White House records obtained by the Jan. 6 panel so far do not reflect calls made to or from Trump during the violence, leaving gaps in what transpired, sources say
The records the House select committee has obtained do not contain entries of phone calls between the President and lawmakers that have been widely reported in the press. Trump was known to make calls using personal cell phones, which could account for those.
Two of the sources, who have also reviewed the presidential diary from that day, say it contains scant information and no record of phone calls for several hours after Trump returned to the Oval Office after giving a speech to his supporters at the Ellipse until he emerged to address the nation in a video from the Rose Garden.
A spokesperson and an attorney for Trump did not respond to requests for comment.
Sources familiar with the investigation say they haven’t drawn any final conclusions, suggesting the gaps in the records may be explained by the use of personal cell phones, or because Trump was simply not making or receiving many calls during the riot. There is also the possibility the Archives will find more records that can explain the gaps.
Compiled with information provided by White House staffers for the Archives, they are meant to chronicle the President’s activities. Diaries from past administrations have been rife with information.
In some cases, the committee has already been able to fill in the gaps. Sources who reviewed the records say there is an entry showing Trump trying to get former Vice President Mike Pence on the phone before the Capitol siege. Pence didn’t answer the call, and the committee does not have a record of Pence returning Trump’s call.
But the committee has learned the pair did talk that morning from interviewing Pence’s then-national security adviser Keith Kellogg, according to a letter sent to Ivanka Trump by the committee requesting her voluntary cooperation. The revelation in the request, underscoring the importance of hundreds of depositions already conducted and potentially reams of phone records that the committee has subpoenaed.
“Whether it is the absence of data or phone logs or willing testimony, inevitably, we have different sources to get that information because these are conversations that require more than one participant,” committee member Rep. Stephanie Murphy said.
“So even if there is one node that isn’t forthcoming, there are inevitably other points of information that we can use to build a more fulsome picture of what happened on January 6,” the Florida Democrat said.
The committee has not requested Trump’s personal phone records, according to the committee’s chairman, Rep. Bennie Thompson, who noted the panel could always revisit that possibility.
Thompson also acknowledged that the use of private cell phones was common in the Trump White House, including by senior officials like Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows. Sources also tell CNN that Trump had a habit of asking aides to call certain people on his behalf.
One former Trump White House staffer said calls on personal cell phones were rarely tracked or recorded. That same staffer said Trump routinely used his personal cell phone, too.
Former White House deputy chief of staff Dan Scavino was among those whose cell phone would be commandeered by the President to make calls, sources tell CNN. An attorney for Scavino declined to comment.
Scavino has been subpoenaed by the select committee, and he’s also among several Trump loyalists who have sued to prevent the committee from obtaining his personal cell phone records. Scavino initially attempted to file the suit anonymously, but the judge in the case required him to go public.
“We know that President Trump had a highly unorthodox style of communication using his own personal cell phones but even in the normally weird practices of the Trump White House, this gap raises some serious questions,” CNN legal analyst Norm Eisen said.
“The gaps in in the call logs and the ancillary records raises a set of very serious concerns, including the question whether there was an intentional effort to circumvent the usual system, and if so, who directed it and for what purpose,” Eisen said.
Chris Christie, the former New Jersey governor and once a Trump ally, previously told CNN about multiple efforts to get through to the then-President during the riot, through the White House switchboard, his assistant, body man and personal cell phone — without any luck.
The committee has asked Ivanka Trump to come in for an interview, and she has not responded publicly. Meadows has refused to cooperate and been referred to the Justice Department for possible criminal contempt of Congress charges. He also sued to keep his phone records out of the committee’s hands.
The investigative techniques the committee is using in spite of Trump administration’s lack of careful record-keeping, is similar to a process House investigators used during their impeachment probe of Trump shortly after the riot.
Thompson, a Mississippi Democrat, has said that their efforts to obtain information from a wide variety of sources is a key to getting to the bottom of what happened even as some witnesses refuse to cooperate or fight them in court.
“If this person sent a message to Meadows, then we will debate the policy question of maybe we need to get the phone records of that person and compare the two,” Thompson said.
Jordan as well as McCarthy have so far declined an invitation to voluntarily cooperate with the investigation.
This story has been updated with additional developments Thursday.
CNN’s Marshall Cohen contributed to this report.