August 21, 2023 - Trump plans to surrender Thursday in Georgia election case | CNN Politics

August 21, 2023 - Trump plans to surrender Thursday in Georgia election case

Former President Donald Trump speaks to supporters during a political rally while campaigning for the GOP nomination in the 2024 election at Erie Insurance Arena on July 29, 2023 in Erie, Pennsylvania.
Journalist points out what's 'remarkable' about Trump's bond agreement
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John Eastman to surrender Wednesday in Georgia

John Eastman outside the State Bar Court of California in Los Angeles, California, US, on Tuesday, June 20. 

Trump election attorney John Eastman plans to surrender to Fulton County authorities on Wednesday in response to his charges in Georgia related to the 2020 election, according to a new filing. 

Eastman has been facing discipline proceedings in the State Bar of California, in which he could lose his license to practice law in the state. Hearings were set for multiple days this week, but a judge of the State Bar Court of California said on Monday night that Eastman would not be before her on Tuesday and Wednesday because of his forthcoming surrender in Fulton County.

This is the first confirmation outside of Trump for a date on which one of his 18 co-defendants will turn themselves in for their arrest and processing this week, before a deadline of Friday at noon.

Eastman and others are expected to be arrested at Fulton County’s jail, then released on pre-negotiated bond terms. He and others are also expected to enter not guilty pleas soon after.

Eastman reached a $100,000 bond agreement with Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis earlier Monday.

Trump says he plans to turn himself in Thursday at the Fulton County jail

Former President Donald Trump plans to turn himself in and be processed at the Fulton County jail on Thursday, two sources familiar with the plan tell CNN. 

Trump confirmed the plans of his surrender on Truth Social Monday.

That date was set during negotiations with the district attorney’s office today over his consent bond and release conditions.

The first GOP debate is set for Wednesday night. Trump has said he doesn’t plan to attend.

Fulton County sheriff’s staff facing threats ahead of Trump’s surrender

As the Fulton County officials await the surrender of Donald Trump and his 18 co-defendants, employees with the sheriff’s office are being threatened, a source familiar with the matter tells CNN.

The source says threats have been made against Fulton County Sheriff’s office employees and their homes for the role they will play in the former president’s surrender.

The sheriff’s office is responsible for the administration and operation of the Fulton County Jail, where Trump is expected to surrender later this week.  

Last week, CNN reported that the FBI was looking into threats against Fulton County officials, including District Attorney Fani Willis.

Trump will put up a cash bond for the first time in the Fulton County criminal case

The Fulton County election subversion case marks the first time release conditions for Donald Trump have included a cash bond and a prohibition on intimidation through social media. 

The criminal case is the fourth brought against the former president this year.

In the previous cases, the conditions for Trump’s release after arrest and pending trial have been largely routine:

  • In Florida: In the Mar-a-Lago documents case brought against him by special counsel Jack Smith, Trump was released on personal recognizance, though there was some pushback from his attorneys on the restrictions that were imposed on his contact with witnesses in that case. 
  • In Washington, DC: Trump also was released on minimal conditions in Smith’s federal election subversion case brought in Washington, DC. Those conditions include not being allowed to communicate with anyone known to be a witness in the case unless through an attorney.
  • In New York: And in the New York hush money case, Trump was similarly ordered to not communicate about the case with anyone central to it except through one of his attorneys. 

Former Trump lawyer Ray Smith reaches $50,000 bond agreement in Fulton County election subversion case

Smith is seen inside of the Georgia State Capitol in Atlanta, Georgia during an election hearing on December 3, 2020.

Ray Smith, former lawyer for Donald Trump, reached a $50,000 bond agreement with Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis in the 2020 Georgia election subversion case, according to court documents. 

Smith faces 12 state crimes, including violating Georgia’s anti-racketeering law, soliciting a public officer to violate their oath and conspiring to commit forgery.  

Smith participated in a Georgia Senate hearing in December 2020 where he falsely alleged widespread fraud and voting irregularities and argued that the results “must be vacated and cannot be allowed to stand.”

In the indictment, prosecutors allege that Smith made false statements at that hearing about illegal voting by felons and dead people. 

Pro-Trump lawyer Chesebro reaches $100,000 bond agreement

A Fulton County Superior Court judge approved a $100,000 bond package for pro-Trump lawyer Ken Chesebro, who faces seven charges in the Georgia election subversion case.

The conditions of Chesebro’s bond resemble the agreements other co-defendants reached with prosecutors.

Trump has agreed to $200,000 bond in Fulton County criminal case

Former President Donald Trump pauses for cheers from the crowd before speaking as the keynote speaker at the 56th Annual Silver Elephant Dinner hosted by the South Carolina Republican Party on August 5, 2023, in Columbia, South Carolina.

Former President Donald Trump has agreed to a $200,000 bond and other release conditions after his lawyers met with the Fulton County district attorney’s office on Monday, according to court documents reviewed by CNN. 

The release conditions outlined in Trump’s bond order are more extensive than those laid out in the other bond orders approved earlier. 

Unlike some of his co-defendants, the former president is barred from using social media to target his 18 co-defendants in the case, as well as any witnesses or the 30 unindicted co-conspirators. 

The order also prohibits Trump from communicating “directly or indirectly” about the case with any of his co-defendants or witnesses in the case, except through his attorneys. A similar provision has been included in bond orders for some of his co-defendants.

The order is also signed by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and three Trump attorneys: Drew Findling, Marissa Goldberg and Jennifer Little.

Trump’s legal team arrives at Fulton County courthouse to negotiate terms of bond and release 

Donald Trump’s legal team leaves the Fulton County courthouse on Aug. 21 in Atlanta.

Donald Trump’s legal team has arrived at the Fulton County courthouse, where they are expected to meet with the district attorney’s office and negotiate the terms of the former president’s bond and release conditions, sources tell CNN. 

One of the sources indicated that Trump’s lawyers Todd Blanche, Jennifer Little and Drew Findling will be doing the negotiating and likely visiting the DA’s office in Georgia today. Little and Findling are both based in the state, while Blanche has taken the helm as Trump’s primary defense attorney across his multiple criminal indictments.

Trump is expected to turn himself in at the jail later this week.

How surrenders work in the county: In a typical case in Fulton County when police make an arrest, the arrestee is booked into jail and must appear before a magistrate judge within 72 hours.

That most likely won’t be the case for the defendants in this racketeering case. Because they have already been indicted and are expected to negotiate the terms of release and bond before surrendering at the jail, they most likely won’t have an initial court appearance, attorneys told CNN.

CNN’s Jason Morris, Katelyn Polantz and Holmes Lybrand contributed reporting to this post.

Chesebro attorney says he expects his client to surrender by deadline

Kenneth Cheesebro

Scott Grubman, an attorney for pro-Trump lawyer Ken Chesebro, told reporters Monday that he expects his client to surrender by the Friday deadline set by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis

Grubman was seen entering the Fulton County courthouse to meet with the district attorney’s office about Chesebro’s bond terms.

He added that he expects the district attorney to agree to bond terms that are “fair” and consider the low likelihood his client will be fair to turn himself in. 

An attorney for former Trump lawyer Ray Smith was also seen leaving the courthouse Monday afternoon. He told CNN that his client has agreed to bond terms but declined to elaborate. 

Scott Hall, accused of voter data breach, agrees to $10,000 bond in Fulton County criminal case 

Scott Hall testifies about the 2020 presidential election before a Georgia Senate subcommittee on Dec. 3, 2020.

Defendant Scott Hall, a bail bondsman, has reached a bond agreement with Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, according to court filings.  

Hall’s bond was set at $10,000. As part of the order, he must report to pre-trial supervision every 30 days and is able to do so by phone. He is also barred from communicating with the other 18 defendants in the case. 

Hall is one of former President Donald Trump’s co-defendants and was a pro-Trump poll-watcher in Atlanta who spent hours inside a restricted area of the Coffee County elections office when voting systems were breached in January 2021.  

Hall is facing a total of seven charges, including the racketeering count that’s central to Willis’ prosecution, as well as several charges stemming from the Coffee County allegations.  

Former Trump attorney John Eastman agrees to $100,000 bond and release conditions in Georgia criminal case

John Eastman, former lawyer to Donald Trump, speaks to members of the media after leaving the State Bar Court of California in Los Angeles, California, on Tuesday, June 20, 2023.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has reached a bond agreement with one of former President Donald Trump’s 18 co-defendants: conservative attorney John Eastman, according to a new court filing on Monday. 

Eastman’s $100,000 bond order is the first to appear on the Fulton County court website.  

Eastman, Trump’s former attorney, faces multiple criminal charges for his alleged role in helping the former president try to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia. 

Eastman devised and promoted a six-step plan for then-Vice President Mike Pence to overturn Joe Biden’s victory while presiding over the Electoral College certification on January 6, 2021. He also urged Georgia state lawmakers to appoint fake GOP electors to replace the legitimate slate of Democratic electors.

A bipartisan array of legal scholars have said Eastman’s schemes were unconstitutional. 

Eastman also was referenced, though not explicitly by name, as an unindicted co-conspirator in special counsel Jack Smith’s federal 2020 election subversion case against Trump. 

Read the agreement here.

These are the post-election incidents that led to Georgia charges against Trump and his allies 

Georgia prosecutors allege that former President Donald Trump and his allies broke state laws during about a dozen separate incidents after the 2020 election, according to the indictment made public last Monday.

There are 41 overall charges in the case, which was brought by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. The first charge involves Georgia’s anti-racketeering law known as the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, or RICO. But the next 40 non-racketeering charges stem from roughly a dozen key incidents after the 2020 election. 

The events, and the crimes the Trump group allegedly committed, break down this way:

  • Counts 2-4: Presentation of fraud claims to Georgia Senate: Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and others are accused of making false statements about election fraud and pressuring members of the Georgia Senate while presenting to a legislative panel in early December 2020.
  • Count 5: Call to Georgia House Speaker: Trump is charged with asking then-Georgia House Speaker David Ralston to call a special session of the Georgia General Assembly.
  • Count 6-7: Presentation of fraud claims to Georgia House: Two charges accuse Giuliani and another man of breaking the law as they presented a video of vote counting at State Farm Arena, misconstruing it, to the Georgia House of Representatives. 
  • Count 8-19: Fake electors scheme: This series of charges capture the fake elector scheme. A trio of Georgia residents were charged with crimes including forgery. Trump, Giuliani, Trump lawyer John Eastman and others around Trump’s campaign were charged with conspiracies related to the fake electors. 
  • Count 20-21: First attempt to intimidate Atlanta election worker: Illinois pastor Stephen Lee is charged with two charges of attempting to influence witness Ruby Freeman, a 2020 election worker in Fulton County. Prosecutors say Lee went to Freeman’s home, knocked on her door and spoke to a neighbor. He was “purporting to offer her help” with the intent to influence her testimony about the vote counting in Atlanta, the indictment said. 
  • Count 22: Trying to get DOJ to intervene in Georgia: Jeffrey Clark is charged with an attempt to make false statements when he tried to persuade the Justice Department to make false assertions in Georgia about the validity of the election’s results. 
  • Count 23-26: Communication with Georgia Senate about voter fraud: These four charges capture efforts by Giuliani and others to influence and make false statements to the Georgia Senate on December 30, 2020, when he falsely told them thousands of dead people and felons voted in the election and smeared the vote counting at the State Farm Arena. 
  • Count 27: Filing election lawsuit: This charge accuses Donald Trump and John Eastman of filing false information about votes in a federal court case that sought to block Georgia’s election result.
  • Count 28-29: Phone call to Georgia secretary of state: Donald Trump and his White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows are charged around the call they made to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger on January 2, 2021, where Trump pleaded with Raffensperger to “find” enough votes to flip the results. 
  • Count 30-31: Second attempt to influence Atlanta election worker: Three people are charged with conspiracy to solicit false statements from Ruby Freeman and trying to influence her on January 4, 2021.
  • Count 32-37: Coffee County voting machine breach: Trump campaign lawyer Sidney Powell and others are accused of conspiracies of computer theft, computer trespassing, invasion of privacy and election fraud related to the breach of voting machines in rural Coffee County, Georgia.
  • Count 38-39: Letter sent to Georgia Secretary of State: Donald Trump is charged with solicitation and false statements related to a letter he sent to Raffensperger in September 2021. 
  • Count 40-41: Alleged lies to investigators and grand jury perjury: These are two charges that relate to the course of the investigation. Georgia GOP chairman David Shafer is accused of lying to the Fulton County District Attorney’s Office investigators. Robert Cheeley is also accused of perjuring himself before the Fulton County Special Purpose Grand Jury.

Trump and several co-defendants expected to negotiate bond terms with Fulton County DA’s office today

Former President Donald Trump and several co-defendants in the sweeping Georgia racketeering case are expected to work out the terms of their bond today with the Fulton County district attorney’s office, according to multiple sources familiar with the matter.   

Trump’s legal team has been in contact with Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ office, and conversations are expected to continue this week about the logistics of his surrender at the jail and arraignment in court, sources tell CNN.  

One of the sources indicated that Trump’s lawyers Todd Blanche, Jennifer Little and Drew Findling will be doing the negotiating and likely visiting the DA’s office in Georgia today. Little and Findling are both based in the state, while Blanche has taken the helm as Trump’s primary defense attorney across his multiple criminal indictments.    

In a typical case in Fulton County when law enforcement makes an arrest, the arrestee is booked into jail and must appear before a magistrate judge within 72 hours. That most likely won’t be the case for the defendants in this racketeering case.

Because they have already been indicted and are expected to negotiate the terms of release and bond before surrendering at the jail, they most likely won’t have an initial court appearance, attorneys told CNN. 

Fulton County jail has a reputation for troubled conditions for inmates

If former President Donald Trump were facing the booking process that newly charged criminal defendants in Fulton County typically experience, he might find himself lingering for hours at the Rice Street jail waiting for his fingerprints and mug shot to be taken.

Even by the standards of local jails, the Fulton County jail on Rice Street has a reputation for troubled conditions for inmates. Last month, the US Justice Department launched a civil rights investigation into living conditions, access to health care, violence against detainees and possible discrimination against those with psychiatric disabilities.

But the treatment that defendants receive when being booked and processed on criminal charges in Fulton County varies drastically, case by case. The system gives discretion to prosecutors, the magistrate judges who often preside over the first court appearances and the superior court judges who have been assigned the underlying case.

Trump is expected to turn himself in Thursday or Friday, according to a senior law enforcement official.

While officials have vowed to treat Trump and his associates as they would any defendant, that is likely impossible due the security precautions required for a former president and the high-profile nature of some of his co-defendants.

Trump’s team has already been in contact with Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ office and conversations are expected to continue early this week about the conditions of his appearance and the logistics of his surrender. Other defendants have also engaged with the district attorney, sources told CNN.

Willis gave Trump and his co-defendants in the case, which alleges they engaged in racketeering scheme and other crimes in their efforts to overturn Georgia’s 2020 election results, until August 25 to turn themselves in voluntarily. That nearly two-week window for self-surrender has given the defendants time for planning and for potential outreach to prosecutors to discuss how the process will work.

Custody at Fulton County jail: The Justice Department last month launched a civil rights investigation into the jail which has been the site of multiple deaths on the premises.

US Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke pointed to the death last year of LaShawn Thompson, whose family has blamed unsanitary conditions, including a bed bug and lice infestation, as contributing to his death.

Three jail officials stepped down earlier this year, after a preliminary investigation into Thompson’s death.

Fulton County Sheriff Patrick Labat has sought more than in $2 billion in county funding to build a new jail and has acknowledged the difficulties in meeting safety and health standards in the current facility, which, from the day that it opened, was not large enough to accommodate the population that comes through it.

The sheriff said he was not surprised by the announcement. In fact, he says he welcomes it.

First GOP primary debate looms as 2024 race plays out across two stages

The 2024 Republican presidential primary is set to enter a new phase this week, but it’s one that will play out across two stages – in Milwaukee, where at least seven contenders will meet Wednesday night for the first GOP debate of the cycle, and in the drama surrounding the legal woes of the front-runner, former President Donald Trump.

Trump announced Sunday he’s skipping the first debate, effectively depriving his intraparty rivals of oxygen in a week when his surrender and arraignment in Fulton County, Georgia, will also dominate headlines.

Writing on his social media platform, the former president said that the public already “knows who I am” and that “I will therefore not be doing the debates!”

Hours before Trump posted, Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel told Fox News that she was “still holding out hope” that he would participate in the debate.

“I think it’s so important that the American people hear from all the candidates,” she said.

A Trump adviser said the former president could still decide to participate in a later primary debate, despite his post.

Trump’s absence will deny the other GOP hopefuls the kinds of standout, viral moments that could come from clashes with the party’s front-runner.

But Wednesday night’s debate will still be the largest audience most of the party’s presidential field has ever had as they seek to replace the former president as the GOP standard-bearer – and it could become a crucial moment as Republican primary voters sort out which candidates are viable Trump alternatives and which are not.

To qualify for the debate, candidates must have at least 40,000 unique donors, with at least 200 unique donors from 20 or more states or territories, and must reach at least 1% in three national polls meeting the RNC’s requirements or at least 1% in two national polls and two polls from separate early voting states.

Trump also met the polling and fundraising thresholds, but is planning instead to sit for an interview with former Fox News host Tucker Carlson.

The timing for the Carlson interview has yet to be determined, multiple sources familiar with his plans tell CNN, but it is expected to air around the same time as the debate.

The debate and the Carlson interview are expected to take place ahead of Trump’s surrender to authorities in Fulton County. The former president was charged in connection with a plot to subvert the 2020 election results in Georgia – his fourth indictment this year.

Negotiations between Trump’s lawyers and District Attorney Fani Willis’ office are expected to continue this week, and the exact timing of a surrender remains unclear.

Security remains heightened at Fulton County court complex

The law enforcement presence remains at an elevated level at the Fulton County court complex following the indictment of former President Donald Trump and his allies over efforts to overturn the 2020 election.

Dozens of law enforcement vehicles are parked, lining the two block radius around the court well as the government center where the 19 defendants are expected to negotiate the terms of release and bond with the district attorney’s office on Monday. 

Law enforcement officers from the Fulton County sheriff’s office have been taking the lead in security outside the buildings, but members from other agencies and departments — like the US Marshals Service, who are responsible for courthouse security, as well as Atlanta police — also have been seen patrolling the area and staged outside of public entrances.

According to a news release from the sheriff’s office on Monday, the barricades around the Fulton County courthouse will remain in place until Saturday.

The deadline for the defendants to turn themselves is Friday at 12 p.m. ET.

Here's how surrenders work at the Fulton County jail – and why Trump’s will be different

A sign is posted outside of the Fulton County Jail on August 16, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia.

In typical cases in Fulton County, Georgia, police make an arrest, the person arrested is booked into jail and that person must appear before a magistrate judge within 72 hours. But the process for defendants who are indicted and face grand jury arrest warrants – as is the case with Donald Trump and his 18 co-defendants – works differently.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis gave the 19 defendants until noon ET on August 25 to surrender voluntarily. While the grand jury issued arrest warrants, those warrants do not become active until the district attorney enters them into the Georgia Crime Information Center, which is the statewide crime database. This is what we expect to happen if someone fails to voluntarily surrender by the deadline.

In the meantime, the attorneys for defendants in the Trump case are expected to negotiate with the district attorney’s office to work out the terms of release and bond for their clients – this is known as a consent bond.

The judge that considers the bond agreement has to consider four factors when deciding whether to approve the bond agreements, attorneys told CNN. The judge has to determine the defendant is not a flight risk, is not likely to commit other felonies pending trial, does not present a danger to the community and is not likely to intimidate witnesses or take other steps to interfere with the case. 

Surrender and booking: According to the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office, all defendants in this case are expected to be booked at the Rice Street Jail. Once a defendant enters the jail and is taken into custody, they are technically “under arrest.” They are not expected to be handcuffed.  

Once defendants are taken into custody, they are expected to be fingerprinted and have their mugshot taken, according to Fulton County Sheriff Patrick Labat.

Normally, those taken into custody are thoroughly searched by a jail deputy. In the past, though, some high-profiled defendants who have voluntarily surrendered were not subjected to that thorough body search. We don’t know if anyone related to the Trump case would be subjected to this search.

Defendants typically undergo a medical screening and receive a pre-trial consultation to determine whether they can sign out on their own recognizance. It’s unclear if that will happen with Trump and his co-defendants.

For a typical defendant, the booking process can take hours, much of which is spent waiting around for their turn to be booked.

But attorneys told CNN the process could move more swiftly for VIP defendants in the Trump case. They could theoretically be processed within 15 minutes if officials at the jail want to swiftly move them in and get them out.

If the defendants have a bond agreement in place, they will be processed and then released. If defendants do not have a bond agreement in place, they will be kept in custody.

The jail is open 24/7 and defendants can turn themselves in at any time. Some may try to coordinate with the sheriff’s office before they arrive in order to expedite the process.

In Trump’s case, we expect Secret Service to coordinate with the sheriff’s office ahead of time. 

Once bonded out, a typical defendant would exit through the front door. It’s not clear if that will be the case here. High-profile defendants in the past have been allowed to exit through an alternate intake entrance – one that is less accessible to the public and media once driven beyond the gate.   

Read more about surrenders at the Fulton County jail here.

What to know about RICO, the law at the center of Trump's Georgia criminal case

Former President Donald Trump and his 18 co-defendants have been accused of breaking a variety of criminal laws in the Georgia 2020 election subversion case, but one crime ties all their alleged misconduct together: the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act.

The state law — which is commonly referred to as RICO — is similar to the federal version of the statute that targets so-called criminal enterprises. Georgia’s law allows prosecutors to pull an array of conduct into their indictments, including activities that took place outside of the state of Georgia but may have been part of a broad conspiracy.

Those convicted of racketeering charges also face steeper penalties, a point of leverage for prosecutors if they are hoping to flip potential co-conspirators or encourage defendants to take plea deals.

“Federal RICO is a very big deal. It’s difficult to prove, and it’s used pretty sparingly. Georgia RICO is a different animal. It’s easier to prove,” said Kenneth White, a defense attorney familiar with the federal law. “The point is, it’s used very aggressively there.”

For Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, the law has been her calling card. The Atlanta-area prosecutor has used it in a number of high-profile cases she’s previously brought in Georgia against school officials, gangs and musicians, including the rapper Young Thug.

The historic 41-count indictment unsealed last Monday accuses Trump and the other defendants of being part of a broad conspiracy to attempt to overturn the 2020 election result in the Peach State.

Prosecutors say the criminal actions the charge is built around include: making false statements, filing false documents and forgeries, impersonating officials, computer breaches and attempts to influence witnesses.

Several of the acts alleged to have made up the racketeering conspiracy involved states other than Georgia.

These are the 19 people charged in the Georgia 2020 election interference case

An Atlanta-based grand jury indicted former President Donald Trump and 18 co-defendants on state charges last week stemming from their efforts to overturn the former president’s 2020 electoral defeat in the Peach State.

They defendants have until noon ET Friday to voluntarily surrender to authorities, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said last week.

Here are the 19 people charged in the Georgia case, according to the indictment:

  • Donald Trump, former US president
  • Rudy Giuliani, Trump lawyer
  • Mark Meadows, White House chief of staff
  • John Eastman, Trump lawyer
  • Kenneth Chesebro, pro-Trump lawyer
  • Jeffrey Clark, top Justice Department official
  • Jenna Ellis, Trump campaign lawyer
  • Robert Cheeley, lawyer who promoted fraud claims
  • Mike Roman, Trump campaign official
  • David Shafer, Georgia GOP chair and fake elector
  • Shawn Still, fake GOP elector
  • Stephen Lee, pastor tied to intimidation of election workers
  • Harrison Floyd, leader of Black Voices for Trump
  • Trevian Kutti, publicist tied to intimidation of election workers
  • Sidney Powell, Trump campaign lawyer
  • Cathy Latham, fake GOP elector tied to Coffee County breach
  • Scott Hall, tied to Coffee County election system breach
  • Misty Hampton, Coffee County elections supervisor
  • Ray Smith, Trump campaign attorney

Read more here.

READ MORE

Trump expected to surrender to Fulton County jail on Thursday or Friday next week
Mark Meadows asks federal court for Georgia charges to be dismissed
How surrenders work at the troubled Fulton County jail – and why Trump’s will be different
What to know about Trump’s criminal indictment in the Georgia election subversion case
Fulton County district attorney wants Trump trial to begin March 4, 2024 – one day before Super Tuesday primaries
The strengths and weaknesses of the Georgia election meddling case against Trump and his allies
What is RICO, the law at the heart of Trump’s Georgia criminal case?

READ MORE

Trump expected to surrender to Fulton County jail on Thursday or Friday next week
Mark Meadows asks federal court for Georgia charges to be dismissed
How surrenders work at the troubled Fulton County jail – and why Trump’s will be different
What to know about Trump’s criminal indictment in the Georgia election subversion case
Fulton County district attorney wants Trump trial to begin March 4, 2024 – one day before Super Tuesday primaries
The strengths and weaknesses of the Georgia election meddling case against Trump and his allies
What is RICO, the law at the heart of Trump’s Georgia criminal case?