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WASHINGTON — Former Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne, an ally of former President Donald Trump, is expected to meet Friday with the House select committee investigating Jan. 6, 2021, according to three sources familiar with the matter.
There have been no ground rules or topics defined, according to one of the sources. The meeting will be behind closed doors.
A spokesman for the committee declined to comment, as did an attorney for Byrne.
Byrne played an active role supporting efforts to question and push baseless claims about the 2020 election, including attending a meeting in mid-December at the White House to discuss strategies to overturn the election. That meeting with Trump also included former national security adviser Michael Flynn and his lawyer Sidney Powell, as well as some White House staff. It focused on ideas to block Joe Biden's certification as president and discussed the prospect of seizing voting machines. White House officials in the meeting pushed back at the ideas in heated exchanges, CNN previously reported.
CNN reported earlier Monday that former White House Counsel Pat Cipollone had been asked about the December 18, 2020, meeting in his interview with the committee last week.
Excerpts from Cipollone's closed-door interview with the panel were featured during the committee's hearing on Tuesday. That hearing sought to draw connections between the various pressure campaigns Trump undertook to try to overturn the 2020 election and how "all the elements came together" and erupted into violence at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, committee aides said Monday.
Two sources familiar with Cipollone's testimony told CNN that he was asked extensively about his role in that meeting where Trump welcomed the group of extreme election deniers to the West Wing and what was discussed. One source familiar with Cipollone's testimony told CNN that he described to the committee his view of how insane the meeting was.
The session, which, according to two people familiar with the matter, began as an impromptu gathering, devolved and eventually broke out into screaming matches at certain points as some of Trump's aides pushed back on Powell and Flynn's more outrageous suggestions about overturning the election.
Select committee aides told CNN that Flynn will be among the former Trump associates whose role in overturning the election will be highlighted during Tuesday's hearing.
The Dec. 18 meeting, committee aides said, is of high interest to the panel's investigation. They pointed to a tweet Trump sent the following day, encouraging his supporters to descend on Washington as a key moment that ultimately led to the violence on Capitol Hill on Jan. 6.






