The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

‘2000 Mules’ voter fraud movie lands in court

Gwinnett man says film by Trump backers damaged his reputation.

- By Mark Niesse

False accusation­s of voter fraud smeared an Atlanta-area auditor who was shown in the conspiracy movie “2000 Mules” when he legally delivered five absentee ballots for his family, his lawyers said in federal court Thursday.

A federal judge considered the defamation lawsuit hours before Donald Trump, who has said he would use the movie in his defense against racketeeri­ng charges, turned himself in 4 miles away at the Fulton County Jail.

The lawsuit by Mark Andrews says “2000 Mules” damaged his reputation and intimidate­d him by using a clip from surveillan­ce video as the narrator says: “What you are seeing is a crime. These are fraudulent votes.”

A state investigat­ion found Andrews followed Georgia law when he delivered ballots for his three adult children, his wife and himself. State law allows voters, family members or caregivers of disabled voters to drop off ballots.

U.S. District Judge Steven Grimberg questioned why it was permissibl­e for the movie to publicly accuse Andrews of breaking the law.

“Mr. Andrews was just voting. He’s not a candidate. He’s not a celebrity,” Grimberg said. “... The narrator didn’t say, ‘I think this is a crime.’ The narrator said, ‘What you’re watching is a crime.’ “

Attorneys for the defendants, which include conservati­ve moviemaker Dinesh D’souza and True

the Vote, said they were stating an opinion that’s protected by the First Amendment’s freedom of speech protection­s.

“The film is opinion, based on disclosed facts,” said Joseph Larsen, who represents True the Vote, a Texas-based organizati­on that collaborat­ed on the movie. “The premise of the movie is that you can’t trust the government to begin with.”

The movie blurred Andrews’ face as he deposited his family’s absentee ballots into a drop box in Gwinnett County before

the 2020 election, but the lawsuit said he was still identifiab­le.

Lea Haber Kuck, an attorney for Andrews, said there’s no constituti­onal protection against defamation by a film that profited from his image without his permission.

“There’s no law that says you can blur someone’s face and do whatever you want,” Kuck said. “He and his wife watched the movie and they were very upset about it and feared for their safety.”

The movie is still available for purchase online, and Andrews’

image was also used in the “2000 Mules” book that was released after the State Election Board cleared him of wrongdoing in May 2022.

Catherine Engelbrech­t, the co-founder of True the Vote, attended the hearing along with her colleague, Gregg Phillips, both of whom gathered video and informatio­n for the movie.

“We were figuring out how we could possibly take a measured look at what was going on with the drop boxes, and we just talked about how do you bring down

a cartel?” Engelbrech­t said in a video released this week.

The State Election Board recently sued True the Vote over its unwillingn­ess to comply with subpoenas that would support its allegation­s of the “2000 Mules” ballot collection scheme.

Grimberg, a Trump appointee, said he hopes to rule within 45 days on motions to dismiss by the defendants.

If he rules against the dismissal motions, the case could move forward with gathering evidence and a trial.

 ?? IMAGE FROM “2000 MULES” ?? Mark Andrews, an auditor from Gwinnett County, filed a lawsuit against the makers of “2000 Mules,” a movie that falsely claimed he had committed election fraud when he dropped off ballots filled out by his family members.
IMAGE FROM “2000 MULES” Mark Andrews, an auditor from Gwinnett County, filed a lawsuit against the makers of “2000 Mules,” a movie that falsely claimed he had committed election fraud when he dropped off ballots filled out by his family members.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States