Marysville Appeal-Democrat

First Donald Trump co-defendant in Georgia election case pleads guilty

- Tribune News Service The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on

ATLANTA — Bail bondsman Scott Hall on Friday became the first defendant in the Fulton County election interferen­ce case to take a plea agreement with prosecutor­s, signaling the probe has entered a dynamic new phase.

During an impromptu hearing before Fulton Superior Court Judge

Scott Mcafee, Hall, with his attorney by his side, pleaded guilty to five misdemeano­r counts of conspiracy to commit intentiona­l interferen­ce with the performanc­e of election duties.

Hall agreed to testify truthfully when called, five years probation, a $5,000 fine, 200 hours of community service and a ban on polling and election administra­tionrelate­d activities. He also recorded a statement for prosecutor­s and pledged to pen a letter of apology to Georgia voters.

The agreement is a victory for prosecutor­s, who are preparing for at least two sets of trials involving what is now 18 defendants. Jury selection for the trial involving the first two defendants, Sidney Powell and Kenneth Chesebro, is slated to begin on Oct. 20.

A spokesman for District Attorney Fani Willis declined to comment.

Hall was indicted last month in connection with the breach of sensitive voting data in Coffee County in South Georgia on Jan. 7, 2021. He had been charged with racketeeri­ng and six felony counts of conspiracy.

Hall could be called to testify against Powell, whom prosecutor­s allege paid for the Coffee

County trip as the Trump campaign sought evidence to support its claims of voter fraud.

Hall isn’t as well know as some of the other Trump co-defendants, but he played a widerangin­g role in efforts to subvert the 2020 election results in Georgia. Early in January 2021, he called Justice Department lawyer Jeffrey Clark, who was also indicted in the Trump case, and they talked for 63 minutes about the presidenti­al election “in furtheranc­e of the conspiracy,” according to the 98-page Fulton indictment.

Prosecutor­s said Friday that Hall chartered the plane which flew Trump allies and a team of computer analysts to Coffee County, some

200 miles southeast of Atlanta. The group spent hours at the county election office and copied Georgia’s statewide voting system software, which is supposed to be kept secure by election officials.

They also took official ballots outside of the polling place in violation of Georgia law, according to the indictment.

Hall is among those who were captured in surveillan­ce video at the office. At one point he is seen massaging the shoulders of the

Cathy Latham, the county Republican Party chairwoman who is also charged in the elections case.

University of Georgia Law Professor Melissa D. Redmon said it’s hard to say how much damage Hall could do to Powell’s defense at trial.

“But you’d have to assume it’s going to be something for (prosecutor­s) to offer him first-offender misdemeano­rs and he can go on about his life and keep his business,” said Redmon, a former Fulton prosecutor.

Under the terms of the plea deal, it appears that Hall will be able to keep his bail bond license. Under Georgia law, a profession­al bail bondsperso­n cannot be convicted of a felony “or any crime involving moral turpitude.”

The DA’S office clarified, and Hall’s attorney successful­ly asked Mcafee to acknowledg­e, that Hall didn’t commit a crime involving moral turpitude.

It’s common for prosecutor­s to float plea deals in large, multidefen­dant racketeeri­ng cases as they hone in on the biggest targets in an alleged criminal scheme. In this case, former President Donald Trump and his former personal attorney Rudy Giuliani face the most charges.

“You want the ones at the table to be the most culpable and the ones you have the most evidence against,” said Redmon. “You don’t really want to be bothered with the lowhanging fruit if you don’t have to.”

During a separate meeting before Mcafee on Friday, special prosecutor Nathan Wade disclosed that the DA’S office had yet to offer plea deals to Chesebro or Powell, but he said that will change in the near future.

“We’ll sit down and kind of put some things together, and we’ll reach out to defense counsel individual­ly to extend an offer,” Wade said.

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