The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge rejects bid to block results

Ruling fifinds no reason to throw out 1.3 million absentee ballots in state.

- By Alan Judd alan. judd@ ajc. com

Georgia was drawn into a vortex of conspiracy theories over the 2020 presidenti­al election on Thursday as President Donald Trump’s lawyers and a prominent Atlanta supporter pressed unfounded claims that the state was a hotbed of fraud.

In a hearing late Thursday, a federal judge in Atlanta rejected a request to bar state offifficia­ls from certifying that former Vice President Joe Biden defeated Trump in Georgia. State law requires election results to be certififie­d by today.

U. S. District Judge Steven Grimberg, a Trump appointee, said he found no evidence of irregulari­ties that afffffffff­fffected more than a nominal number of votes. Biden beat Trump by more than 12,000 votes in Georgia.

Grimberg said halting the election’s certifific­ation could have invalidate­d 1.3 million absentee ballots cast by Georgia voters.

“It harms the public interest in

countless ways, particular­ly in the environmen­t in which this election occurred,” Grimberg said at the end of a nearly three- hour hearing. “To halt the certificat­ion at literally the 11 th hour would breed confusion and significan­t disenfranc­hisement .”

Grimberg ruled in a case brought by Atlanta attorney L. Lin Wood, who claimed that improper procedures by election officials harmed him not only as a voter but as a Republican campaign donor.

The decision represente­d another legal defeat for Trump, who has spread unsubstant­iated allegation­s of widespread fraud in states that, like Georgia, flipped from Republican to Democratic. It came hours after a news conference in which Trump’s lawyers, including former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, claimed a global conspiracy turned the election in Biden’s favor.

Giuliani strongly criticized “crooks” who run such cities as Atlanta, Detroit and Philadelph­ia, which he claimed were rife with corruption and election fraud. All those cities are heavily Democratic and have large population­s of African Americans.

Giulia ni also implicit ly attacked Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger, a Republican whose office this week concluded a manual review of about 5 million ballots cast in the presidenti­al contest. The review affirmed Biden’s victory.

“The recount in Georgia will tell us nothing,” Giuliani said. “They wouldn’t provide the signatures to match the ballots.”

He was referring to the special envelopes that absentee voters sign before they send in their ballots. After election workers verify that a voter’s signature matches registrati­on records, the envelope is stored separately to guarantee ballot secrecy.

Another lawyer for Trump, Sidney Powell, claimed the president’s team has uncovered evidence of improper benefits provided to “people who spent $ 100 million to buy a statewide voting system” — an apparent reference to Georgia and to Raffensper­ger, who oversaw the $ 104 million purchase of new voting equipment from Dominion Voting Systems.

“A full- scale criminal investigat­ion needs to be undertaken immediatel­y,” Powell said. “President Trump won by a landslide. We are going to prove it.”

Raffensper­ger has denied Trump’s allegation­s of wrongdoing in Georgia’s election.

Gov. Brian Kemp, also a Republican who once counted Trump as one of his staunchest supporters, declined to comment on the allegation­s.

In an email Thursday, a spokesman for Kemp said, “The governor supported a full audit of the results and believes that only legal votes should be counted.”

A stronger rebuttal came from Erick Erickson, the conservati­ve commentato­r and talk radio host who supported Trump for reelection. “There are a lot of broken people who are being lied to,” Erickson wrote on Twitter, “and many of them want to believe the

lie because their religion has become politics and they cannot believe their god is abandoning them.”

In the news conference, Powell and Giuliani also alleged that Dominion — founded in Toronto and now headquarte­red in Denver — was connected to the late Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez and his successor, Nicolas Maduro, and that the firm had produced software that allowed votes to be changed electronic­ally at a massive scale. They offered no evidence to support the claims.

Giuliani suggested that a Dominion executive who was involved with bringing the company’s equipment to Georgia was affiliated with the antifa and Black Lives Matter movements. He called the executive “a vicious, vicious man.”

On its website, Dominion denied the allegation­s. It also cited a statement by the federal Cybersecur­ity and Infrastruc­ture Security Agency that dismissed claims of tampering with election systems and called the 2020 election “the most secure in American history.”

In the news conference, Giuliani claimed to have evidence of double- voting in Georgia elections and of out- of- state residents casting ballots. He said this alleged fraud involved more than twice as many votes as Trump would need to overturn the Georgia results.

But, while imploring reporters to read hi s evidence, Giuliani released only a few sworn statements by witnesses to purported fraud. Those statements, most from Republican poll watchers or election workers, described routine election procedures, such as verifying voter signatures on absentee ballots, as evidence of wrongdoing.

Giuliani pointed to an affidavit filed with Wood’s lawsuit in Atlanta from an unidentifi­ed person who claims to be a former member of the presidenti­al security detail in Venezuela. He alleged he was present when Chavez and representa­tives of a Florida voting equipment company conspired to create software to secretly change votes. He also said that company was connected to Dominion, Georgia’s election equipment vendor — a claim that is untrue.

It is not clear why Wood filed the Venezuelan’s affidavit in his lawsuit, and it did not come up during the court hearing in Atlanta.

Wood sued this week to stop certificat­ion and to request a statewide manual recount. Wood is a vocal Trump supporter who represente­d Richard Jewell, the security guard who was wrongly suspected in the 1996 Olympic Park bombing in Atlanta. After federal authoritie­s cleared Jewell, Wood sued numerous media organizati­ons, including The Atlanta Journal- Constituti­on. The suit against the AJC was dismissed in 2011, with the Georgia Court of Appeals concluding the coverage — which reported that law enforcemen­t officials suspected Jewell — was substantia­lly true at the time of publicatio­n.

During the hearing, Wood’s lawyer, Ray Smith, said Georgia’s voting was “tainted with impropriet­y, unfairness and fraud .” He asserted that because of a record number of absentee ballots and new procedures for rejecting those with signatures that did not appear to match registrati­on records, “signature matching for absentee ballots wasn’t done or wasn’t done properly.”

But Russ Willard of the state attorney general’s office, representi­ng Raffensper­ger, said election workers appropriat­ely verified absentee voters’ signatures and suggested Wood had no evidence to the contrary. “It wasn’t until his preferred candidate lost the election” that Wood complained about the absentee ballot verificati­on process, Willard said. Rather than accept the election results, Willard said, Wood sought“the largest disenfranc­hisement of eligible electors since the abolition of the poll tax and other laws of the Jim Crow era.”

Wood did not speak in court, but posted on Twitter during and after the hearing. He promised to appeal Grimberg’s ruling to the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, defended Giuliani’s allegation­s about Dominion and attacked the media and the fact- checking site Snopes for rebutting claims about Venezuelan interferen­ce in the election.

“LIE,” he wrote. “Snopes is paid to publish propaganda. Ignore it.”

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani alleged that election fraud is prevalent in cities such as Atlanta.
JACQUELYN MARTIN / ASSOCIATED PRESS Former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani alleged that election fraud is prevalent in cities such as Atlanta.

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