Georgia’s Secretary of State’s office has opened a probe into ex-U.S. President Donald Trump’s efforts to overturn the state’s 2020 election results.
The probe is viewed as a step that could lead to a criminal investigation by state and local authorities.
Secretary of State, Brad Raffensperger, had faced calls to open a probe after Trump was recorded in a Jan. 2 phone call pressuring Raffensperger to overturn the state’s election results.
Trump’s calls were based on unfounded voter fraud claims, as events that followed later proved.
“The Secretary of State’s office investigates complaints it receives,” said Walter Jones, a spokesman for Raffensperger’s office, describing the investigation as “fact-finding and administrative.”
“Any further legal efforts will be left to the attorney general,” he clarified.
He said the probe, which was first reported by Reuters, was prompted by a complaint filed on Monday by George Washington University law professor John Banzhaf.
Banzhaf told Reuters he spoke with an investigator in Raffensperger’s office on Monday, hours after he filed the complaint requesting a probe into Trump’s potential election interference.
It was his fourth such complaint to Georgia officials since the Jan. 2 call, he said.
Jason Miller, a Trump adviser, said, “There was nothing improper or untoward about a scheduled call between President Trump, Secretary Raffensperger, and lawyers on both sides.
If Mr. Raffensperger didn’t want to receive calls about the election, he shouldn’t have run for Secretary of State,” he said.
Legal experts say Trump’s phone calls may have violated at least three state criminal election laws.
These include conspiracy to commit election fraud, criminal solicitation to commit election fraud, and intentional interference with the performance of election duties.
The felony and misdemeanor violations are punishable by fines or imprisonment.
If Trump were prosecuted, he would likely argue that he genuinely believed the election was rigged against him, the experts said.
He noted that criminal laws generally require a guilty state of mind or a deliberate intent to carry out a crime, arguing that this may be a high hurdle to clear in this case.
In the Jan. 2 phone call, Trump urged Raffensperger, a fellow Republican, to “find” enough votes to overturn his Georgia loss.
The transcript quotes Trump telling Raffensperger: “All I want to do is this: I just want to find 11,780 votes,” which is the number Trump needed to win.
On Jan. 6, the day of the U.S. Capitol riots, Trump bragged about the call in a speech to supporters: “People love that conversation because it says what’s going on.
These people are crooked, ” he had said.
Two Democratic lawmakers in the U.S. House of Representatives, New York’s Kathleen Rice and California’s Ted Lieu, asked in a Jan. 4 letter to the Federal Bureau of Investigation for a criminal probe into Trump’s call to Raffensperger.
The push for investigations illustrates the legal perils facing Trump since he lost the constitutional protections that shield sitting presidents from prosecution.
Trump now faces nearly a dozen legal battles, including a criminal probe by Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr into his business dealings and several civil lawsuits.
Trump has described investigations into his family business as politically motivated.
David Worley, the lone Democrat on Georgia’s state election board, had planned to introduce a motion at Wednesday’s board meeting.
The motion aims to urge state Attorney General Chris Carr and Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis to open a criminal investigation into Trump’s phone calls with election officials.
Worley said such a move was unnecessary now that Raffensperger’s office had opened an investigation.
“I won’t need to make my move. This is the normal thing that should happen when a complaint is filed. If a complaint is filed, an investigation is started, that’s how it works,” Worley told Reuters.
Spokespeople for Carr and Willis did not reply to requests for comment.
Once the Secretary of State’s investigation is complete, the office’s investigations division will write a report and present it to the state election board, Worley said.
The board will then decide if the matter is referred to the state attorney general or a local district attorney.
Willis, a Democrat, has held internal discussions about launching a criminal probe to investigate Trump’s alleged election interference, Reuters reported on Jan. 28, quoting people familiar with the matter.
In addition to the January phone call, Trump made another call in December to Georgia’s chief elections investigator, Raffensperger’s office has said.
It wasn’t immediately clear if the December call would be included in the Secretary of State’s probe.
“The investigation will go where it needs to go. It’s not like a prosecutor where you’re limited to the parameters of the complaint,” said Jones.
Reuters/NAN