• Gaetz sought a pardon request from "the beginning of time up until today, for any and all things."
  • That's according to Trump lawyer Eric Herschmann and two other Trump officials.
  • The revelation came at the end of Thursday's January 6 committee hearing.

The January 6 committee aired a series of video testimonies from former Trump administration officials detailing which Republican members of Congress sought pardons from former President Donald Trump at the end of his term as he and his allies exhausted different avenues to stay in power.

Most prominently featured: Republican Rep. Matt Gaetz of Florida.

According to various officials who spoke with the committee, Gaetz began pushing for a pardon well before other Republicans who were involved in the attempt to overturn the 2020 election.

"Mr. Gaetz was personally pushing for a pardon, and he was doing so since early December," said Cassidy Hutchinson, a former aide to White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, in testimony aired by the committee on Thursday.

"I'm not sure why," she continued. "Mr. Gaetz had reached out to me to ask if he could have a meeting with Mr. Meadows about receiving a presidential pardon."

Several other aides confirmed that Gaetz asked for a pardon; it would become public two months after Trump left office that Gaetz was reportedly under investigation for alleged sexual trafficking.

"I know he had asked for it, but I don't know if he ever received one or what happened with it," said John McEntee, the former director of the White House Personnel Office.

"The general tone was, 'We may get prosecuted because we were defensive of, you know, the President's positions on these things,'" said Eric Herschmann, a former White House senior advisor. "The pardon that he was discussing, requesting, was as broad as you could describe, from... the beginning of time up until today, for any and all things."

"He had mentioned Nixon," said Herschmann. "And I said Nixon's pardon was never nearly that broad."

Gaetz apparently referenced President Richard Nixon, who was pardoned by President Gerald Ford following his resignation amid Watergate scandal.

Hutchinson named five other House Republicans who sought pardons from Trump in the wake of January 6, including Republican Reps. Mo Brooks of Alabama, Andy Biggs of Arizona, Louie Gohmert of Texas, Scott Perry of Pennsylvania, and Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia.

Republican Rep. Jim Jordan of Ohio, according to Hutchinson, asked for an "update on whether the White House is going to pardon members of Congress" but did not personally ask for one.

 

At the time, a federal investigation into Gaetz unrelated to his actions related to the election was already likely brewing.

In March 2021, the New York Times revealed that Gaetz was under investigation for an alleged sexual relationship with a 17-year-old girl and may have violated federal laws against sex trafficking in the process. Gaetz, who has not been charged, has maintained his innocence.

"The allegations against me are as searing as they are false. I believe that there are people at the Department of Justice who are trying to criminalize my sexual conduct, you know, when I was a single guy," he told Axios at the time.

It was later revealed that Gaetz had sought a pre-emptive pardon from Trump, though the exact timing was unclear then. Trump, for his part, denied that Gaetz ever asked for a pardon.

In January 2022, the Daily Beast reported that a witness told prosecutors that Gaetz was aware that he'd had sex with a minor and was in the room when he was informed of that fact. 

Reached for comment, Gaetz's office directed Insider to a tweet in which the congressman does not refute any of the charges.

Here is a complete timeline of the accusations against Gaetz.

Read the original article on Business Insider