August 22, 2023 Trump indictment news in Georgia election interference case | CNN Politics

August 22, 2023 The latest on the Georgia 2020 election subversion case

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Maggie Haberman: This move in Trump's Georgia case is 'unprecedented'
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Giuliani is set to meet with the Fulton County district attorney's office Wednesday

Rudy Giuliani makes an appearance in support of fellow Republican Curtis Sliwa who is running for NYC mayor on June 21, 2021 in New York City.

Former Donald Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani is set to meet with the Fulton County district attorney’s office on Wednesday to discuss a bond agreement, according to multiple sources. 

Giuliani is expected to travel to Georgia with former New York police commissioner Bernie Kerik who has been working with the former New York City mayor to help him find a Georgia lawyer to represent him in this case, according to one of the sources. 

Giuliani is expected to have a lawyer with a Georgia license to represent him during the bond negotiations, according to a second source. It is unclear if that attorney will be representing him throughout the case.

12 defendants in Fulton County election case have reached bond agreements. Here's where things stand

Twelve defendants in the Fulton County criminal case over efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election in Georgia have reached bond agreements with prosecutors that have been signed by a judge.

Two of those defendants — John Eastman and Scott Hall — surrendered to be booked at the Fulton County jail on Tuesday and have been released. 

Former President Donald Trump plans to surrender to Fulton County authorities on Thursday. 

A total of 19 defendants have been charged in the case. They face a deadline on Friday to turn themselves in.

Here’s where things stand with the bond agreements:

Donald Trump

  • Bond: $200,000 bond
  • Booked: No

John Eastman: Trump lawyer

  • Bond: $100,000 bond
  • Booked: Yes

Jenna Ellis: Trump campaign lawyer

  • Bond: $100,000
  • Booked: No

Kenneth Chesebro: Pro-Trump lawyer

  • Bond: $100,000
  • Booked: No

David Shafer: Georgia GOP chair and fake elector

  • Bond: $75,000
  • Booked: No

 Cathy Latham: Fake GOP elector tied to Coffee County breach

  • Bond: $75,000
  • Booked: No

Mike Roman: Trump campaign official

  • Bond: $50,000
  • Booked: No

Ray Smith: Trump campaign attorney

  • Bond: $50,000
  • Booked: No

Scott Hall: Bail bondsman tied to Coffee County breach

  • Bond: $10,000
  • Booked: Yes

Shawn Still: Fake GOP elector

  • Bond: $10,000
  • Booked: No

Stephen Lee: Pastor tied to intimidation of election workers

  • Bond: $75,000
  • Booked: No

Robert Cheeley: Lawyer who promoted fraud claims

  • Bond: $50,000 bond
  • Booked: No

Bond deals for these defendants have yet to be announced:

  • Mark Meadows: White House chief of staff
  • Rudy Giuliani: Trump lawyer
  • Jeffrey Clark: Top Justice Department official
  • Harrison Floyd: Leader of Black Voices for Trump
  • Trevian Kutti: Publicist tied to intimidation of election workers
  • Sidney Powell: Trump campaign lawyer
  • Misty Hampton: Coffee County elections supervisor

Georgia-based trial attorney Robert Cheeley reaches $50,000 bond agreement with prosecutors

Georgia-based trial attorney Robert Cheeley will be released on a $50,000 bond once he surrenders at the Fulton County jail, according to an agreement struck with prosecutors in the 2020 election subversion case. 

Attorneys representing Cheeley were seen leaving the offices where Fulton County District Attorney prosecutors have been negotiating bond agreements with the 19 defendants – including Cheeley and former President Donald Trump – who have been charged by District Attorney Fani Willis. After a 40-minute meeting, the bond agreement was filed in court.

Cheeley participated in public hearings before Georgia state lawmakers where he and other Trump allies pushed baseless fraud claims. At a Georgia Senate hearing in December 2020, Cheeley showed video that he falsely claimed contained “evidence” of vote-rigging in Atlanta that “should shock the conscience” of Georgians.

Cheeley’s attorney, Chris Anulewicz, declined to comment on his meeting with prosecutors. His client faces 10 counts in the indictment against Trump and the 18 co-defendants.

Illinois-based pastor accused of intimidating Georgia election worker reaches $75,000 bond agreement

Stephen Lee

Stephen Lee, the Illinois-based pastor accused of intimidating a Georgia election worker after the 2020 election, has reached a bond agreement with prosecutors in the Fulton County election subversion case.   

Lee has agreed to a $75,000 bond as part of his deal with prosecutors.

Like other defendants in the case, who have negotiated bond orders this week, Lee has agreed not to discuss the case with any of his 18 co-defendants or the witnesses in the case except through his attorneys.   

The bond order also says Lee is prohibited from intimidating any of his co-defendants or witnesses or “otherwise obstruct the administration of justice.”    

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis charged Lee with five state crimes, including violating Georgia’s anti-racketeering law, influencing a witness, and conspiring to solicit false statements.   

Prosecutors say Lee participated in a plot to pressure an Atlanta worker into falsely admitting that she committed massive fraud against former President Donald Trump in the 2020 election.   

The election worker, Ruby Freeman, called 911 after Lee knocked on her front door in December 2020.

When a police officer confronted Lee in his car, Lee said he was trying to “get some truth on what’s going on,” according to police body camera footage obtained by CNN.  

Fulton County DA subpoenas 2 lawyers as prosecutors prepare to counter Meadows’ effort to toss election case

The Fulton County District Attorney’s Office issued subpoenas Tuesday to two people who were listening in on former President Donald Trump’s January 2021 call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

It comes as prosecutors plan to counter an effort to get the case thrown out.  

According to court filings, the subpoenas issued to two lawyers — Kurt Hilbert and Alex Kaufman — requested that they appear to testify at a federal court hearing next Monday. The hearing is about a request from former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows to move the Fulton County election subversion case against him to federal court.

The subpoenas do not spell out why they are being called to testify. However, the Raffensperger call is key to the case that District Attorney Fani Willis has brought against Meadows. 

The Georgia grand jury indictment alleges that Meadows, along with Trump, unlawfully solicited the violation of oath by a public officer with the call. The call also was listed as an overt act in the racketeering conspiracy charge that has been brought against Meadows, Trump and the other 17 defendants in the case.

Hilbert spoke on the call about data he claimed showed that thousands of voters in Georgia were cast illegally while asking for the secretary of state’s office to provide its internal data that could speak to the claims. Kaufman appeared to be referred to as “Alex” by Trump on the call, and confirmed to the Atlanta Jewish Times that he was listening — but didn’t speak — in his capacity of general counsel for the Fulton County Republican Party.

US District Judge Steve Jones, who is presiding over Meadows’ request to move the prosecution against him to federal court, has said Monday’s hearing on the request will be an evidentiary one. 

One question Jones will likely be considering at the proceeding is whether Meadows was acting as a federal government agent in his participation on the call. Meadows claims that the charges against him should be moved to federal court and then dismissed under a law that gives certain immunities from state prosecution to individuals acting on behalf of the US government.

Exclusive: Rudy Giuliani still hasn’t found a Georgia-based lawyer needed to negotiate his surrender

Rudy Giuliani, former lawyer to Donald Trump, exits federal court in Washington, DC, on Friday, May 19, 2023. 

Rudy Giuliani still hasn’t found a Georgia-based lawyer and is getting help from former New York Police Commissioner Bernie Kerik, an unindicted co-conspirator in the Fulton County election subversion case, to help him find legal representation, sources familiar with the matter tell CNN. 

Kerik, who is not a lawyer, has agreed to assist Giuliani at no cost through the first phase of the Georgia prosecution — including bond negotiations with the Fulton County district attorney’s office and then surrendering to local authorities, the sources said. 

CNN previously reported that Giuliani is facing hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal bills and sanctions from numerous lawsuits related to his work for Donald Trump after the 2020 election. In recent months, Giuliani traveled to Mar-a-Lago and appealed to Trump himself for assistance with his legal bills.

Kerik worked closely with Giuliani after the 2020 election to chase down supposed election fraud. Now, the former Commissioner of the New York City Department of Correction is working his law enforcement contacts to help Giuliani once again. 

Giuliani would need a Georgia-based lawyer to sign off on a bond agreement that would set the terms for his release once he surrenders at the Fulton County jail. The 19 defendants in the case, including Giuliani and Trump, face a Friday deadline to turn themselves in after being indicted last week.  

Though he is not charged in the sprawling indictment out of Fulton County, his attorney confirmed to CNN that Kerik is the unnamed individual listed in the indictment as co-conspirator 5.

According to the indictment, co-conspirator 5 took part in several meetings with lawmakers in Pennsylvania and Arizona — states Trump was contesting the 2020 election results — including at least one meeting at the White House.

Here are 3 ways Trump and co-defendants can post bond in Fulton County

A view of the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta, Georgia, on Aug. 15.

Donald Trump is expected to surrender at the Fulton County Jail on Thursday in the Georgia 2020 election subversion case – and when he does the former president will have three different options to pay the $200,000 bond that will keep him from being detained in the facility as his case unfolds. 

District Attorney Fani Willis has given the defendants until noon Friday to surrender at the jail and a number of them have negotiated so-called bond orders with her office to ensure a speedy surrender process. 

As of Tuesday afternoon, just two of the defendants had surrendered.

Here’s what to know about paying a bond in Fulton County and three different ways to do so to avoid being detained:

  • The first is with cash, which would require the amount to be paid in full at the jail. 
  • The second way is through “commercial surety,” in which a defendant would use a professional bonding company. The Fulton County Sheriff’s Office publishes an “approved bonding list” for companies it works with. If a defendant goes with this option, the company doesn’t actually pay any money to the county, but the defendant would have to pay a fee to the company for using their services. 
  • The third option is the “Fulton County Jail 10% program,” which allows a defendant to pay just 10% of their total bond amount – plus fees and other associated costs. 

Trump election attorney John Eastman, who surrendered on Tuesday, went with the 10% option, as did Scott Hall, a professional bondsman in Atlanta, who was charged in the case with crimes related to his alleged involvement in the Coffee County, Georgia, voting systems breach

The consent bond orders being negotiated between the defendants’ attorneys and Willis spell out the conduct a defendant is prohibited from engaging in and specifies the amount of money they have to pay for each count brought against them in the case. 

For Trump, who was charged with 13 crimes in the case, his $200,000 includes $80,000 for allegedly violating Georgia’s racketeering act and $10,000 for each of the remaining 12 counts brought against him. 

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

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

Read more about the process

Judge asks Fulton County district attorney to respond to effort to put prosecution on hold

A federal judge has ordered the Fulton County district attorney’s office to respond by Wednesday afternoon with arguments regarding Jeffrey Clark’s emergency request to put the Georgia state proceeding on hold. 

Clark, who faces charges in the case stemming from his efforts to assist former President Donald Trump in the election reversal schemes, is trying to move the case to federal court. 

The judge has taken swift action to move this legal maneuver from Clark toward a hearing or resolution.

Some context: Clark argued in court filings on Monday that both the criminal prosecution and the special purpose grand jury proceedings that preceded it should be moved to the US District Court in Atlanta.

He claimed that, because the special purpose grand jury was a civil proceeding, his notice automatically triggers the process for the entire case — for all the — to be moved to the district court and for the state court proceedings to be immediately put on hold.

CNN’s Tierney Sneed contributed reporting to this post

Trump's ex-chief of staff Mark Meadows asks for emergency court order to avoid arrest in Georgia election case

In this October 2020 photo, Mark Meadows walks along the South Lawn in Washington, DC. 

Former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows asked a federal court to issue an order that would prevent District Attorney Fani Willis from seeking his arrest if he doesn’t surrender to the Fulton County Jail by the Friday deadline.

Meadows, in a new court filing Tuesday, pointed to the court’s plans to hold a hearing Monday on his request that the state court prosecution against him be moved to federal court — where he is seeking the dismissal of the charges against him.

His filings include an email from Willis, in which the district attorney declined his request for an extension and said that at “12:30 pm on Friday I shall file warrants in the system.”

More about Meadows: Meadows was Trump’s final White House chief of staff and he played a key role in exploring ways to overturn the 2020 election. He was on the phone when Trump pressured Georgia’s secretary of state to “find” enough votes to change the outcome.

He also attended a December 2020 White House meeting where Trump considered using the military to seize voting machines. Meadows also visited the site of a post-election audit in Cobb County, Georgia. And emails show that he urged Justice Department officials to investigate shoddy fraud allegations, though that is not part of the charges.

Trump campaign official Mike Roman to be released on $50,000 bond

Mike Roman, a campaign official for former President Donald Trump, will be released on a $50,000 bond once he surrenders at the Fulton County jail, according to an agreement he struck with prosecutors in Georgia. 

Roman, who was allegedly involved in efforts to appoint “fake electors” and promoted baseless claims of voter fraud, will also be subject to the same standard release conditions as his co-defendants. 

He is charged with seven crimes in the sprawling Georgia case against Trump and 18 co-defendants accused of taking part in a broad “criminal enterprise” that attempted to overturn the 2020 presidential election result in that state. 

GOP fake elector reaches bond agreement with Fulton County prosecutors

Cathy Latham.

Lawyers for Cathy Latham, who acted as one of the “fake electors” in Georgia, struck a $75,000 bond agreement with Fulton County prosecutors Tuesday afternoon. 

She was also ordered to follow the same conditions barring her from speaking to any of her co-defendants or witnesses about the case. 

Latham, one of 19 defendants in the election subversion case against former President Donald Trump and others, was one of the 16 Republicans who served as “fake electors” in Georgia and allegedly signed paperwork claiming that Trump had carried the state. 

Prosecutors say Latham’s efforts were part of the Trump campaign’s plan to subvert the Electoral College and nullify Biden’s victory.

Latham, the former chair of the Coffee County GOP, also escorted individuals into the county election office where they breached voter data.

Latham has said she was not “personally involved’ in the breach.

Ex-Trump campaign attorney Jenna Ellis reaches $100,000 bail agreement

A Superior Court judge in Fulton County on Tuesday approved a $100,000 bail agreement for Jenna Ellis in the Georgia election subversion case.

The bond order for Ellis — a former Trump campaign attorney, who faces two charges in the case – contains the same conditions that have been imposed on most of the other defendants who have reached agreements with prosecutors.

Ellis allegedly planned the hearings before Georgia lawmakers at which Trump allies pushed baseless fraud claims that the indictment alleges are part of the conspiracy to change the election’s outcome. 

She also wrote legal memos arguing that Vice President Mike Pence could block President Joe Biden’s victory from being certified by Congress on January 6, 2021, though that isn’t part of the charges.

CNN’s Macie Goldfarb, Jared Formanek and Holmes Lybrand contributed to this report.

Catch up on the key developments Tuesday in the Fulton County 2020 election subversion case

A view of the Fulton County Jail where former President Donald Trump and 18 of his allies are required to surrender and be booked after a grand jury brought back indictments against them in their attempt to overturn the state of Georgia's 2020 election results, in Atlanta, Georgia, on August 17, 2023.

The first two of former President Donald Trump’s co-defendants surrendered at the Fulton County jail on Tuesday — while a pair of defendants sought to move their cases to federal court — signs of how the sprawling case will progress in multiple directions this week.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has charged Trump and 18 others of participating in schemes to meddle with Georgia’s election results.

All 19 co-defendants are expected to surrender ahead of a Friday deadline set by Willis when she unveiled last week’s sweeping indictment over attempts to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss to Joe Biden.

Trump, who agreed to a $200,000 bond on Monday, said he plans to turn himself in on Thursday.

If you are just tuning in, catch up below on the major developments Tuesday:

First defendants surrender: John Eastman, a right-wing lawyer who advised Trump on plots to disrupt Congress’ certification of the 2020 election results, turned himself in Tuesday morning, shortly after Scott Hall, a bail bondsman in Atlanta.

Both Eastman and Hall, who reached bond agreements on Monday, were processed at the Fulton County jail in roughly an hour and released on Tuesday.

Republican state chairman blames Trump: Former Georgia GOP chairman David Shafer, who led the state’s delegation of fake electors, said in a court filing that he and the other fake electors “acted at the direction of the incumbent President and other federal officials.”

Shafer, a longtime member of the Georgia state Senate, played a key role in organizing the Trump campaign’s slate of fake electors in the state. He convened the 16 fake electors in the Georgia state capital in December 2020, where they signed a certificate falsely proclaiming that Trump won the state.

Unlike Trump or some other defendants, however, Shafer has not been part of the federal government. His attorneys say what matters is he was given orders from the top.

Shafer falsely claimed “thousands of people” voted illegally in the state while casting his vote as a fake elector on December 14, 2020, according to a transcript of the secretive closed-door meeting Shafer made public.

Former senior Justice Department official seeks to avoid arrest: Jeffrey Clark, the former Justice Department official indicted after trying to use his federal law enforcement powers to overturn the 2020 election, has asked the judge to let him avoid turning himself in to local authorities.

Clark, in a filing in federal court on Monday, argued that his notice of removal, as well as the notice of removal filed by co-defendant Mark Meadows last week, has the effect of moving the entire state court case — for all 19 co-defendants — to federal court.

Clark says his status as a federal officer when he engaged in the alleged conduct that led to the charges requires the dismissal of the charges against him. He also says the process for removal of civil proceedings applies in the Fulton County case, because of Willis’ use of a special purpose grand jury.

Clark also asked the federal court put an emergency hold on the state court proceedings, “including any attempted issuance or execution of arrest warrants.”

A federal judge has given Willis until mid-afternoon Wednesday to respond.

Read more about the latest developments.

Fulton County criminal case marks first time Trump will put up a cash bond

Former President Donald Trump arrives at Ronald Reagan Washington National Airport in Arlington, Virginia, on August 3.

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. 

Attorneys for Jenna Ellis arrive at Fulton County district attorney’s office ahead of surrender deadline

Jenna Ellis, legal adviser to President Donald Trump, speaks during a news conference at the Republican National Committee headquarters in Washington, DC, on Thursday, Nov. 19, 2020. 

Attorneys for Jenna Ellis, the lawyer who played a prominent role in former President Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 election in Georgia, have arrived at Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ offices Tuesday.

Attorneys Laura Hogue and Franklin Hogue, who represent Ellis, did not answer questions. 

Several defense attorneys for the 19 people charged in the Fulton County case have already negotiated bond agreements with prosecutors so that they can be released once booked at the county jail. Defendants face a Friday deadline to turn themselves in.

Ellis allegedly planned the hearings before Georgia lawmakers where Trump allies pushed baseless fraud claims that the indictment alleges are part of the conspiracy to change the election’s outcome. 

She also wrote legal memos arguing that Pence could block Biden’s victory from being certified by Congress on January 6, 2021, though that isn’t part of the charges.

Ex-Trump lawyer John Eastman says he does not regret representing the former president 

After being booked and released from the Fulton County jail, former Donald Trump attorney John Eastman told reporters that he does not have any regrets about representing the former president.

Eastman — one of the 19 co-defendants facing charges in Fulton County — said Trump is not paying his legal bills and that he hasn’t spoken to the former president recently. 

Eastman read a prepared statement to reporters gathered outside the jail before saying he wouldn’t take further questions, but later said that he felt the 2020 election had “absolutely” been stolen from Trump. 

Attorney David Wolfe told CNN in a phone call that Eastman retained him to represent him on bond negotiations and surrendering. He is not representing Eastman beyond that.

“He did get a mugshot and was fingerprinted,” Wolfe said about the process, which he said took roughly 1 hour and 15 minutes from start to finish. 

Georgia GOP chair falsely claimed thousands voted illegally while casting fake elector vote, transcripts show

Then-Georgia GOP Chair David Shafer, who has been charged in the Fulton County election subversion indictment, falsely claimed “thousands of people” voted illegally in the state while casting his vote as a fake elector in December 2020, according to a transcript.

The transcript of the secretive closed-door meeting of the pro-Trump electors was made public Tuesday in a court case Shafer initiated. He hopes to move the state-level prosecution out of Georgia courts and into the federal system, where he is seeking additional protections and might even try to get the charges dropped. Shafer is no longer the state Republican Party chair.

The meeting lasted 26 minutes. Shafer and the other illegitimate electors cast their votes for former President Donald Trump, even though Joe Biden was the certified winner in Georgia. 

The transcript indicates that at least two Trump officials were in the room: Trump campaign attorney Ray Smith — who was charged alongside Trump and Shafer in the Georgia indictment — and Robert Sinners, an unindicted co-conspirator who was Trump’s Election Day operations lead in the state. 

“That’s correct, Mr. Chairman,” Smith responded, according to the transcript. 

Smith told the fake electors, “We’re conducting this because the contest of the election in Georgia is ongoing,” even though the Georgia Supreme Court had already rejected Trump’s emergency petition to intervene in the election. 

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, a Democrat, charged Smith with 12 state crimes and Shafer with eight crimes, largely revolving around their role in the fake electors scheme. 

They have signaled their intention to aggressively fight the case. 

Former Georgia GOP chair seeks to move case to federal court and says fake electors acted at Trump’s direction

Former Georgia GOP chairman David Shafer, who was charged in the Fulton County election subversion indictment and led the state’s delegation of fake electors, said in a court filing that he and the other fake electors “acted at the direction of” former President Donald Trump.

“Mr. Shafer and the other Republican Electors in the 2020 election acted at the direction of the incumbent President and other federal officials,” Shafer’s lawyers wrote in the filing.

With the filing, Shafer is attempting to move his case from state to federal court.

Unlike Trump or the other Georgia defendants who actually held an official federal government position, Shafer is arguing that he deserves the same protections because he was acting as a “Presidential Elector nominee” in 2020, when he took the actions that form the basis of his indictment. A federal judge – or judges, if there are future appeals – will decide whether Shafer’s role qualifies for federal protections.

Shafer pinned the fake electors plot on Trump and other federal officials while requesting to move his state-level criminal case into federal court. That move, if granted by a judge, could help him fight the charges, or even possibly get them dismissed.

Attorney for Georgia "fake elector" arrives to negotiate bond conditions

An attorney for Cathy Latham, the indicted former chair of the Coffee County GOP in Georgia, arrived Tuesday at the Fulton County courthouse complex to negotiate bond. 

Latham, one of 19 defendants in the election subversion case against former President Donald Trump and others, was one of the 16 Republicans who served as “fake electors” in Georgia and allegedly signed paperwork claiming that Trump had carried the state. 

Prosecutors say Latham’s efforts were part of the Trump campaign’s plan to subvert the Electoral College and nullify Biden’s victory.

William Cromwell, who represents Latham, told CNN he was here to negotiate bond conditions. 

READ MORE

Trump plans to turn himself in Thursday at Fulton County jail
How surrenders work at the troubled Fulton County jail – and why Trump’s will be different
First Trump co-defendant surrenders, according to Fulton County Jail records
John Eastman to surrender Wednesday in Fulton County criminal case

READ MORE

Trump plans to turn himself in Thursday at Fulton County jail
How surrenders work at the troubled Fulton County jail – and why Trump’s will be different
First Trump co-defendant surrenders, according to Fulton County Jail records
John Eastman to surrender Wednesday in Fulton County criminal case