Lawyers for Trump spend Jan. 6 anniversary fighting for immunity in Capitol attack lawsuits

Left: Jan. 6 rioters during the 2021 Capitol attack (Department of Justice). Right: President-elect Donald Trump arrives to speak at a meeting of the House GOP conference, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon).

Left: Jan. 6 rioters during the 2021 Capitol attack (Department of Justice). Right: President-elect Donald Trump arrives to speak at a meeting of the House GOP conference, Wednesday, Nov. 13, 2024, in Washington. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon).

Lawyers for Donald Trump spent the fourth anniversary of the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol fighting on behalf of the president-elect in court over the status of the lawsuits that he’s currently facing for his actions that day — arguing that Trump should be exempt from all of them because of the Supreme Court’s ruling last summer granting him broad criminal immunity from official acts.

Trump and others are accused of conspiring to incite an assembled crowd to “march upon and enter” the Capitol building during the 2021 insurrection with his statements and actions. Capitol Police officers and members of Congress filed a series of lawsuits against Trump that February after the attack, alleging that he was liable for what transpired and should dole out compensatory damages to them.

Trump attorney Jonathan Shaw told U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta on Monday during a virtual hearing that the Supreme Court’s July 2024 decision provides “further insight” into the legal standard for tossing out the civil suits on the grounds that they directly involve official acts that Trump took as president, according to Politico. In order for Trump to get the suits axed, his legal team will have to prove that he was acting in his official capacity as president while speaking to Jan. 6 rioters that day — specifically, at a rally on the Ellipse lawn outside the White House, where Trump urged his supporters to march on the Capitol as Congress certified the results of the 2020 election.

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