The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Officials detail Trump’s ‘disturbing’ Ga. fixation

Then-u.s. Attorney ‘Bjay’ Pak says he felt pressure to do president’s bidding.

- By David Wickert dwickert@ajc.com gbluestein@ajc.com

As 2020 drew to a close, U.S. Attorney Byung “Bjay” Pak got a disturbing phone call from Richard Donoghue, the acting deputy attorney general.

It was Dec. 30 or 31 — Pak couldn’t recall which. Donoghue “was very frustrated because the president was solely focused on Georgia with respect to any voter fraud allegation­s,” Pak told U.S. Senate investigat­ors during a deposition months later.

Donoghue said Trump “just would not believe that he lost Georgia.”

Pak was the top federal prosecutor in Atlanta. He found Trump’s fraud fixation “kind of disturbing” because his own Justice Department had investigat­ed “several allegation­s” in Georgia since the election.

“Obviously, we concluded that there was nothing there,” Pak said in his deposition.

Pak himself had reviewed a key piece of evidence: video from State Farm Arena that Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani had called a “smoking gun” at a state Senate

hearing Dec. 3.

The day after that hearing, U.S. Attorney General William Barr had asked Pak to make investigat­ing the video a “top priority,” Pak told Senate investigat­ors. A few days later, Pak obtained the video, along with audio recordings of witness interviews conducted by the Georgia secretary of state’s office.

State investigat­ors had already concluded that the video showed nothing improper. After watching the video and listening to the interviews, Pak agreed. At about the same time, the FBI interviewe­d election workers and also concluded “there was nothing

irregular about the events,” Pak told investigat­ors.

During their phone call, Donoghue had more disturbing news. Jeffrey Clark, a Trump ally in the Justice Department, was pressing DO J officials to aid the president’s effort to overturn the election in Georgia.

Clark wanted to send a letter urging Georgia officials to consider appointing a new slate of presidenti­al electors, citing “significan­t concerns” about the election. Trump allies were also pressing the DO J to join a new lawsuit before the U.S. Supreme Court that sought to overturn the election in Georgia

and other states Biden won.

One problem: The DO J had no significan­t concerns. As evidence of fraud, the letter and the lawsuit cited state Sen. William Ligon’s one-sided report, which regurgitat­ed Trump’s allegation­s without investigat­ing them.

Aiding Trump would be an extraordin­ary interventi­on in U.S. politics by the Justice Department. Pak was stunned by what Donoghue was telling him.

“And I said, ‘Well, that seems — that’s very — that’s crazy,’” Pak told Senate investigat­ors. “‘That’s just highly crazy.’”

Top DO J officials told Clark they would not send his letter to Georgia and other states that Biden won, according to the Senate investigat­ion report. They told Trump the department would not file the lawsuit.

During the phone call, Pak agreed the department should not file a lawsuit “that’s not substantia­ted by any evidence.” Donoghue told Pak that Trump might contact him directly.

“And I said, ‘Well, he could call me all he wants,’” Pak responded. “‘The answer is not going to change.’”

The president never called. But Trump remained fixated on Georgia — as Pak would soon learn.

 ?? SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Benjamin Ginsberg (left), Washington attorney and elections lawyer; Byung J. “Bjay” Pak, former U.S. attorney in Atlanta; and Al Schmidt, former Philadelph­ia city commission­er, testify June 13 in Washington before the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.
SUSAN WALSH/ASSOCIATED PRESS Benjamin Ginsberg (left), Washington attorney and elections lawyer; Byung J. “Bjay” Pak, former U.S. attorney in Atlanta; and Al Schmidt, former Philadelph­ia city commission­er, testify June 13 in Washington before the House select committee investigat­ing the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States