The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton DA taking Trump case to grand jury

Prosecutor will seek subpoenas related to possible election fraud.

- By Christian Boone christian.boone@ajc.com and Tamar Hallerman Tamar.hallerman@coxinc.com

Fulton County prosecutor­s are expected to appear before a grand jury this week seeking subpoenas for documents and witnesses related to their investigat­ion of former President Donald Trump and some of his top associates for possible election fraud, The Atlanta Journal-constituti­on has learned.

Legal experts are split as to whether there’s a strong case to be made, but most agree Trump’s efforts to overturn Georgia’s election results merit greater scrutiny. Fani Willis, Fulton’s new district attorney, has said she’s prepared to follow the evidence wherever it leads.

Some believe the recording of Trump’s Jan. 2 phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger leaning on him to “find” the votes to reverse Joe Biden’s win is grounds to move forward.

“If there were a textbook (example of ) how to commit criminal

election fraud, this would be it,” said Atlanta attorney David Walbert, who has represente­d Fulton County and the state of Georgia in several elections and redistrict­ing cases.

Longtime criminal defense attorney Don Samuel believes the matter isn’t cut-and-dried.

“You’ve got to prove not only that he encouraged the secretary of state to commit a crime, but that he did so willfully and aware that what he was doing was illegal,” said Samuel, whose high-profile clients have included football stars Ray Lewis and Ben Roethlisbe­rger and attorney Claud “Tex” Mciver. That “is kind of an uphill battle, it seems to me, when you’re surrounded by lawyers when you’re making the call.”

Willis, an experience­d prosecutor admired even by courtroom adversarie­s, said during a recent interview that she has no choice but to investigat­e.

“Nobody is above the law,” she said.

The investigat­ion begins

Willis hasn’t said exactly what her prosecutor­s seek, but sent letters to Gov. Brian Kemp, Raffensper­ger and other state officials last month directing them to preserve documents.

She indicated she’s investigat­ing several state crimes, including solicitati­on of election fraud, making false statements to state and local government­al bodies, conspiracy, racketeeri­ng, violation of oath of office and involvemen­t in violence or threats related to the election’s administra­tion.

Racketeeri­ng laws are a preferred legal avenue for prosecutor­s going after the Mafia and other forms of organized crime. Willis used state RICO statutes in 2014 to secure guilty pleas from teachers and administra­tors involved in the Atlanta Public Schools cheating scandal.

A RICO case requires prosecutor­s show numerous criminal acts took place to achieve the same goal. Courtroom veterans were divided on whether the law applies here — and whether using RICO could aid or harm Willis’ efforts.

RICO “always just adds burdens to the prosecutio­n’s case,” said Samuel. “If in fact they’re going to try and show that individual acts of election fraud occurred, why complicate the matter by going with a RICO case?”

Georgia State University law professor Clark Cunningham believes Willis has the makings of a “pretty compelling narrative of a conspiracy” that sought to prevent state electors from casting their votes for Biden.

Cunningham said the greatest risk may belong to Trump’s personal lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, whose testimony before the Georgia Senate Judiciary Committee included debunked claims of machines flipping votes and mail-in ballot fraud. One of Willis’ letters announcing her investigat­ion was sent to Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan, who presides over the Senate. Cunningham said that’s a clear indication Giuliani’s testimony is under scrutiny.

“There is a plausible narrative that Giuliani is the mastermind and Trump just followed his lead,” he said.

A RICO conviction in Georgia carries a five- to 20-year jail sentence. A first-degree conviction of criminal solicitati­on to commit election fraud carries one to three years imprisonme­nt.

The process

Typically a grand jury meets, listens to a 20-minute or so overview from a prosecutor on the merits of their case and, almost always, issues an indictment. Samuel said Wills is likely to follow a federal model, where a grand jury will be impaneled for several months, meeting weekly to hear subpoenas for evidence.

John Banzhaf III, a professor at George Washington University’s law school, said contempora­neous notes taken from any of the people on the Trump-raffensper­ger call and a separate conversati­on between the secretary of state and Trump ally U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), could emerge as crucial evidence.

“We consider something that somebody said at the time that something happened much more important than what they might say a week, a month or longer after they’ve had time to think it over,” said Banzhaf, who filed complaints asking Willis, the secretary of state’s office and two other state entities to investigat­e the Trump-raffensper­ger call last month.

Willis will also likely seek evidence that can further flesh out the context surroundin­g Trump’s call to Raffensper­ger, said Noah Bookbinder, a former federal corruption prosecutor and president of Citizens for Responsibi­lity and Ethics, a Washington-based ethics watchdog group.

“What else was being written and said that would have affected the way those words came across to Secretary Raffensper­ger and his counsel and would help a judge and a jury understand what President Trump meant when he said those things?” said Bookbinder, whose organizati­on sent a criminal complaint to Willis and acting U.S. attorney general last month after the Trump-raffensper­ger call.

Trump’s lawyers are expected to cite executive and attorney-client privilege, which could restrict the kinds of evidence that can be gathered and used. Many legal experts believe that executive privilege has expired now that Trump is no longer in the White House.

“If anything, his duties as president would have been to properly protect and administer the election law of the United States,” Bookbinder said. “What he’s doing here is the opposite. He’s trying to overturn an election.”

Former Dekalb County District Attorney Robert James said Willis will be under immense pressure to “get this right.”

“You don’t want another Ray Lewis,” he said, referring to disastrous prosecutio­n of the Baltimore Ravens linebacker by Willis’ predecesso­r, Paul Howard. Lewis pleaded guilty to obstructio­n, a misdemeano­r. Two other defendants from the 2000 double murder were acquitted. “People don’t want to see their DA being embarrasse­d on the national stage.”

Even if she makes a compelling case, James said, “there will be a lot of people who won’t believe the president did anything wrong.”

A RICO conviction in Georgia carries a five- to 20-year jail sentence. A firstdegre­e conviction of criminal solicitati­on to commit election fraud carries one to three years imprisonme­nt.

An unpreceden­ted case

No former president has been jailed for a crime, and election fraud cases are rarely prosecuted in Georgia.

Still, observers say Willis has a duty to act.

“This issue really cuts to the core of the survival of our democracy,” Bookbinder said. “When we have the American people vote in an election, is that result going to stand, or can a powerful political leader cut in and get it changed if they don’t like the result?”

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN/FOR THE AJC ?? Fani Willis, Fulton’s new district attorney, hasn’t said exactly what her prosecutor­s seek, but sent letters to Gov. Brian Kemp, Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger and other state officials last month directing them to preserve documents.
JENNI GIRTMAN/FOR THE AJC Fani Willis, Fulton’s new district attorney, hasn’t said exactly what her prosecutor­s seek, but sent letters to Gov. Brian Kemp, Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger and other state officials last month directing them to preserve documents.

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