On Thursday, the Seminole County Republican Party announced, in an email, that it had named John M. Nassif, 56, as poll-watching chair, according to local ABC station WFTV 9.

The station said that Nassif will be responsible for creating a list of possible people to watch the polls on election day. After creating the list, Nassif will give it to the county election office.

According to WFTV, Nassif, for his part in the riot, was charged last year with disorderly conduct as well as with entering a restricted building. It said that if Nassif is convicted of the charges, he faces up to a year in prison.

On Thursday evening, the House Select Committee investigating the riot held its first of several planned televised hearings. The committee, composed of seven Democrats and two Republicans, is looking to determine whether former President Donald Trump and those closest to him conspired to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

During her opening remarks, Wyoming Representative Liz Cheney took a shot at fellow Republicans who are still defending the former president.

“I say this to my Republican colleagues who are defending the indefensible. There will come a day when Donald Trump is gone, but your dishonor will remain,” she said.

Thursday night, the committee heard testimony and played a number of video clips, including those of former Attorney General William Barr and Former President Donald Trump’s daughter and White House senior adviser Ivanka Trump.

Barr testified said that he had a number of conversations with the former president in which he said he did not agree with Trump’s assessment that the election was stolen, calling the claim “bullsh**t.”

Ivanka Trump, in the clip played by the committee, said that what Barr said about the Department of Justice not finding evidence of voter fraud “affected” her “perspective” and that she “accepted what he said” about the election.

In late May, the chair of the Seminole County Republican Party, Ben Paris, was charged, with two other people, with election finance violations in connection with a plan aimed at taking away votes from a Democrat in a 2020 state Senate race, according to WTJV in Miami.

Newsweek reached out to the Seminole County Republican Party for comment.