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‘Metadata is very powerful’: January 6th adviser says Kelli Ward’s texts could expose damning coup info
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‘Metadata is very powerful’: January 6th adviser says Kelli Ward’s texts could expose damning coup info
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On Tuesday’s edition of MSNBC’s “Deadline: White House,” former Republican congressman and House January 6 Committee adviser Denver Riggleman weighed in on the efforts to gain communications by key allies of former President Donald Trump.
This comes after the Supreme Court shut down a request by Arizona Republican Party Chairwoman Kelli Ward, who is suspected of working with Trump’s allies to create a list of fraudulent presidential electors, to shut down a subpoena of her phone records — a subpoena which, according to Riggleman, could produce valuable information.
“Let me tell you, metadata and data is very powerful,” said Riggleman. “When you talk about Kelli Ward, you’re talking about someone who could be in the political side and the legal and the militant side. So when you have individuals fighting their phone records, you wonder why. And there could be one or two calls that go to people that are rally or right extremist groups and there are White House numbers and who was she talking to in the White House around January 6.”
“As far as the Secret Service texts, I would like to see what is policing,” said Riggleman. “But the before and after could be very powerful. On the Secret Service texts, if they could put that thread together it is very interesting to see who thought Trump was doing the right thing and who was supporting him and things of that nature. As far as Kelli Ward, I think you have a factor for people whose data out there, whether they realize, that the technical teams have a millions of lines of data and there is a link system to see the connections very quickly. And it is very, very robust. So I think you see that is why people are fighting.”
Furthermore, continued Riggleman, when it comes to Clarence Thomas — whose wife was heavily involved in pressuring Arizona lawmakers to throw out the 2020 election results, and who was one of only two justices to vote in favor of Ward’s request, it is “not a surprise that he voted against this.”
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