The Oklahoman

RICO expert hired by prosecutor investigat­ing Trump call

- By Kate Brumback

ATLANTA — An expert on Georgia' s racketeeri­ng law was sworn in Wednesday to help the prosecutor who's investigat­ing potential efforts by former President Donald Trump and others to influence last year's general election.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has engaged John Floyd to serve as a special assistant district attorney to work with lawyers in her office on any cases involving allegation­s of racketeeri­ng, her spokesman Jeff DiSantis said.

A Fulton County Superior Court judge swore him in Wednesday morning.

In letters sent to state officials last month asking them to preserve evidence for her investigat­ion into potential attempts to influence last year's elect i on, Willis mentioned racketeeri­ng as one of the possible violations of Georgia law that she was examining.

Floyd previously helped Willis when she used the Georgia Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizati­ons, or RICO, l aw to prosecute nearly three dozen Atlanta public school educators accused in a cheating scandal. In April 2015, after a trial that spanned months, a jury convicted 11 former educators of racketeeri­ng for their role in a scheme to inflate students' scores on standardiz­ed exams. Willis was a lead prosecutor in the case while working for her predecesso­r, former Fulton County District Attorney Paul Howard.

Floyd will remain employed by Atlanta law firm Bondurant Mixson &El more and will be available to help Willis as needed.

He was not being retained for any partic ul ar case and could be consulted on possible racketeeri­ng violations in a variety of areas, including prosecutio­ns of white collar crime, gangs and public corruption, DiSantis said.

Willi s' s office has confirmed that the investigat­ion into potential efforts to influence the election includes a Jan. 2 phone call in which Trump urged Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensper­ger to “find” enough votes to overturn Joe Biden's win in the state. Willis has also said she has questions about a call U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham made to Raffensper­ger, the sudden departure of a top federal prosecutor and statements made before Georgia legislativ­e committees.

She wrote in the letters to state officials Feb. 10 that her office had opened a criminal investigat­ion into “potential violations of Georgia law prohibitin­g the solicitati­on of election fraud, the making of false statements to state and local government bodies, conspiracy, racketeeri­ng, violation of oath of office and any involvemen­t in violence or threats related to the election's administra­tion.”

She wrote that her team has “no reason to believe that any Georgia official is a target of this investigat­ion.”

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