Tag: fulton county
Pursuing 2020 Conspiracies, Trump Sends FBI To Raid Georgia Election Site

Pursuing 2020 Conspiracies, Trump Sends FBI To Raid Georgia Election Site

The FBI has raided an election facility in Fulton County, Georgia, escalating the role of the federal government in pursuing President Donald Trump’s debunked election conspiracy theories.

According to local reports, the federal agency deployed multiple law enforcement vehicles and agents to Fulton County’s Election Hub and Operation Center. Sources told Fox 5 Atlanta that election ballots from 2020 were taken from the site.

Trump lost Fulton County to former President Joe Biden in 2020 by a significant margin, with Biden winning by a margin of more than 243,000 votes—or more than 46 percentage points above Trump.

Fulton is Georgia’s most populous county and 90 percent of Atlanta is located there. Republicans have traditionally won the state, with Biden becoming the first Democrat candidate to win in 28 years, since former President Bill Clinton’s victory in 1992.

This has been a sore point for Trump, who has sought to undermine the result over the past six years.

Immediately after the 2020 election, Trump and his team immediately began pushing conspiracies. Most notably, his former lawyer and disgraced former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani argued that ballots had been manipulated in Biden’s favor in Fulton County.

The conspiracies got so out of hand that Giuliani was later sued by two Black election workers who received death threats after he claimed that they had been part of a ballot manipulation scheme. Giuliani ultimately settled out of court for millions of dollars.

Former special counsel Jack Smith recently testified before Congress, detailing how Trump’s actions to pressure Georgia officials to overturn election results became the hub in the Justice Department’s criminal case against Trump. Smith said that Georgia was “ground zero” for Trump’s criminal crusade.

With former Trump fan-fiction author Kash Patel installed as head of the FBI, the nation’s premiere law enforcement agency is now being deployed to entertain Trump’s debunked conspiracies.

But no matter how Trump misuses federal resources—which are financed by taxpayers—to pursue these conspiracies, his actions will not undo the results of the race.

Trump lost in 2020, with Biden handily defeating him in multiple states—including Georgia. Biden was then certified by Congress as the winner of the election—despite the Jan. 6 insurrection instigated by Trump—and went on to serve his full term as president.

Trump and Patel can try every bizarre FBI operation in the book. It will never change these facts.


Fulton County Releases Trump Mugshot After Booking

Fulton County Releases Trump Mugshot After Booking

Donald Trump got special treatment in New York and federal courts, which didn’t make him suffer the indignity of a mugshot. Fulton County, Georgia, is different. Over the past two days, we’ve seen the mugshots of one after another of Trump’s co-defendants in racketeering and other charges stemming from their efforts to overturn the 2020 election. Now it’s the time for the big one: Trump has surrendered at the Fulton County Jail, and now we get to see one of the main pictures he’ll be remembered by for the rest of his life—and possibly thereafter.


Trump is charged with 13 felonies in Fulton County, including racketeering, filing false documents, conspiracy to commit forgery, and others. He was to pay a $200,000 bond, also a first for him.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos.

In Senate Runoff, Georgia's Organizers Defy GOP Attack On Voting Rights

In Senate Runoff, Georgia's Organizers Defy GOP Attack On Voting Rights

On the only day of Sunday voting before Georgia’s U.S. Senate runoff, the auto-parts store parking lot across the street from Atlanta’s Metropolitan Library looked and sounded more like a block party than a get-out-the-vote event.

“We’re having a good time on this corner. If you feel the spirit, let me hear your horn. Come on!” bellowed D.J. Concrete Kash above a sound system that played gospel music and was next to several orange shade tents filled with free food, water, hand warmers and voter guides.

“We have five or six organizations out here coming together to say, ‘Hey, we believe in what you all are doing,” said Chandra Gallashaw, a community organizer. “Georgia Stand Up is over there. The NAACP. Black Voters Matter. We Vote, We Win… It has nothing to do with anyone running for office. It has to do with these people over there in line exercising their right, their constitutional right to vote.”

The tables at this pro-voter effort comprised some of Georgia’s oldest and newest non-profit civil rights groups. While they were careful not to endorse any candidate, their presence was a powerful rejoinder to the state’s GOP-led government, whose 2021 legislation banned giving food and water to anyone waiting to vote, among other roll backs of voting options.

“As we know, our governor [Republican Brian Kemp] banned us from being able to give water in line. We have to be 150 feet away from the polls,” said Mykah Owens, a campaign associate with We Vote We Win. “One of our guys measured and made sure that we’re far enough from the polls so we won’t get in trouble.”

“We had to do something,” said Gallashaw. “The fact we cannot give water in line to people who stand in line for two or three hours… Some of these folks are 70, 80 years old. Some of them are diabetic. They have health issues.”

A similar “Party to the Polls” was held at three of Fulton County’s two-dozen voting sites on Sunday and will continue through the early voting period which ends on Friday. While the event was a rarity in this populous county, its significance was not lost on Black voters.

“I love the fact that although they tried to pass a law where you couldn’t give water and things to people in line, they just put it across the street,” said Yasha Yisrael, who, with her husband, Chasum Yisrael, were sipping free smoothies from one of three food trucks. “It’s amazing.”

“It’s something that should have been done all along and I hope they continue it,” she continued, “because it does encourage more people who would not normally vote who are registered to come in and vote because they feel this sense of community.”

“Every effort is being tried to stop our right to vote,” said Chasum Yisreal. “We’ve got to be smart about it.”

The couple said that they did not know who the newer civic groups were. But across the state’s 159 counties, a coalition of community-based organizations, from mainstays like the NAACP and sororities and fraternities from historically Black colleges and universities to new groups targeting younger people, are making a determined effort to turn out voters for the Senate runoff and to keep in touch year round to try to change state’s political representation.

Georgia, as Rep. Nikema Williams told the Democratic National Committee last June in a bid to urge the DNC to move up its 2024 presidential primary date, is one of the nation’s most racially diverse states with growing Black, Latino and Asian-Pacific Islander populations. It is the fifth-ranked state for women-owned businesses and 41 percent of all businesses are minority owned, which is double the national average. But cosmopolitan Atlanta is surrounded by the old South, where conservatives continue to dominate county and municipal government.

That landscape has turned every recent Georgia election into a struggle to engage voters. The Senate runoff was no exception and is operating under some new voting rules.

This is the first time that a statewide runoff is being held one month after Election Day. That timetable is half as long as the state’s two U.S. Senate runoff elections in 2020 and was created by the GOP’s 2021 legislation. One impact of the shorter timetable is to block new voters from registering. It also is too tight a timeline to obtain and return a mailed-out ballot.

Additionally, the legislation shortened the runoff’s early voting period to one week, although some metro counties expanded it through this past weekend, and a few counties started before Thanksgiving. (Republicans tried to bar voting on Saturday but lost in court last week.)

The early turnout numbers suggest that voters are not deterred by the 2021 law’s tightening of voting options. On Sunday, Gabriel Sterling, the chief operating officer for Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, tweeted that some metro Atlanta voting sites were experiencing waits of two hours. The wait at the Metropolitan Library’s first day of early voting on Saturday was as long, said We Vote, We Win’s Owens.

“We had over a two-hour wait yesterday. You usually don’t see that until the end of early voting – more towards the Election Day,” she said. “People are paying attention.”

Steven Rosenfeld is the editor and chief correspondent of Voting Booth, a project of the Independent Media Institute. He has reported for National Public Radio, Marketplace, and Christian Science Monitor Radio, as well as a wide range of progressive publications including Salon, AlterNet, The American Prospect, and many others.

This article was produced by Voting Booth, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

Georgia District Attorney Enlists FBI After Trump's Violent Rhetoric Targets Her

Georgia District Attorney Enlists FBI After Trump's Violent Rhetoric Targets Her

The Fulton County, Georgia, district attorney is asking for the FBI’s help with security after Donald Trump targeted her in his speech at a Texas rally on Saturday. ”These prosecutors are vicious, horrible people. They're racists and they're very sick—they're mentally sick,” Trump said, referring to multiple investigations he faces. “They're going after me without any protection of my rights from the Supreme Court or most other courts. In reality, they're not after me, they're after you.”

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is specifically investigating Trump’s January 2, 2021 call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, asking him to “find” the 11,780 votes needed to overturn the election in Georgia, so she is definitely after Trump, not his supporters who were not involved in that phone call.

Trump did not name the prosecutors he was referring to, but he made his meaning clear by naming their locations. “If these radical, vicious, racist prosecutors do anything wrong or illegal, I hope we are going to have in this country the biggest protests we have ever had in Washington, D.C., in New York, in Atlanta, and elsewhere because our country and our elections are corrupt,” he said. New York Attorney General Letitia James, Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, and Willis are all Black, as is Rep. Bennie Thompson, the chair of the select committee investigating January 6.

”In reality, they’re not after me, they’re after you,” he said as James and Bragg investigate the Trump Organization’s financial dealings -- as if Trump supporters were the ones claiming inflated valuations of Trump properties for the purposes of getting loans and deflated valuations for the purposes of taxation, among other such complex financial maneuvers.

But even more than the gross demonization of prosecutors doing their jobs as “vicious, horrible” and “racists” and “very sick—mentally sick” and “radical, vicious, racist,” Trump’s call to his supporters to take action against the prosecutors he had just described in dehumanizing terms is particularly scary.

“I hope we are going to have in this country the biggest protests we have ever had, in Washington, D.C., in New York, in Atlanta, and elsewhere because our country and our elections are corrupt” in particular stands as a potent incitement to Trump’s supporters—and a dangerous echo of his December 19, 2020 tweet promoting the January 6 rally that turned into a bloody attack on the U.S. Capitol. “Big protest in D.C. on January 6th,” he tweeted. “Be there, will be wild!”

Trump’s speech was last Saturday night. On Sunday, Willis wrote to J.C. Hacker, the head of the FBI’s Atlanta field office, saying that “security concerns were escalated this weekend” in reference to Trump’s speech, and requesting a risk assessment of the courthouse where a special grand jury to investigate Trump will soon be impaneled, as well as surrounding buildings. Willis also requested that the FBI “provide protective resources to include intelligence and federal agents.”

”We must work together to keep the public safe and ensure that we do not have a tragedy in Atlanta similar to what happened at the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021,” Willis wrote. She’s right to be concerned: That appears to be exactly what Donald Trump is trying to incite, and we have to assume he’s just getting started.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos

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