The US congressional committee probing the deadly January 6 assault on the Capitol has voted in favour of contempt of Congress charges against Jeffrey Clark, a senior Justice Department official under former president Donald Trump.
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The seven Democratic and two Republican members of the House of Representatives Select Committee approved a report recommending the criminal charge by a unanimous 9-0 vote on Wednesday after Clark appeared before the committee in early November but declined to answer questions.
The committee's approval of the report paved the way for the entire House to vote on whether to recommend contempt charges.
Representative Bennie Thompson, the panel's Democratic chairman, said before the vote that Clark's lawyerb had contacted them on Wednesday evening and said Clark had invoked his Fifth Amendment right not to self-incriminate and agreed to continue his deposition.
Clark had declined to answer questions and walked out of his first deposition in early November.
Thompson said the committee nonetheless was going ahead with the contempt proceeding, and had ordered Clark to appear on Saturday.
"We will not allow anyone to run out the clock, and we will insist that he must appear," Thompson said.
Approval by the full, Democratic-controlled chamber would send the matter to the Department of Justice for a decision on whether to prosecute.
Clark, the former acting head of the Justice Department's civil division, was a proponent of Trump's false claims that his defeat by Democrat Joe Biden in the November 2020 election was the result of fraud.
Clark had argued that he was exempt from having to comply with the Select Committee's subpoena because his communications were protected by legal privilege.
Trump has urged former aides to disregard the committee's subpoenas, issuing often-rambling statements insulting its members and arguing that he is protected by executive privilege.
Legal experts dispute that argument, saying it does not apply to former presidents.
The committee has made clear it will force compliance with its subpoenas.
Trump's longtime adviser Steve Bannon pleaded not guilty last month to two counts of contempt of Congress after he defied a subpoena from the Select Committee.
Nearly 700 people have been charged with taking part in the assault on the Capitol on January 6, the worst attack on the seat of the US government since the War of 1812.
Four people died the day of the riot, and one Capitol police officer died the next day of injuries sustained while defending Congress.
Australian Associated Press