Page:CTRL0000034605 - Transcribed Interview of Angela McCallum, (December 8, 2021).pdf/39

39 Okay. When I left for Pittsburgh, around the 5th of November, I was there for approximately a week. I came home for one day, maybe 24 hours, to McLean, Virginia. And after leaving McLean I went to Philadelphia and stayed there until, I want to say, one of the first days in December, the 4th comes to mind, either the 4th or the 5th.

And at that point, I drove back to South Carolina, went to my parents' house for maybe 2 days, and then Atlanta, Georgia, to start with the National Republican Senatorial Committee.

Okay. So based on what you told us earlier in that very helpful overview, is it accurate to say that from election day until you went to South Carolina and visited your parents, before going to Atlanta, you were still employed by the Trump campaign. Is that right?

Through—partially I was still on payroll until either the 15th or the 30th. I don't remember entirely. And then at some point during November that switched to an independent contractor role, filing, I believe it's called an I9 or something like that—or 1099.

Okay. So you became a 1099 employee after you went off the Trump campaign payroll?

Yes. It was referred to as a 1099 contractor.

Okay. And that—did that end when you started working for the NRSC?

That contract was originally, I believe, went through the 15th of January. It was just, you know, while I was being paid through the 15th of January I was not performing work during a lot of that period, so—

I see. Am I understanding you correctly that your job working for—as a 1099 contractor, that was still your employment circumstances when you went to work