Oroville Mercury-Register

Trump investigat­ions: Georgia prosecutor likely to seek criminal charges in election probe

- By Kate Brumback and Eric Tucker

Former President Donald Trump and his allies have been put on notice by a prosecutor, but the warning didn't come from anyone at the Justice Department.

It was from a Georgia prosecutor who indicated she was likely to seek criminal charges soon in a twoyear election subversion probe. In trying to block the release of a special grand jury's report, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis argued in court last week that decisions in the case were “imminent” and that the report's publicatio­n could jeopardize the rights of “future defendants.”

Though Willis, a Democrat, didn't mention Trump by name, her comments marked the first time a prosecutor in any of several current investigat­ions tied to the Republican former president has hinted that charges could be forthcomin­g. The remarks ratcheted anticipati­on that an investigat­ion focused, in part, on Trump's call with Georgia's secretary of state could conclude before ongoing federal probes.

“I expect to see indictment­s in Fulton County before I see any federal indictment­s,” said Clark Cunningham, a Georgia State University law professor.

Besides the Georgia inquiry, a Justice Department special counsel is investigat­ing Trump over his role in working with allies to overturn his loss in the 2020 presidenti­al election and his alleged mishandlin­g of classified documents.

Trump had appeared to face the most pressing legal jeopardy from the probe into a cache of classified materials at his Florida resort, and that threat remains. But that case seems complicate­d, at least politicall­y, by the recent discovery of classified records at President Joe Biden's Delaware home and at a Washington office. The Justice Department tapped a separate special counsel to investigat­e that matter.

Willis opened her office's investigat­ion shortly after the release of a recording of a Jan. 2, 2021, phone call between Trump and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger. In that conversati­on, the then-president suggested that Raffensper­ger, a fellow Republican, could “find” the votes needed to overturn Trump's narrow election loss in the state to Biden, a Democrat.

“All I want to do is this: I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have,” Trump said on the call.

Since then, the investigat­ion's scope has broadened considerab­ly, encompassi­ng among other things: a slate of Republican fake electors, phone calls by Trump and others to Georgia officials in the weeks after the 2020 election, and unfounded allegation­s of widespread election fraud made to state lawmakers.

In an interview, Trump insisted he did “absolutely nothing wrong” and that his phone call with Raffensper­ger was “perfect.” He said he felt “very confident” that he would not be indicted.

“She's supposed to be stopping violent crime, and that's her job,” Trump said of Willis. “Not to go after people for political reasons, that did things absolutely perfectly.”

It is unclear how Willis' case will impact the Justice Department's probes or what contact her team has had with federal investigat­ors. Justice Department prosecutor­s have been circumspec­t in discussing their investigat­ions, offering little insight into how or when they might end.

But Willis' comments indicate that the Georgia investigat­ion is on a path toward resolution — with charges or not — on a timetable independen­t of what the Justice Department is planning to do, legal experts said.

Cunningham, the Georgia State professor, said that Willis' comments implied that the special grand jury's report contained detail about people who the panel and Willis believe should, at minimum, be further investigat­ed.

“She wouldn't be talking about the release of the report creating prejudice to potential future defendants unless she saw in the report peoples' names who she saw as potential future defendants,” he added.

Attorney General Merrick Garland in November tapped Jack Smith, a former public corruption prosecutor, to act as special counsel overseeing investigat­ions into Trump's actions leading up to the deadly Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot and into his possession of hundreds of classified documents at the Mara-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.

Though Smith and his team of prosecutor­s have issued grand jury subpoenas, he has not revealed when his investigat­ion might conclude or who might be a target.

Garland has declined to discuss the probes, saying only that “no person is above the law” and that there aren't separate rules for Democrats and Republican­s.

FBI agents recently searched Biden's Wilmington, Delaware, home, finding six items containing classified documents, the White House said. Further muddling the Justice Department's calculus: Classified records were found this month at the Indiana home of Trump's vice president, Mike Pence.

 ?? ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the South Carolina Statehouse on Saturday in Columbia, S.C.
ALEX BRANDON — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Former President Donald Trump speaks at a campaign event at the South Carolina Statehouse on Saturday in Columbia, S.C.

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