2ND LAWYER PLEADS GUILTY IN GA. CASE
Chesebro admits taking part in false documents scheme
Kenneth Chesebro, a lawyer criminally charged in Georgia for his role in what prosecutors describe as a conspiracy to overturn the 2020 election in favor of Donald Trump, accepted a plea deal Friday, becoming the third of 19 co-defendants to plead guilty in the wideranging criminal racketeering indictment that also names Trump.
The plea from Chesebro, 62, came a day after Sidney Powell, another Trumpaligned lawyer charged in the case, also agreed to cooperate with the prosecution. Both defendants had exercised their right to a speedy trial under Georgia law and had been preparing for jury selection to start Monday.
With a trial date for Trump and the other remaining co-defendants unclear for now, the formerly fast-moving Georgia case is now on pause. At the same time, Chesebro's plea has added to a sense of momentum in favor of prosecutors in Fulton County, Ga., although it was unclear Friday whether other defendants were considering plea deals.
Chesebro, a Harvard-educated lawyer, was accused in the indictment of conspiring to create slates of socalled fake electors pledged to Trump in Georgia and several other states that President Joe Biden had won. His lawyers had argued that he broke no laws and was merely offering legal counsel to clients.
As part of his deal, Chesebro agreed to “truthfully testify”
against the remaining co-defendants, as had Powell and Scott Hall, an Atlanta bail bondsman who was the first to accept a plea deal in the case in late September. Chesebro also agreed to turn over documents and other evidence relevant to the case.
Chesebro pleaded guilty to a single felony charge of conspiracy to commit filing of false documents and was sentenced to five years' probation, which may eventually be reduced to three years. He was originally charged with seven felony counts, including one charge under the state racketeering
law, known as RICO, which carries a five-year minimum prison sentence.
His cooperation could be particularly valuable to prosecutors as they seek to prove to eventual jurors that the effort to seat pro-Trump electors in contested states was not a valid legal strategy, but rather part of an illegal scheme to keep Trump in power.
The two consecutive plea deals spell only bad news for Trump and his 15 remaining co-defendants, including Rudy Giuliani, his former personal lawyer, and Mark Meadows, his former White House chief of staff.
Emails obtained by The New York Times show that Chesebro was considering not only the legality of various maneuvers related to the electors scheme in the weeks after the election but also their political ramifications, potentially undercutting arguments that he was merely offering legal advice. One email chain included messages from John Eastman, another conservative lawyer who has been charged in the Georgia case.
On Friday, Chesebro appeared in court soon after several hundred potential jurors gathered on the seventh floor of the courthouse
to fill out screening questionnaires. Judge Scott McAfee of Fulton County Superior Court told the prospective jurors that the trial was expected to last four or five months and acknowledged that it was likely that they would be familiar with a case that had made international headlines.
Prosecutors acknowledged in court last month that a deal would be offered to Chesebro, and ABC News reported this week that he rejected a deal in which he would plead guilty to a felony racketeering charge, a conviction that could have resulted in him losing his law license.
Chesebro is the first person with inside knowledge of the wide-ranging plan to create fake slates of pro-Trump electors in states that Trump actually lost to have pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with authorities.
He was identified, albeit not by name, as Co-Conspirator 5 in a federal election interference indictment that the special counsel, Jack Smith, filed against Trump in Washington this summer. In that indictment, Chesebro is described as a lawyer who helped to craft and implement “a plan to submit fraudulent slates of presidential electors to obstruct the certification process.”
The Washington indictment cited several emails in which Chesebro and other lawyers working on the fake elector scheme had expressed reservations about whether it was honest or even legal.
It remains unclear how Chesebro's cooperation deal with prosecutors in Georgia might affect Smith's prosecution of Trump. If Chesebro takes the stand in Fulton County, Smith's prosecutors could in theory use his testimony against him should they ultimately decide to bring charges.
Scott Grubman, a lawyer for Chesebro and a former federal prosecutor, said Wednesday that a Justice Department policy discourages bringing federal charges against someone who pleads guilty to a crime in a separate case “unless there are very, very specific circumstances.”
“When you're convicted or plead guilty, what's supposed to happen is that that's it,” he said. “And so I really hope Jack Smith will, seriously, take those obligations seriously.”