San Diego Union-Tribune

GIULIANI SURRENDERS AT GEORGIA JAIL

Trump lawyer is booked, released in election case

- BY KATE BRUMBACK Brumback writes for The Associated Press.

Rudy Giuliani, Donald Trump’s lawyer and confidant, turned himself in at a jail in Atlanta on Wednesday on charges related to efforts to overturn then-President Trump’s loss in the 2020 presidenti­al election in Georgia.

The former New York mayor was indicted last week along with Trump and 17 others. Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said they participat­ed in a wide-ranging conspiracy to subvert the will of the voters after the Republican president lost to Democrat Joe Biden in November 2020.

Bond for Giuliani, who was released after booking like the other defendants, was set at $150,000, second only to Trump’s $200,000.

Giuliani, 79, is accused of spearheadi­ng Trump’s efforts to compel state lawmakers in Georgia and other closely contested states to ignore the will of voters and illegally appoint Electoral College electors favorable to Trump.

Other high-profile defendants also surrendere­d Wednesday, including Jenna Ellis, an attorney who prosecutor­s say was involved in efforts to convince state lawmakers to unlawfully appoint presidenti­al electors, and lawyer Sidney Powell, accused of making false statements about the election in Georgia and helping to organize a breach of voting equipment in rural Coffee County.

Georgia was one of several key states Trump lost by slim margins, prompting the Republican and his allies to proclaim,

without evidence, that the election was rigged in favor of his Democratic rival Biden.

Giuliani is charged with making false statements and soliciting false testimony, conspiring to create phony paperwork and asking state lawmakers to violate their oath of office to appoint an alternate slate of pro-Trump electors.

Outside the Fulton County Jail on Wednesday afternoon, Giuliani laughed when asked if he regretted allying himself with Trump.

“I am very, very honored to be involved in this case because this case is a fight for our way of life,” Giuliani told reporters. “This indictment is a travesty. It’s an attack on — not just me, not just President Trump, not just the people in this indictment, some of whom I don’t even know — this is an attack on the American people.”

After Giuliani’s surrender, Trump repeated his unfounded claims that the election was rigged and stolen and wrote on his social media site, “The greatest Mayor in

the history of New York City was just ARRESTED in Atlanta, Georgia, because he fought for Election Integrity.”

Trump, the early frontrunne­r in the 2024 Republican presidenti­al primary, has said he plans to turn himself in at the Fulton County Jail today. He and his allies have characteri­zed the investigat­ion as politicall­y motivated and have heavily criticized District Attorney Willis, a Democrat.

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows and former Justice Department

official Jeffrey Clark are both trying to have the case against them heard in federal court rather than in Fulton County Superior Court. Both argue the actions that gave rise to the charges in the indictment were related to their work as federal officials and that the case should be moved to federal court and the charges against them dismissed.

They had each asked a judge to allow them to avoid being arrested while those requests are pending. But U.S. District Judge Steve Jones on Wednesday rejected their requests to avoid having to be booked in jail while they fight to move the case to federal court.

Willis has set a deadline of noon on Friday for the people indicted last week in the election subversion case to turn themselves in. Her team has been negotiatin­g bond amounts and conditions with the lawyers for the defendants before they surrender at the jail.

Misty Hampton, who was the Coffee County elections director when a breach of election equipment happened there, had her bond set at $10,000. David Shafer, who’s a former Georgia Republican Party chair and served as one of 16 fake electors for Trump, and Cathy Latham, who’s accused in the Coffee County breach and was also a fake elector, turned themselves in Wednesday morning. Also surrenderi­ng Wednesday were lawyers Ray Smith and Kenneth Chesebro, who prosecutor­s said helped organize the fake electors meeting at the state Capitol in December 2020.

Attorney John Eastman, who pushed a plan to keep Trump in power, and Scott Hall, a bail bondsman who was accused of participat­ing in the breach of election equipment in Coffee County, turned themselves in Tuesday.

Lawyers for Chesebro on Wednesday filed a demand for a speedy trial. Typically, such a demand would mean that trial proceeding­s would need to get under way this fall, but this case has many defendants and multiple complicati­ng factors, Georgia State University law school professor Anthony Michael Kreis said.

 ?? BRYNN ANDERSON AP ?? Rudy Giuliani speaks outside the Fulton County jail Wednesday in Atlanta as he faces an indictment alleging he acted as former President Donald Trump’s chief co-conspirato­r in a plot to subvert the 2020 election.
BRYNN ANDERSON AP Rudy Giuliani speaks outside the Fulton County jail Wednesday in Atlanta as he faces an indictment alleging he acted as former President Donald Trump’s chief co-conspirato­r in a plot to subvert the 2020 election.

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