Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Year in Review: Biggest moments in Georgia’s Fulton County Trump case

- By Bill Rankin The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on

The year 2023 in

Atlanta will be forever remembered as the year a Fulton County grand jury indicted a former

U.S. president. Formal charges of racketeeri­ng and 12 other felonies were brought against Donald Trump for allegedly overseeing a conspiracy that sought to overthrow the results of the 2020 presidenti­al election in Georgia.

The indictment was major news across the globe. The events leading up to the charges and those that have played out afterwards have produced a steady supply of major developmen­ts in the case.

Here are some of the more notable ones.

‘It’s not a short list’

In early January, a brief court order reveals that the Fulton County special purpose grand jury investigat­ing the election interferen­ce case has completed its work and finished its final report. The panel met in secret for eight months and heard testimony from about 75 witnesses.

After a few pages of the report are unsealed in February, jury foreperson Emily Kohrs grants interviews to the local and national media. “It’s not a short list,” she famously tells The Atlanta Journalcon­stitution, when asked how many people the special grand jury recommende­d be indicted.

Later, five members of the panel, in an exclusive interview with the AJC, somberly recount their work. “One of the most important things we’ll be a part of in our life was this eight-month process that we did,” one juror says, adding that it was “incredibly important to get it right.”

The special grand jury could not obtain indictment­s, only recommend them.

A grand jury is convened

In July, two Fulton County grand juries are assembled, one of which is certain to be presented the criminal case against Trump and others. Coincident­ally, Superior Court Judge Robert Mcburney, who oversaw the special grand jury, is the judge who presides over the selection of these grand jurors.

The build up

In early August, security begins to ramp up around the Fulton Count courthouse. Streets are closed. Barricades are installed. No parking is allowed around the perimeter of the court complex. Reporters from major TV news organizati­ons begin setting up tents and cameras across the street from the courthouse. And there is an increased law enforcemen­t presence in the area.

Indictment day

On Aug. 15, a Fulton County grand jury hands up an indictment accusing Trump and 18 others of being part of a criminal racketeeri­ng enterprise that tried to overthrow the 2020 presidenti­al election in Georgia. Details of the indictment, first reported by The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on, do not come until after 10 p.m. Among the others charged: onetime New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani; Trump’s White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows; former U.S. Justice Department official Jeffrey Clark; state Sen. Shawn Still; former state GOP chair David Shafer; and attorneys Sidney Powell, Kenneth Chesebro, Jenna Ellis, John Eastman, Bob Cheeley and Ray Smith.

District Attorney Fani Willis announces the blockbuste­r 41-count, 97-page indictment at a press conference held shortly after 11:30 p.m.

She says the 19 defendants were indicted for trying

“to accomplish the illegal goal of allowing Donald J. Trump to seize the presidenti­al term of office beginning on Jan. 20, 2021.”

Willis gives Trump and his 18 co-defendants until noon on Aug. 25 to surrender at the Fulton County jail.

Trump surrenders

Amid intense security, Trump surrenders on the evening of Aug. 24 at the Fulton jail on Rice Street. He is booked in, processed and released on a $200,000 bond. His mugshot, taken with a scowl on his face and his eyes glaring at the camera, is the first ever of a former U.S. president and is soon published by media around the world.

On the day of his surrender, Trump dumps Atlanta lawyers Drew Findling and Marissa Goldberg, who’d been representi­ng him for months, and pairs prominent Atlanta lawyer Steve Sadow with Jennifer Little to defend him.

A newbie judge gets the case

One of the most consequent­ial and closely watched cases in Georgia history is randomly assigned to Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott Mcafee, a former federal prosecutor and state inspector general who had assumed the bench just six months earlier. In the ensuing months, the level-headed, patient jurist would preside over a series of hearings and promptly issue clearly written opinions resolving a number of contentiou­s matters.

The push for federal court

Meadows quickly moves to transfer the case to U.S. District Court, saying that a federal law allows it because his alleged conduct was part of his official duties. Four other defendants — ex DOJ official Clark and three of the GOP officials who cast electoral college votes for Trump — file similar motions.

U.S. District Judge

Steve Jones, an appointee of President Barack Obama, presides over three hearings and rejects the defendants’ bids to move the case to federal court where they would presumably get a more favorable jury pool.

All four defendants appeal the ruling. The 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals expedites the cases and on Dec. 18, just three days after hearing arguments, a three-judge panel summarily rejects Meadows’ bid to transfer his case to federal court. The other cases are still pending, and Meadows is expected to appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The special grand jury goes big

The bulk of the special grand jury’s final, kept under seal since February, is finally released on Sept. 8. The report discloses that the panel recommende­d a whopping 39 people be indicted. In addition to Trump and others who Willis charged, they had recommende­d indictment­s for U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham, ex-trump National Security Advisor Michael Flynn; Lt. Gov. Burt Jones and former Georgia U.S. Sens. David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler.

The guilty pleas

On Sept. 29, Atlanta bail bondsman Scott Hall becomes the first of the 19 defendants to plead guilty. He pleads to five misdemeano­rs for his role in connection with the breach of sensitive voting data in Coffee County. Three weeks later, lawyers Kenneth Chesebro and Sidney Powell, who had demanded speedy trials, enter their own guilty pleas. Chesebro, an architect of using

GOP presidenti­al electors to overturn Democrat

Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia, pleads guilty to a single felony, and Powell, for playing a role in the Coffee County breach, pleads guilty to six misdemeano­rs.

A few days later, attorney Jenna Ellis tearfully disavows Trump as she pleads guilty to a single felony for aiding and abetting false statements made to the state Legislatur­e. Of the four defendants, only Ellis agrees to cooperate with Fulton prosecutor­s as the case moves forward; the other three simply agree to testify truthfully if called as witnesses. All get sentences of probation.

Fiery Fani Willis appears in court

On Nov. 21, Mcafee convenes a hearing to consider Fulton prosecutor­s’ motion to revoke the bond of defendant Harrison Floyd for making social media posts about witnesses or others charged in the election interferen­ce case. DA Willis makes her first court appearance since the indictment in August and it’s a notable one. Combative and impassione­d, the prosecutor argues Floyd should be jailed pending trial. But Mcafee rules that while Floyd may have technicall­y violated his bond, his actions don’t warrant revocation. Before the hearing is adjourned, lawyers for both sides work out a new, more restrictiv­e bond order that Floyd must adhere to.

An August 2024 trial?

In November, Fulton prosecutor­s file a motion asking Mcafee to set an Aug. 5 trial date, which means the trial would likely still be ongoing three months later on Election Day. At a hearing in early December, Sadow opposes the proposed trial date. “That would be the most effective election interferen­ce in the history of the United States,” he tells Mcafee.

Fulton prosecutor­s, denying they want to interfere with the election, say they were simply being mindful of the alreadysch­eduled criminal trials for Trump in Washington, New York and South Florida. Mcafee has yet to set a date for the trial.

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