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House January 6 committee chairman says panel 'close to putting pens down' on final report

(CNN) The chairman of the House select committee investigating the January 6, 2021, attack on the US Capitol said Tuesday that the panel is "close to putting pens down" on its final report, which is slated for release by the end of this Congress.

"The body of the report is complete and there is general agreement on that," Democratic Rep. Bennie Thompson of Mississippi told reporters.

The final report, he said, will include eight chapters.

In addition to focusing on former President Donald Trump's actions around January 6, the congressman said the final report will "focus on some other issues," including material the committee has not previously presented. "We are reviewing material on a daily basis," he said, though he told reporters the panel has largely completed its interviews.

CNN reported earlier this week that committee members have been in active discussions about what to include in the report, which will effectively serve as the committee's closing statement. The panel has less than two months before it expires, and members continue to deliberate what the report will contain and how those findings will be presented.

It is unclear what the committee will do with the thousands of pages of documents and transcribed interviews it has compiled throughout its investigation. Sources said there could even be a digital component to accompany the final written report.

Thompson said Tuesday that the committee could release "hundreds" of transcripts by the end of its investigation, adding that "the goal is to release as many of the transcripts where we didn't have prior agreement with the people because of the sensitivity where they are employed."

The chairman said he doubts the panel will release its final report by December 16 -- the last day Congress is scheduled to be in session before the year's end -- but there is a "good possibility" the report is released by Christmas.

Whether the panel will issue criminal referrals is "still under consideration," Thompson said, though any such referrals would be "done separately" from the final report. The panel would not need to hold a business meeting to issue criminal referral, he said.

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