This was published 1 year ago
Trump charged in Georgia over racketeering scheme to overturn election
By Farrah Tomazin
Washington: Donald Trump has been charged for a fourth time, this time over efforts to overturn presidential election results in Georgia.
The new charges relate to a racketeering case Trump will not be able to pardon himself over if he regains the presidency.
Two weeks after he pleaded not guilty in a Washington court over his role in trying to overthrow the results of the 2020 election, an Atlanta-based grand jury has indicted the former US president and 18 allies in connection with an alleged “criminal enterprise” designed to overturn the result to stop Joe Biden’s 2020 election victory.
Prosecutors brought 41 counts against Trump and his associates, including forgery, conspiracy-related charges, soliciting a public officer to violate an oath, and breaches of a racketeering law that is used to target members of organised crime groups.
Among the others named are Mark Meadows, Trump’s former White House chief of staff; Jeffrey Clark, a former senior official in the Justice Department; and lawyers Rudy Giuliani and John Eastman. Multiple unindicted co-conspirators are also referred to in the 97-page document.
“The indictment alleges that rather than abide by Georgia’s legal process for election challenges, the defendants engaged in a criminal racketeering enterprise to overturn Georgia’s presidential election result,” Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said during a press conference just before midnight on Monday (US time).
She added the defendants would have until “no later than noon” on Friday, August 25 to voluntarily surrender.
Biden’s victory in Georgia in 2020 ultimately helped him secure the Electoral College votes he needed to become president.
But after a 2½-year investigation, Trump and his allies have been accused of a sweeping scheme that included setting up phony electors to produce fake votes, making false representations to the courts, tampering with electronic voting machines, misusing the power of the Justice Department and pressuring state and federal officials not to certify Biden’s win.
Willis, a Democrat, began her investigation in January 2021 after Trump made his now-infamous phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a fellow Republican, urging him to “find” the votes he needed to put him ahead of Biden.
“All I want to do is this: I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have,” an insistent Trump is heard saying on a leaked recording of the call. “Because we won the state.”
But the probe has also embroiled key members of Trump’s orbit, as well as lesser-known state Republicans accused of conspiring with them to keep Trump in power.
Some of those allies signed a certificate falsely stating that Trump had won and declaring themselves the state’s “duly elected and qualified” electors. They then sent that certificate to the US Congress, using it as the basis for pressuring the then vice president, Mike Pence, to delay or block certification of Biden’s election victory.
Prosecutors also had evidence tying Trump’s legal team to a security breach relating to voting machines in Coffee County, a conservative rural area about 300 kilometres from Atlanta, which is mostly Democrat-leaning.
However, the plan to subvert the election was foiled when Pence refused to introduce the fake votes – even as furious Trump supporters attacked the Capitol building on January 6, 2021, in an insurrection that resulted in several people dying and about 150 police being injured.
“President Trump was wrong then, and he’s wrong now. I had no right to overturn the election,” said Pence, who is now competing against his former boss for the Republican nomination to run as president next year.
The Georgia indictment is the fourth Trump has faced in five months, putting him on a collision course with the court system as his campaign to return to the White House intensifies.
But it is also significant because it would be much harder for Trump to pardon himself over Georgia’s state-based charges than it would be at the federal level, if he is convicted and becomes president.
Georgia’s pardon system is far more stringent than presidential pardons, which can be made somewhat arbitrarily with limited legal restraints.
To get a pardon in Georgia, Trump would have to apply to the five-member Georgia State Board of Pardons and Paroles. He could only apply after a conviction, and only after five years have passed since completion of his sentence.
The former president, however, insists he is innocent, and spent the day flooding his Truth Social online forum attacking Willis and some of her witnesses. He also sent a message to the grand jury, writing: “Would someone please tell the Fulton County Grand Jury that I did not tamper with the election. The people that tampered with it were the ones that rigged it, and sadly phony Fani Willis.”
After the indictment was unsealed, he issued a statement saying that “justice and the rule of law are officially DEAD in America”.
“This marks the fourth act of Election Interference on behalf of the Democrats in an attempt to keep the White House under Crooked Joe’s control and jail his single greatest opponent of the 2024 election,” Trump wrote.
With 15 months until the presidential election, Trump is currently the overwhelming frontrunner to win the Republican nomination to run for the White House again.
The twice impeached president is well ahead of his nearest closest rival, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, and is so confident of his lead that he is considering not turning up to the first Republican debate, in Milwaukee next week.
But his campaigning calendar next year is starting to get clogged with court cases. In April, Trump was charged in New York by the Manhattan District Attorney over alleged hush money paid to porn star Stormy Daniels, with whom he had an affair shortly after his wife, Melania, gave birth to their son, Barron.
In June, he was charged again, this time federally, by special counsel Jack Smith over his alleged mishandling of classified documents.
And last week he was charged by Smith a second time, for attempting to overturn the 2020 election. In that particular case he will also argue at trial that he is protected by America’s right to free speech, and that he genuinely believed that the 2020 election was rigged.
In Georgia, security has been beefed up for weeks around the Fulton County court where Trump is expected to appear and plead not guilty. On Monday, Willis began presenting her case to the grand jury, but things began to move quickly as she brought in two witnesses who were not scheduled to appear until later in the week.
A court document that appears to have been mistakenly published by the Fulton County Court while the jury was still hearing evidence on Monday listed several charges against Trump but was swiftly taken down without explanation.
The incident has outraged some Republicans, who believe the legal system has been weaponised. Asked how the documents were posted, Willis suggested she did not know.
Trump is embroiled in seven cases in several jurisdictions involving:
- Charges in Georgia relating to an alleged criminal racketeering attempt to subvert the state’s presidential election results - 41 charges are brought against Trump and his associates
- Four counts, including three of conspiracy, relating to an effort to overturn the 2020 election which led to the January 6 Capitol riots; first hearing scheduled for August 28, 2023, Washington
- Alleged “persistent and repeated business fraud” at his Trump Organisation, October 2023 trial, New York
- Writer E Jean Carrol’s second defamation trial on January 15, 2024, New York (Trump’s counter suit was thrown out on August 8.
- A lawsuit by four investors who claim losses from an alleged pyramid scheme involving a phone company promoted by Trump on The Apprentice. The claim is now against Trump alone, as claims against his children were dropped after they gave dispositions. Trial starts on January 29, 2024, New York
- 34 counts relating to alleged hush money paid to Stormy Daniels, trial set for March 25, 2024, New York
- 40 counts relating to classified documents kept at his residence, May 20, 2024 trial, Florida
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