The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Judge says GOP vice chair voted illegally

Conservati­ve talk show host voted nine times while serving probation for felony forgery charges.

- By Mark Niesse Mark.Niesse@ajc.com

A judge ruled Wednesday that the Georgia Republican Party’s first vice chairman, Brian K. Pritchard, violated state election laws when he voted nine times while serving probation for a felony check forgery sentence.

Pritchard, a conservati­ve talk show host, must pay a $5,000 fine and receive a public reprimand from the State Election Board, according to the decision by Administra­tive Law Judge Lisa Boggs.

Pritchard has previously alleged the 2020 presidenti­al election was fraudulent on his show, but now he has been found to have voted illegally. Recounts, court cases and investigat­ions over the past 3 1/2 years have consistent­ly debunked fraud claims and upheld the 2020 election results.

Pritchard has said he didn’t do anything wrong and thought he had completed his probation before voting in Georgia. But that didn’t convince the judge in the case.

“The court does not find the respondent’s explanatio­ns credible or convincing,” Boggs wrote in her 25-page decision. “At the very least, even if the court accepts he did not know about his felony sentences, the record before this court demonstrat­es that he should have known.”

Pritchard declined to comment Wednesday on the judge’s ruling.

Republican U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene called for Pritchard to “resign immediatel­y or be removed” from his position in the Georgia Republican Party.

“Our state party should be the leading voice on securing our elections . ... It is unacceptab­le for our party to have a man in leadership who has repeatedly committed voter fraud himself,” Greene said Thursday.

Pritchard testified in February that he believed his felony sentence ended in 1999, but attorneys for the state showed evidence that his probation had been repeatedly revoked and extended until 2011. Georgia law prohibits felons from voting until they’ve completed their sentences.

Pritchard registered to vote in Georgia in 2008 and cast ballots in nine elections before his probation was over, according to election records presented in court.

“I felt it ended,” Pritchard said after the court hearing. “Do you think the first time I voted I said, ‘Oh, I got away with it. Let’s do it eight more times?’”

Pritchard pleaded guilty in 1996 to forgery and theft charges involving $38,000 worth of checks that he deposited while working on a constructi­on job, according to court records from Alleghany County, Pennsylvan­ia.

Pritchard acknowledg­ed that 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.

His probation initially lasted three years, but Pennsylvan­ia judges repeatedly extended it until 2011 on allegation­s Pritchard failed to pay restitutio­n, court records showed. Pritchard maintained that he didn’t owe money and he thought that case was resolved.

Attorneys for the state said in court that Pritchard knew he was still serving his sentence because records show he appeared in Pennsylvan­ia court for probation revocation hearings in 1999, 2002 and 2004. Pritchard denied that he was present in court in 2002 or 2004.

“When he came to Georgia, he was aware that he was registerin­g to vote illegally. He knew when he went in all nine times and signed that voter certificat­e, he was voting illegally,” Senior Assistant Attorney General Russell Willard said during closing arguments in February.

The judge fined Pritchard $500 for each of the nine times he voted illegally, plus another $500 for his illegal voter registrati­on. Pritchard can appeal the decision.

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.

 ?? ?? Brian K. Pritchard, found guilty of voting illegally in nine elections.
Brian K. Pritchard, found guilty of voting illegally in nine elections.

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