Plaskett says Trump 'fanned the flame of violence -- and it worked'
Congresswoman Stacey Plaskett, D-Virgin Islands, was tasked with arguing the case for how Trump was aware of the violence on Jan. 6 and amplified supporters' plans for insurrection instead of calling them off, a pattern the president had already established in his repeated refusals to directly denounce violence in his presidency, she said.

"Some of you have said there's no way the president could have known how violent the mob would be. That is false, because the violence, it was foreseeable," Plaskett said. "The violence that occurred on Jan. 6 -- like the attack itself -- did not just appear. You'll see that Donald Trump knew the people he was inciting. He saw the violence that they were capable of, and he had a pattern and practice of praising and encouraging that violence never, ever condemning it."
"This violent attack was not planned in secret," Plaskett continued, noting many rioters -- whom she referred to as "Trump's cavalry" -- were proud to be a part of the attack. "The insurgents believed that they were doing the duty of their president. They were following his orders, and so they publicized it openly, loudly, proudly -- exact blueprints of how the attack would be made."
"He fanned the flame of violence and it worked," she said. "There are many examples where the president engaged in this pattern and I'm just going to walk you through a few of them."
Plaskett went on to tick through instances to support the managers' case including Trump calling on the Proud Boys to "stand back and stand by" in the first 2020 presidential debate -- instead of denouncing them -- and tweeting videos praising his supporters attempting to drive a Biden campaign bus off the road ahead of the election.

Lead impeachment manager Rep. Jamie Raskin, D-Md., in introducing Plaskett called it a moment of "special pride" because Plaslett is not only the first delegate ever to be on a team of impeachment managers in American history, but she is also but also Raskin's former law student.






