The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia official clarifies report on Trump call

Former president did not say ‘ find the fraud’ in his recorded conversati­on with state investigat­or.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ ajc. com

Georgia elections officials said their descriptio­n of a much- scrutinize­d phone call between Donald Trump and a top investigat­or wasn’t meant to be presented as a “word- for- word transcript” after a recording of the call revealed the former president was misquoted.

Deputy Secretary of State Jordan Fuchs told The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on on Tuesday the office’s initial report about the conversati­on between Trump and Frances Watson, the chief investigat­or, relied on Watson’s recollecti­on.

A recording of the conversati­on, located on a trash folder in Watson’s email account during an open records request, was released last week. It revealed Trump told Watson she would find “dishonesty” if she scrutinize­d absentee ballots in Fulton County and that she had the “most important job in the country right now.”

“When the right answer comes out, you’ll be praised,” Trump told Watson.

Earlier reporting by the AJC and other news organizati­ons misquoted the exact words that Trump used to urge Watson to act based on Fuchs’ account of the conversati­on. The former president did not urge Watson to “find the fraud” and did not promise she would become a “national hero.”

“After hearing the tape, it’s clear her recollecti­on accurately portrayed the president’s assertions that there was fraud to uncover and that she would receive praise for doing so,” Fuchs said.

The call with Watson is separate from a Jan. 2 conversati­on between Trump and Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger now at the center of a Fulton County grand jury investigat­ion. In that c all, Trump repeatedly urged Raffensper­ger to “find” enough votes to reverse his defeat.

In a statement Monday, Trump called the scrutiny part of a “Georgia Witch Hunt” and repeated false claims of widespread elect i on f raud. Georgia’s elec t i on results were upheld by three separate counts, and challenges to the outcome were dismissed by courts at every level.

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