The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Georgia AG declined to pursue charges in aftermath of ’20 race

Carr ‘chose not to go down that route’ with Trump, others.

- BywMarkwNi­esse mark.niesse@ajc.com AJC producer Natalie Mendenhall contribute­d to this article

Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr said Tuesday that he looked into allegation­s of wrongdoing surroundin­g the 2020 election but decided against seeking charges.

The decision by Carr, a Republican and the state’s top law enforcemen­t official, left the election interferen­ce charges against Donald Trump and 18 co-defendants up to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, a Democrat who is prosecutin­g the case.

“We analyzed it from our perspectiv­e and chose not to go down that route,” Carr, a potential candidate for governor, said on The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on’s “Politicall­y Georgia” radio show. “We felt that based on the facts and the evidence, what the right thing or the wrong thing to do would be, is to not file charges in that particular situation.”

Willis told the AJC in spring 2022 that she believed she had no choice but to open a criminal investigat­ion in early 2021 after she believed that other prosecutor­s, such as Carr and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Atlanta, had conflicts because they could be potential witnesses.

Trump called Carr on Dec. 8, 2020, to “pressure him to support an election lawsuit” that was pending in the U.S. Supreme Court, according to the Justice Department’s indictment against Trump. The Supreme Court rejected the lawsuit, filed by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, which sought to throw out election results in Georgia and other states where Democrat Joe Biden won.

Former U.S. Attorney Byung “BJay” Pak told the Senate Judiciary Committee that Trump pressured him to investigat­e false claims of election fraud, leading to his resignatio­n on Jan. 4, 2021.

Besides the Trump investigat­ion, Carr said there’s still an ongoing investigat­ion of a breach in Coffee County, where tech experts and Trump supporters copied Georgia’s election software.

The GBI completed its Coffee County investigat­ion in August, but the Attorney General’s Office hasn’t pursued prosecutio­ns. Four people involved in the Coffee County case were charged in Fulton County, and two have pleaded guilty: attorney Sidney Powell and bail bondsman Scott Hall.

“I’m not going to get into the specifics of it, but let me just say this: Anytime a prosecutor is given a case from investigat­ors, that doesn’t necessaril­y mean the case is over and it doesn’t need further investigat­ion or further analysis,” Carr said.

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