Lodi News-Sentinel

Georgia grand jury recommends perjury charges in 2020 election case

- Tamar Hallerman and Bill Rankin

ATLANTA — A special grand jury in Fulton County that examined efforts by former President Donald Trump and his allies to overturn the 2020 presidenti­al election results in Georgia said it believed at least one witness it heard from may have lied under oath.

The panel recommende­d that the Fulton District Attorney’s office seek indictment­s against those people “where the evidence is compelling,” though it did not specify to which witnesses it was referring or why it believed they lied.

“A majority of the Grand Jury believes that perjury may have been committed by one or more witnesses testifying before it,” the report said. “The Grand Jury recommends that the District Attorney seek appropriat­e indictment­s for such crimes where the evidence is compelling.”

All or parts of four pages of the nine-page final report were released Thursday, providing the public its first peek into the findings of the 23-member panel, which spent eight months working behind closed doors. The grand jurors also noted an appendix of relevant Georgia statutes was attached to the final report.

Grand jurors noted they unanimousl­y found that “no widespread fraud took place in the Georgia 2020 presidenti­al election that could result in overturnin­g that election.”

Few other details were provided, including the panel’s highly anticipate­d recommenda­tions for who should be charged with state crimes. Those portions are likely to be released only after Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis makes indictment decisions, which could take months or longer.

But in the introducti­on of the report that was released, the special grand jurors wrote that they had provided “recommenda­tions on indictment­s and relevant statutes.” They also said the report will show the tallies of their votes on “each topic.”

Still, Thursday’s excerpts were being picked apart by observers seeking hints on what was proposed. Some expressed surprise that the final document might only be nine pages long, not the similar expansive look at the election that the Jan. 6 committee on Capitol Hill took late last year.

“It’s certainly not definitive on whether Trump should be charged,” said attorney Norm Eisen, who co-authored a report on the Fulton probe for the Brookings Institutio­n. “But the declaratio­n that they found that no widespread fraud took place in the Georgia 2020 presidenti­al election is another nail in Trump’s coffin.”

Eisen, who was President Barack Obama’s ethics czar and helped lead House Democrats’ first Trump impeachmen­t, noted that Trump’s defense has been that something amiss happened during the 2020 election in Georgia.

“That defense has now been eliminated, not by a prosecutor­ial adversary but by 23 members of the grand jury who unanimousl­y explained this is their view,” he said.

A Willis spokesman did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Neither did Trump’s Georgia-based legal team.

The special grand jury, which was advised by the DA’s office, interviewe­d 75 witnesses, including top state officials, former White House aides and several of Trump’s closest advisers. But jurors did not seek testimony from the probe’s central figure: Trump himself.

Among the incidents jurors investigat­ed was the Jan. 2, 2021, leaked phone call between Trump and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, during which Trump asked the fellow Republican to “find” 11,780 votes, one more than was needed to swing the outcome of the election. The panel also examined the appointmen­t of a slate of 16 “alternate” Republican electors, testimony Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani and others gave to Georgia lawmakers, the alleged harassment of a Fulton poll worker and a breach of elections data in Coffee County.

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