Members of the DPR Committee who investigated the Capitol riots said on Sunday that they had found enough evidence for the Department of Justice to consider criminal charges that had never happened before against former President Donald Trump for trying to cancel the 2020 election results.

The Committee announced that Trump’s campaign manager, Bill Stepien, was one of the witnesses scheduled to testify at the Monday trial focused on Trump’s efforts to spread his lies about the stolen election. Stepien was called for his public testimony.

When the audience takes place, Rep. Adam Schiff said he wanted the department to “investigate credible criminal activity accusations on Donald Trump.” Schiff, D-Calif., Who also led the DPR Intelligence Committee, said that “there are certain actions, part of various efforts to cancel the election that I did not see the evidence investigated by the Department of Justice.”

The Committee launched a public hearing last week, with members put their cases against Trump to show how the president who was defeated endlessly encouraged fake claims about the election that was cheated even though there were many advisers who told him and how he intensified the extraordinary scheme to turn the victory of Joe Biden Biden Joe Biden on the contrary Joe Biden Joe Biden.

Additional evidence will be released in this week’s hearing, Democrats, who will show that Trump and some of his advisers are involved in “massive efforts” to spread wrong information, pressing the Department of Justice to embrace his fake claims, and urged Vice at that time at that time the President at that time Mike Pence to reject state voters and block vote certification on January 6, 2021.

Stepien, Trump’s old ally, is now a leading campaign adviser for DPR Trump candidates in Wyoming Republican Primary, Harriet Hageman, who challenged Rep. Liz Cheney, deputy chairman of the committee and a critic of the former president. A spokesman for Trump, Taylor Budowich, suggested that the committee’s decision to call Stepien be politically motivated.

The list of witnesses on Monday also included Bjay Pak, the Top Federal Prosecutor in Atlanta who left his position on January 4, 2021, the day after the audio footage was announced where Trump called him “never Trumper”; Chris Stirewalt, a former political editor for Fox News; records Washington’s Election lawyer Benjamin Ginsberg; and Al Schmidt, a former city commissioner in Philadelphia.

The panel will also focus on millions of team dollars Trump brings fundraising ahead of January 6, according to an assistant committee who insisted on anonymity to discuss the details.

The Committee said that most of those who were interviewed in the investigation would move forward voluntarily, although some people wanted a court call to appear in public. The film maker Nick Quesed, who gave a documentary recorder from the attack, said that during the trial last week he received a court call to appear.

Committee members said they would provide clear evidence that the members of the GOP parliament were “many”, including Rep. Scott Perry, R-Pa., Has been looking for forgiveness from Trump, who will protect him from prosecution. Perry on Friday denied he had done it, calling the statement as “absolute lies, shameless, and without soul.”

We will not make accusations or say things without evidence or evidence that supports it,” Rep. Adam Kinzinger, r-to.