The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Election case against state senator resumes

DA says Republican was part of scheme to reverse outcome.

- By David Wickert david.wickert@ajc.com Staff writer Patricia Murphy contribute­d to this article.

After a nearly three-month break, an election interferen­ce case is back on track against the lone sitting elected official charged by Georgia prosecutor­s.

State Sen. Shawn Still’s case was placed on hold during the General Assembly’s 2024 session. With the session over, the Norcross Republican filed a slew of court documents last week, including a motion challengin­g the charges against him on various grounds.

In a recent interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, Still declined to discuss the details of the charges. But it will be hard to avoid the topic as he seeks reelection against an opponent who has made an issue of Still’s alleged criminal conduct.

Still is one of 19 people charged last summer in the election interferen­ce case brought by Fulton County prosecutor­s.

The indictment says they participat­ed in an alleged scheme to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s narrow victory in Georgia in the 2020 election. His fellow defendants include former President Donald Trump, former Georgia GOP Chairman David Shafer and a number of attorneys, campaign operatives and others who aided Trump.

Still is charged with racketeeri­ng, impersonat­ing a public officer, forgery and other crimes. Before he was elected to the Senate in 2022, he served as one of 16 Republican presidenti­al electors who cast their votes for Trump, though Biden had won the state.

The electors maintained their vote was needed to protect Trump’s ability to return to office if he succeeded in overturnin­g Biden’s victory in court. (He did not.) Prosecutor­s say the electors participat­ed in an illegal scheme to pressure state legislator­s and Vice President Mike Pence to overturn a legitimate election.

Prosecutor­s charged only three of the electors: Still, Shafer and former Coffee County GOP Chair Cathleen Latham. Still has maintained his innocence and has filed numerous motions to have the charges against him dismissed.

Prosecutor­s also had been investigat­ing another Republican elector, Lt. Gov. Burt Jones. But District Attorney Fani Willis was disqualifi­ed from the probe and the head of the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Council of Georgia now will decide whether Jones will face charges.

Unlike Still, Jones was in elected office when he served as a Trump elector. Charging sitting officials can be complicate­d by legislativ­e immunity and other legal issues.

In January, Still bought himself some time by asking Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee to put his case on hold during the legislativ­e session. McAfee granted the request, citing a state law that entitles legislator­s to a stay in legal proceeding­s while the Legislatur­e is in session.

A lot has happened since then — including an unsuccessf­ul effort by defendants to disqualify Willis from prosecutin­g the case. That matter is under appeal.

The legislativ­e session ended March 28. The next day, prosecutor­s filed numerous responses to Still’s motions to dismiss the charges.

Last Thursday, Still responded with his own flurry of court filings. They included responses to the state, plus a motion adopting arguments made by other defendants. Still also asked the court to take “judicial notice” of facts about his service as an elector that portray his actions in a favorable light.

It’s unclear when the charges against him and the other defendants will be resolved. McAfee has not scheduled a trial date, but it’s unlikely to come before Still stands for reelection in November.

His Democratic opponent is Ashwin Ramaswami, a law student from Johns Creek who worked in election security during the 2020 election.

“Democracy is on the ballot here in Georgia this November,” Ramaswami wrote Friday on X, formerly Twitter. “An indicted Trump fake elector or me — a former election security profession­al. Choices don’t get much more stark.”

Still, who owns a pool contractin­g business, told the AJC last week that he never considered not seeking reelection.

“I think that, for my kids, for my company, for my friends and family that have supported me, the only way to truly prove my innocence in all of it was to run for reelection, get reelected and prove that all the charges were false,” he said.

 ?? ?? State Sen. Shawn Still’s case was on hold during the legislativ­e session.
State Sen. Shawn Still’s case was on hold during the legislativ­e session.

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