Times Record

Trump lawyer urges judge to dismiss Georgia charges

- Bart Jansen

Donald Trump’s lawyer argued Thursday the former president can’t be prosecuted Georgia for trying to steal the 2020 election because his alleged conduct was political speech that must be protected under the First Amendment − even speech that was lies.

“Falsity alone is not enough,” Trump’s lawyer, Steven Sadow, said. “Clearly, being president at the time, dealing with elections and campaignin­g, calling into question what had occurred – that’s the height of political speech.”

Sadow urged Fulton County Superior Judge Scott McAfee to dismiss the charges against Trump because they are based on his statements questionin­g the election results and pressuring state officials to overturn them.

“It’s the speech that’s being punished,” Sadow said. “Take out the political speech, no charges.”

McAfee didn’t rule immediatel­y on the request. But he sounded skeptical that he could make any decision about whether the First Amendment protected Trump before holding the trial.

Prosecutor­s argued Trump’s statements contribute­d to a widerangin­g conspiracy of making false statements to government officials, submitting false and forged documents and impersonat­ing public officials. Trump asked Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a fellow Republican, to “find” the votes he would need to carry the Peach State.

“It’s not just that he lied over and over and over again,” said prosecutor Donald Wakeford. “It’s that each of those was employed as part of criminal activity with criminal intentions.”

U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan has already rejected Trump’s argument that his statements are protected by the First Amendment, in a federal case with similar charges of election interferen­ce. Wakeford directed McAfee to her reasoning for a detailed explanatio­n for why Trump is wrong.

“It’s not a basis for dismissing the indictment,” Wakeford added.

Trump and 14 co-defendants have pleaded not guilty to election racketeeri­ng. Four defendants have pleaded guilty. McAfee hasn’t scheduled the trial yet but prosecutor­s have proposed starting in August.

Another defendant, David Shafer, who is chairman of the Georgia Republican Party, also sought to dismiss his charges Thursday. His lawyer, Craig Gillen, also asked to erase phrasing in the indictment describing Shafer as a “fake” presidenti­al elector.

Shafer and two others are charged with impersonat­ing public officials and forgery for meeting Dec. 14, 2020, and submitting paperwork as if they were Republican presidenti­al electors for Trump. President Joe Biden narrowly won the state and Congress recognized his Democratic electors as legitimate.

Gillen argued that no electors – neither Republican­s nor Democrats – should have been recognized because a Trump and Shafer lawsuit challengin­g the results was still pending Dec. 14, 2020.

“There were no duly elected and qualified presidenti­al electors from the state of Georgia,” Gillen said.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp certified the election results and the electors, which Congress accepted.

 ?? DENNIS BYRON/AFP POOL VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? Former President Donald Trump’s lawyer Steven Sadow urged Fulton County Superior Judge Scott McAfee to dismiss the charges against Trump because they are based on his statements pressuring state officials to overturn election results.
DENNIS BYRON/AFP POOL VIA GETTY IMAGES Former President Donald Trump’s lawyer Steven Sadow urged Fulton County Superior Judge Scott McAfee to dismiss the charges against Trump because they are based on his statements pressuring state officials to overturn election results.

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