United States Representative Liz Cheney (Republican of Wyoming), Vice Chair, US House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the US Capitol, left, United States Representative Adam Kinzinger (Republican of Illinois), center, and United States Representative Jamie Raskin (Democrat of Maryland), right, listen as the House select committee tasked with investigating the January 6th attack on the Capitol meets to hold one of former President Donald Trump's allies in contempt, former strategist Steve Bannon in the Canon House Office Building in Washington, DC, Tuesday, October 19, 2021. Credit: Rod Lamkey / CNP/Sipa USA
DC: House Select Committee on January 6th attack on the Capitol
WASHINGTON (AP) — The House committee investigating the Jan. 6 insurrection at the Capitol will go public with its findings in a prime-time hearing next week, launching into what lawmakers hope will be one the most consequential oversight efforts in American history.
The six hearings, set to begin June 9 and expected to last until late June, will be the first time the committee discloses what it has discovered in the course of a sprawling 10-month investigation that has touched nearly every aspect of the insurrection. More than 1,000 people have been interviewed by the panel, and only brief snippets of that testimony have been revealed to the public, mostly through court filings.
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