Fulton County, Georgia District Attorney Fani Willis is reportedly prepared to indict the 45th President of the United States Donald Trump with “more than a dozen” different charges when presenting her case to a grand jury next week.
Willis, who Trump referred to as “a young woman, a young racist in Atlanta,” during a New Hampshire rally Tuesday, has reportedly been preparing conspiracy and racketeering or ‘RICO’ charges designed for use against mafiosos and organized crime that would allow her to bring charges against multiple defendants, according to CNN.
Trump attacks Fani Willis pic.twitter.com/WDnwII5KRe
— Acyn (@Acyn) August 8, 2023
The left-leaning outlet, citing “sources familiar with the matter,” wrote, “Her wide-ranging criminal probe focuses on efforts to pressure election officials, the plot to put forward fake electors and a voting systems breach in rural Coffee County, Georgia.”
Conservative commentator Benny Johnson posted the news to X App Wednesday morning.
🚨 BREAKING: Fulton County DA Fani Willis Will reportedly seek 'more than a dozen' indictments in probe into Donald Trump when she presents her case before a grand jury next week
— Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) August 9, 2023
CNN reported that the witnesses subpoenaed by Willis for her presentation to the Grand Jury include the former Lt. Governor of Georgia Geoff Duncan, Democrat former Georgia state Senator Jen Jordan and independent journalist George Chidi. However, the special purpose grand jury assembled by Willis to investigate the Trump case heard testimony from over 75 witnesses total.
The case will reportedly revolve around the phone call that prompted Willis to launch her hunt for any possible charges to levy at Trump between the president and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in which Trump urged him to find the corrupted votes he asserted took away his victory.
In full context according to a Washington Post published transcript, Trump was clear and unequivocal what he was asking Raffensperger to do.
“Look. Here’s the problem. We can go through signature verification, and we’ll find hundreds of thousands of signatures, if you let us do it. And the only way you can do it, as you know, is to go to the past. But you didn’t do that in Cobb County. You just looked at one page compared to another. The only way you can do a signature verification is go from the one that signed it on November whatever. Recently. And compare it to two years ago, four years ago, six years ago, you know, or even one. And you’ll find that you have many different signatures. But in Fulton, where they dumped ballots, you will find that you have many that aren’t even signed and you have many that are forgeries.
Okay, you know that. You know that. You have no doubt about that. And you will find you will be at 11,779 within minutes because Fulton County is totally corrupt, and so is she totally corrupt.”
This was the “perfect call” that Trump refers to in which, to anyone who reads the transcript in full, is clearly Trump informing the Georgia officials of discrepancies his legal team found and urging them to investigate to find at least “11,779” of the estimated over 24,000 votes that Trump stated were cast illegally.
At its heart, the controversy and potential prosecution seem to imply that no one has a right to challenge the results of an election once the state authorities have decreed it to be valid. It is a concept that is abhorrent and antithetical to the Constitution and indeed the very founding of the United States.