The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia Republican Party official denies voting illegally

State’s attorneys charge he cast ballots while a prohibited felon.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.Niesse@ajc.com

ELLIJAY — A top Georgia Republican Party official and talk show host accused of election fraud, Brian K. Pritchard, testified Friday he never voted illegally while serving a felony sentence for forging checks, but state attorneys showed evidence he repeatedly voted after his probation had been revoked.

Pritchard, the first vice chairman for the state Republican Party, allegedly broke the law when he voted in nine Georgia elections from 2008 to 2010. Georgia law prohibits felons from voting, and attorneys for the state said Pritchard’s probation didn’t end until 2011.

“There is nothing to the allegation­s,” Pritchard said after the hearing in the Gilmer County Courthouse. “I’m just disappoint­ed that this much time is being put into this effort for me when there’s real voter fraud out there, and real things that need to be investigat­ed.”

Pritchard told a judge he thought he had completed his three-year probation sentence in Pennsylvan­ia in 1999, and he wouldn’t have voted in Georgia if he knew his probation had been repeatedly extended over the years while a collection agency sought payment.

Senior Assistant Attorney General Russell Willard told the judge Pritchard knew better, and his excuses don’t absolve him when Pennsylvan­ia court records indicate he hadn’t finished his sentence.

“He has said he is a sophistica­ted businessma­n, but suddenly he doesn’t seem to understand the criminal law,” Willard said. “This is someone who chooses when they don’t want to understand something. When he came to Georgia, he was aware that he was registerin­g to vote illegally in Georgia.”

Willard asked Administra­tive Law Judge Lisa Boggs to order a $9,500 fine — $1,000 for each alleged illegal vote and $500 for registerin­g to vote while he was a felon — along with a public reprimand, a cease and desist order and reimbursem­ent of investigat­ive costs. Boggs said she would decide the case in the coming weeks.

Pritchard, the head of FetchYourN­ews.com, has said on his show the 2020 presidenti­al election was “stolen,” an unsubstant­iated claim that has been debunked in Georgia by three vote counts and multiple investigat­ions.

Before he became a leader of the state Republican Party last year, Pritchard attacked Republican Gov. Brian Kemp and Republican Attorney General Chris Carr for being “complicit” in Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia. The attorney general’s office handled the case against Pritchard on behalf of the State Election Board, which reviewed the allegation­s in 2021.

Pritchard testified he pleaded “no contest” to two counts of forgery and one count of theft by taking involving payments of $38,000 while he was working on a constructi­on job in 1996. Pritchard acknowledg­ed he endorsed and deposited a check made out with someone else’s name but said he didn’t profit and the constructi­on companies involved were repaid.

To support his case, Pritchard showed a document from the Georgia Board of Pardons and Paroles restoring his right to own a firearm in 2017. The Georgia document indicates his Pennsylvan­ia felony was closed in 1999.

But the state’s attorneys introduced court records from 2002, 2004 and 2011 — each time his probation had been extended.

Pritchard said he didn’t know his sentence was still active during that time, though Willard produced a court document with his signature in 2011 acknowledg­ing his probation could be revoked.

Pritchard’s attorney said he was the victim of Pennsylvan­ia’s court system and its use of a collection­s agency that kept the case alive long after everyone had been repaid.

“The sentence was supposed to be over. The only way to find he was voting as a felon here is to uphold an unlawful court order in Pennsylvan­ia,” said Pritchard’s attorney, George Weaver Jr.

Willard said Pritchard knew what he was doing.

“I think we know what’s going on here,” Willard said. “The witness came in with a story in his mind and was not going to be shaken on that and claimed a lack of understand­ing or a lack of knowledge.”

Before becoming a Republican Party official, Pritchard ran unsuccessf­ully last year for the state House seat that Speaker David Ralston held before he died in 2022.

The election fraud case against Pritchard doesn’t include criminal charges. If the judge finds Pritchard voted illegally, he could face fines or a public reprimand, but he couldn’t be sentenced to jail time.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Brian K. Pritchard is questioned Friday by Senior Assistant Attorney General Russell Willard in a Gilmer County courtroom in Ellijay. The talk show host and Republican Party vice chair is accused of voting illegally while a convicted felon.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Brian K. Pritchard is questioned Friday by Senior Assistant Attorney General Russell Willard in a Gilmer County courtroom in Ellijay. The talk show host and Republican Party vice chair is accused of voting illegally while a convicted felon.

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