The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘Lord Jesus, where’s the police?’ she pleaded

- Bill Torpy

If the lunacy and antipathy that followed the 2020 election in Georgia was pitched as a movie script five years ago, the narrative would have been laughed out of the screenwrit­ers’ room. Too unbelievab­le.

But that was then. Here we are with the story of Ruby Freeman, a 62-year-old temporary Fulton County elections worker who had to flee her home early this year because of continual threats and harassment, according to an investigat­ion by Reuters.

A 911 call to Cobb County police captured her terror. “Last night after 9 someone was bamming on the door; now someone’s bamming on the door again,” she told the operator. “Oh, they’re screaming . ... Lord Jesus, where’s the police?”

Freeman was one of the employees who appeared in videos with the infamous “suitcases” full of illegal ballots that were being counted at Fulton’s elections operation at the State Farm Center. The contention that fraudulent votes were being manufactur­ed there was quickly discounted by state officials. But that did not deter the tin foil hat crowd, nor its leader, President Donald Trump, from regurgitat­ing the conspiracy of corruption over and over.

In fact, Trump even mentioned Freeman by name 18 times in his phone call to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger earlier this year, the call where he wanted to “find 11,780 votes.” Trump referred to Freeman as a “hustler” and “profession­al vote scammer” who “stuffed the ballot boxes.”

Imagine, the Leader of the Free World taking his time to denigrate a grandmothe­r making $16 an hour. But this is where we are.

Last week, Reuters topped itself in the News of the Weird (but True) category. Trevian Kutti, a publicist for hip-hop superstar Kanye West, arrived at Freeman’s door and urged her to ’fess up, and intimated that she could be jail-bound. Freeman, already frazzled, called police and a body cam recording of their conversati­on captured this: “I cannot say what specifical­ly will take place,” Kutti told Freeman. “I just know that it will disrupt your freedom ... and the freedom of one or more of your family members.”

A spokesman for West, who has changed his name to Ye, later told Reuters that Kutti was not associated with the music star when she confronted Freeman. OK, so the story is that she took it upon herself to do this. That seems unbelievab­le. But strange stuff happens nowadays.

Cobb police spokesman Wayne Delk told me that Freeman, through her attorney, said “that they did not want us to investigat­e, that the FBI would investigat­e.”

Freeman’s daughter, also an elections worker who was harassed, declined comment.

The FBI, in an email, said the bureau “takes all threats of violence seriously” and analyzes “intelligen­ce to determine whether individual­s might be motivated to take violent action for any reason, including due to concerns about the election, and investigat­e any and all federal violations to the fullest.”

Richard Barron, the embattled Fulton elections chief who is leaving this month, said he turned over a call to the FBI, one that said he should be tarred and feathered and executed. He has since heard nothing.

“There was a threat against Judge (Brian) Amero and they made an arrest in two days,” Barron said of the Superior Court Judge who tossed out a lawsuit against the Fulton elections department after finding no counterfei­t ballots. “But with elections officials there’s been no arrests. No one is paying a price for this stuff. There should be the same standard for public servants doing their jobs.”

The harassment of Freeman started after a Georgia legislativ­e hearing on Dec. 3, 2020, aimed at ferreting out fraud. (Or at least getting legislator­s on camera.) The video of the “suitcases” of ballots was shown at that hearing and Trump tweeted the live-streaming to his 88 million Twitter followers, almost immediatel­y making Freeman a marked woman. Trump, still barred from Twitter and Facebook, says he’s launching his own platform, Truth Social.

That hearing came a couple days after Gabriel Sterling, the state’s voting system implementa­tion manager, made an impassione­d plea to Trump and the state’s two U.S. Senators at the time, David Perdue and Kelly Loeffler, to tone down their rhetoric or “Someone’s going to get hurt.”

Nobody seemed to be listening.

Loeffler and Perdue, of course, got defeated in a runoff election a month later, and Perdue is now taking a whack at Gov. Brian Kemp in the upcoming Republican primary. Perdue has gone all Trumpie and has dusted off the failed elections lawsuit and filed a version of it last week. It’s a great way to suck up to the Big Guy.

The suit, which references the episode that brought great woe to Freeman, is included. There is certainly no letting go of these unproven nuggets.

Perdue’s camp, in a statement, told me that he is simply joining an ongoing legal effort and is trying to “get to the bottom of fraud in 2020 and make sure it never happens again.”

“Of course harassment and violence is totally unacceptab­le and has no place in our society,” they said.

Of course, the wingnuts never seem to hear that part.

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