First Trump allies in Georgia election subversion case surrender
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[August 23, 2023]
By Jack Queen
ATLANTA (Reuters) -The first of Donald Trump's co-defendants in
Georgia's criminal case accusing the former U.S. president and his
associates of subverting his 2020 election loss surrendered at an
Atlanta jail on Tuesday, according to county records and a statement.
Trump's former lawyer John Eastman and Republican poll watcher Scott
Hall both surrendered to the county sheriff's office.
It is expected that the remaining 17 defendants named in the indictment
will surrender by Friday, the office said in a statement.
Trump was set to turn himself in on Thursday to face his fourth criminal
indictment this year.
Trump, the front-runner for the Republican 2024 White House nomination,
has lambasted all the prosecutions as politically motivated and
continues to claim falsely that his 2020 loss to Democratic President
Joe Biden was the result of fraud.
Eastman said in a statement he would surrender, the day after agreeing
to a $100,000 bond agreement.
"I am here today to surrender to an indictment that should never have
been brought," Eastman said in the statement. "It represents a crossing
of the Rubicon for our country, implicating the fundamental First
Amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances."
Hall, a Republican poll watcher in Georgia's Fulton County, was booked
by the county's sheriff's office on Tuesday, the jail records showed.
Hall previously agreed to a $10,000 bond deal requiring that he report
to pre-trial supervision every 30 days.
Trump on Monday agreed to post a $200,000 bond and accepted bail
conditions that would bar him from threatening co-defendants or
witnesses in the case.
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People enter the Lewis R. Slaton
Courthouse and Superior Court of Fulton County, after a Grand Jury
brought back indictments against former U.S. President Donald Trump
and 18 of his allies in their attempt to overturn the state's 2020
election results, in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. August 17, 2023.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
In a 41-count Georgia indictment unveiled last week, Trump and 18
other defendants were charged with racketeering and other crimes
over their efforts to reverse Trump's loss in the state to Biden.
Prosecutors are seeking a trial in March, but the number of
defendants and complexity of the case could lead to delays.
Mark Meadows, Trump's former chief of staff, sought last week to
move the case to federal court and dismiss it on the grounds he is
immune from prosecution for actions he took as a federal official.
Meadows asked to delay his surrender until after a hearing in
federal court on Monday but was rebuffed by Fulton County District
Attorney Fani Willis, who told his lawyers she will seek his arrest
if he does not turn himself in by Friday afternoon, court records
showed.
Trump and the rest of the defendants are likely to raise similar
arguments, which could cause delays as their lawyers spar with
prosecutors in pretrial litigation.
Trump faces indictments in three other separate criminal cases.
He has been charged in Washington, D.C., over his efforts to
overturn the election, in Florida over his handling of classified
documents upon leaving office, and in New York over a hush money
payment to a porn star.
(Reporting by Jack Queen in Atlanta, additional reporting by Jasper
Ward, Susan Heavey and Kanishka Singh; Editing by Scott Malone and
Daniel Wallis)
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