Las Vegas Review-Journal

Portions of Trump grand jury report to be released this week

- By Tamar Hallerman and Bill Rankin The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on (TNS)

ATLANTA — A Fulton County judge said Monday that he planned to keep private portions of a special grand jury report examining whether former President Donald Trump and his allies criminally meddled in Georgia’s 2020 elections. The report, which comes after an eight-month probe, apparently recommends individual­s be indicted.

But Superior Court Judge Robert Mcburney said he would release three parts of the document on Thursday, including the introducti­on, conclusion and a section in which the grand jury “discusses its concern that some witnesses may have lied under oath during their testimony to the grand jury.”

The eight-page order came almost three weeks after Mcburney heard arguments from Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis that the entire final report should remain under wraps until she makes indictment decisions, which she said were “imminent.” At that same hearing, a coalition of media organizati­ons, including the Atlanta Journal-constituti­on, argued that the public interest demanded that the full document be released, just as grand jurors had requested.georgia law says judges “shall order the publicatio­n as recommende­d” by grand jurors, provided that the jurors stick to the scope of their prescribed mission.

Mcburney noted this grand jury did just that.

“Indeed, it provided the district attorney with exactly what she requested: a roster of who should (or should not) be indicted, and for what, in relation to the conduct (and aftermath) of the 2020 general election in Georgia,” he said.

“But, as with many things in the law, it

is not that simple,” Mcburney noted.

Even though lawyers of investigat­ion targets did not attend the recent hearing to argue on behalf of their clients, Mcburney said the rights of future defendants still need to be protected.

“Put differentl­y, there was very limited due process in this process for those who might now be named as indictment-worthy in the final report,” Mcburney wrote.

The judge rejected arguments from the news outlets that the final report is a court record and therefore subject to public disclosure. He compared the report to a wiretap applicatio­n or a search warrant affidavit, which can only be publicly accessed after an investigat­ion is complete.

In a statement, Willis said she agreed with Mcburney. “I believe Judge Mcburney’s order is legally sound and consistent with my request,” she said. “I have no plans to appeal today’s order.”

Tom Clyde, who argued on behalf of the media organizati­ons, did not have an immediate comment.

The special grand jury was seated in May to help Willis with her criminal investigat­ion, launched two years ago this month, that centered on Trump’s leaked phone conversati­on with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger. During that Jan. 2, 2021, phone call, Trump pressed Raffensper­ger to “find” 11,780 votes, enough to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s narrow victory to in Georgia.

The probe has since expanded to include the appointmen­t of a slate of 16 “alternate” Republican electors, testimony Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani and others gave to Georgia lawmakers and a breach of elections data in Coffee County, Ga., among other events between November 2020 and January 2021. Willis said last month that jurors had interviewe­d 75 witnesses.

At least 18 people were named investigat­ion “targets” and warned by prosecutor­s that they could face charges, including Giuliani and David Shafer, the head of the Georgia GOP who abruptly announced last week that he would not seek another term.

The decision to seek indictment­s now lies solely with Willis, and she can do so at any time using regular grand juries currently in operation. At last month’s hearing, Willis strongly suggested that her office would be seeking indictment­s.

In his order, Mcburney noted that the special grand jury was largely controlled by the DA’S office and defense lawyers were not allowed to appear and argue on behalf of any of the investigat­ion’s targets. Moreover, “potential future defendants were not able to present evidence outside the scope of what the district attorney asked them.” And they could not call their own witnesses to rebut what other witnesses said about them and they had no ability to present mitigating evidence, Mcburney wrote.

“That does not mean that the district attorney’s investigat­ive process was flawed or improper or in any way unconstitu­tional,” Mcburney said. “By all appearance­s, the special purpose grand jury did its work by the book. The problem here, in discussing public disclosure, is that that book’s rules do not allow for the objects of the district attorney’s attention to be heard in the manner we require in a court of law.”

So the publicatio­n of the final report’s recommenda­tions of who should be indicted will be kept under wraps because “fundamenta­l fairness requires this,” the judge wrote. “(T)hose recommenda­tions are for the district attorney’s eyes only — for now.”

Regarding the three sections that he does plan to release, Mcburney noted that while “publicatio­n may not be convenient for the pacing of the district attorney’s investigat­ion, the compelling public interest in these proceeding­s and the unquestion­able value and importance of transparen­cy require their release.”

Mcburney added that because the grand jury did not identify the witnesses who it believed lied under oath, that section can be publicly disclosed at this time.

Mcburney directed the DA’S office to meet with him in the days ahead to discuss the logistics of publicizin­g the relevant portions of the report and determine whether anything should be redacted. He told the DA’S office to provide periodic updates on the status of its criminal investigat­ion so he could “reassess” if other portions of the report “can properly be disclosed.”

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE / AP ?? Fulton County, Ga., Superior Court Judge Robert Mcburney speaks Jan. 24 in Atlanta during a hearing to decide if the final report by a special grand jury looking into possible interferen­ce in the 2020 presidenti­al election can be released. Mcburney ruled Monday that portions of the report were to be released Thursday.
JOHN BAZEMORE / AP Fulton County, Ga., Superior Court Judge Robert Mcburney speaks Jan. 24 in Atlanta during a hearing to decide if the final report by a special grand jury looking into possible interferen­ce in the 2020 presidenti­al election can be released. Mcburney ruled Monday that portions of the report were to be released Thursday.
 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE / AP ?? Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis says she agrees with Judge Robert Mcburney’s ruling to release portions of the report of the special grand jury looking into possible 2020 presidenti­al election tampering in Georgia by the Donald Trump campaign. Trump shown at right last month in Columbia, S.C., says Willis is engaged in a witch hunt against him.
JOHN BAZEMORE / AP Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis says she agrees with Judge Robert Mcburney’s ruling to release portions of the report of the special grand jury looking into possible 2020 presidenti­al election tampering in Georgia by the Donald Trump campaign. Trump shown at right last month in Columbia, S.C., says Willis is engaged in a witch hunt against him.
 ?? ALEX BRANDON / AP ??
ALEX BRANDON / AP

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