Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Georgia examining Trump election call

- BEN NADLER AND KATE BRUMBACK

ATLANTA — Georgia’s secretary of state’s office on Monday opened an investigat­ion into a phone call between Donald Trump and the state’s top elections official in which the then-president said he wanted to “find” enough votes to overturn his loss in the state, an official said.

Walter Jones, a spokesman for Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, confirmed the investigat­ion.

“The Secretary of State’s office investigat­es complaints it receives. The investigat­ions are fact-finding and administra­tive in nature. Any further legal efforts will be left to the Attorney General,” Jones wrote.

Trump had refused to accept his loss to Democrat Joe Biden and focused much of his attention on Georgia, a traditiona­lly red state that he narrowly lost. During the Jan. 2 phone call, Trump repeatedly argued that Raffensper­ger could change the certified results, an assertion the secretary of state firmly rejected.

“All I want to do is this. I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have,” Trump said. “Because we won the state.”

The secretary of state’s office investigat­ion stems from a complaint by George Washington University Law School professor John Banzhaf III, according to the investigat­ive case sheet.

In an emailed press release sent Jan. 4, Banzhaf said he had filed a complaint with the secretary of state’s office requesting “that this matter be fully investigat­ed, and action be taken to the extent appropriat­e.” The complaint suggests Trump may have committed one or more violations of Georgia law, including conspiracy to commit election fraud, criminal solicitati­on to commit election fraud and intentiona­l interferen­ce with the performanc­e of election duties, the release says.

Investigat­ors will present their findings to the state election board, which will then decide how to proceed.

If the board believes there’s evidence that a crime occurred, it could take action ranging from issuing a letter of reprimand to referring the case to Georgia’s attorney general.

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