so and they re getting at it from different ways. look, the two justice department figures that we re talking about here, rosen and clark, that s incredibly valuable testimony for establishing what the law enforcement response would have been on that day and i note that jeffrey rosen testified today for or met with the committee today for i believe over eight hours providing background. t