'Stop the Steal' organizer gave the Jan. 6 committee his communications with GOP lawmakers leading up to the Capitol riot

According to a complaint filed by his attorneys Friday, Ali Alexander provided the House committee investigating the Capitol insurrection with his communications involving several Republican lawmakers.

Alexander told the committee that he had multiple phone conversations with Gosar, that he had a text message with MoBrooks, and that he spoke with Andy Biggs before the Capitol riot.

The January 6 committee was attempting to obtain Alexander's phone records. The committee sent a subpoena to the company for Alexander's personal cell phone number, as well as a list of contacts and call session times from November 1, 2020, through January 31, 2021.

Alexander's attorneys argued that the data sought by the committee was not relevant to its investigation.

Alexander provided testimony on December 9 and disclosed his communications with GOP lawmakers, according to the complaint.

Alexander told the panel he held an organizing call in January where members of Congress might have been present, but he could not remember who was in attendance because the call was so large, according to the complaint.

Alexander said in a video that he collaborated with other people on the "January 6 idea."

Representatives for Gosar, Alexander, and others did not respond to Insider's request for comment. The Republicans were involved in attempts to stop the certification of the election results.

Alexander called January 6 a big moment for our republic in a text from December 2020, according to a statement from the man. He told ABC he didn't know the number at the time.
The suggestion that a single text from an unknown number suggests that Congressman Brooks helped plan the Capitol attack is absurd, outrageous and defamatory.