乔治亚州 Fulton County案,9月6日周三第一次听证,法庭直播,所有19名被告大约需要4个月

得嘞,第四次开橹 ,一起嗨皮啊。撸完乔州还有亚州,不要一次精尽人亡哦。
 
别太激动,悠着点,螳臂当车无济于事,不要把任何不想见的报道都当成兴奋,除非你能 do something.

别管哪州,大戏逐步开始上演,会越来越精彩,至少是空前的。
 
别太激动,悠着点,螳臂当车无济于事,不要把任何不想见的报道都当成兴奋,除非你能 do something.

别管哪州,大戏逐步开始上演,会越来越精彩,至少是空前的。
同意,都搂着点撸。
 
昨天2位自首,今天7位,共9位已自首。

今天,协商的保释金包括朱大律师15万,悉尼 鲍威尔10万。

Jenna 笑容灿烂。

Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell surrendered today. Here are their mug shots​

From CNN staff


Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell.
Rudy Giuliani and Sidney Powell. Fulton County Sheriff's Office

21 min ago

Here's who has surrendered so far and what we know about Trump's plans​

From CNN's Zachary Cohen, Paula Reid, Marshall Cohen and Dan Berman


Scott Hall, John Eastman, David Shafer, Cathy Latham, Kenneth Chesebro, Ray Smith, Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis
Scott Hall, John Eastman, David Shafer, Cathy Latham, Kenneth Chesebro, Ray Smith, Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis Fulton County Sheriff's Office

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has charged former President Donald Trump and 18 others with participating in schemes to meddle with Georgia’s 2020 election results.
All 19 co-defendants must surrender ahead of a noon 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.
Here's what you should know:
  • Key Trump lawyers turn themselves in: Three of Trump’s key election lawyers, Rudy Giuliani, Sidney Powell and Jenna Ellis, surrendered Wednesday. One of Trump’s most outspoken attorneys in 2020, Giuliani was charged with 13 crimes, including breaking the state’s racketeering act, engaging in various criminal conspiracies, and soliciting a public officer in the state to violate their oath. Powell, meanwhile, faces seven state crimes, including violating Georgia’s anti-racketeering law, conspiracy to commit election fraud, conspiracy to commit computer theft, and more, and Ellis was charged with two state crimes: violating Georgia’s anti-racketeering law and soliciting a public officer to violate their oath.
  • Others who have surrendered so far: Six other defendants have surrendered, including pro-Trump lawyer Kenneth Chesebro, former Trump campaign lawyer Ray Smith, former Georgia GOP chairman David Shafer, former chair of the Coffee County Republican Party Cathy Latham, right-wing lawyer John Eastman and bail bondsman Scott Hall.
  • What we know so far about Trump's impending surrender: The former president will turn himself in Thursday after agreeing to a $200,000 bond. Trump will leave his Bedminster golf club in the afternoon and return to New Jersey following his surrender, according to sources. There are no expected events at his club upon his return. Trump’s team has also been making arrangements for him to speak to reporters traveling with him in Georgia, the sources said, though the former president may ultimately choose not to do so.
 
就等明晚黄金时段Trump闪亮登场了!
 
他是美国前总统。快三百年了头一遭。百年不见之大变局。
没一点点Respect, 赤裸裸
 
一张大头照都能带来不少的高潮,要是再有个橙衣服的,一个个的不得吐血精尽而亡啊。
 
我立等,床总喷死监狱长。
 
自首人数17/19,截止时间今天中午。

1 hr 57 min ago

2 defendants are left to surrender at Fulton County jail​

From CNN's Hannah Rabinowitz

Former President Donald Trump surrendered Thursday at the Fulton County jail, followed by five other co-defendants early Friday. Here's a quick look at where things stand on surrenders in the Georgia 2020 election case:
  • Total surrendered: 17
  • Total who still need to surrender: 2
  • Total with bond deals: 18
  • Total without announced deals: 1
Remember: The two co-defendants who still have to surrender face a noon ET Friday deadline.
 
40 minutes to go.
 
佛洛伊德是唯一一位被拒保收监关押了

1693001199044.png


Trump co-defendant Harrison Floyd will remain in jail after judge said she will not issue bond today​

From CNN’s Alta Spells, Isabel Rosales and Holmes Lybrand

Harrison Floyd, one of President Donald Trump's 18 co-defendants in the Georgia 2020 election subversion case, will remain in the Fulton County jail for now.
During his first appearance in court Friday afternoon, Judge Emily Richardson told Floyd that she would not be setting bond because Floyd had already been indicted and assigned to Judge Scott McAfee, who would address bond moving forward.
Richardson also informed Floyd of his rights and read the charges that he is facing during the brief virtual appearance.
“There are grounds for bond to be denied at this point,” Richardson said. “I’m going to go ahead and find that you are a risk to commit additional felonies and a potential risk to flee the jurisdiction. So I’m going to deny bond, but a full consideration of bond will be addressed” by Judge McAfee, who will preside over the case.
Floyd does not have representation and told the judge that he could not afford a private attorney. Richardson told Floyd he did not meet the eligibility requirements for obtaining a public defender. He appeared over video conference in a large, empty room dressed in a prison uniform.
When a bond release was denied, Floyd objected, arguing that he voluntarily surrendered.
"I got on a plane, I voluntarily came here," he said.
Floyd also said he had yet to be read his Miranda warning.
When asked if he had been advised of the charges against him, Floyd said he had and that "the DA's office pulled me aside yesterday" to go through the charges.
Prosecutors for District Attorney Fani Willis attended the hearing and told the judge they had nothing further to add.
Floyd is charged with three state crimes – violating Georgia’s anti-racketeering law, influencing a witness, and conspiring to solicit false statements.
Prosecutors say Floyd participated in a plot to pressure an Atlanta election worker into falsely admitting that she committed massive fraud against former President Donald Trump in the 2020 election.
Floyd is also facing a simple assault charge in a separate case for allegedly assaulting an FBI agent who came to serve him a subpoena to testify before a federal grand jury in Washington, DC, CNN previously reported.
In that case, Floyd is alleged to have threatened two FBI agents who served him the subpoena at his apartment in Rockville, Maryland on February 23 by running after them and “striking” one agent “chest to chest.”

 
还真有留宿的。
 
法官要面子,挑个最没后台的欺负欺负,同样叫Floyd,待遇差别太大了。美帝法律被民主党玩成裹脚布了。
 

他说不记得​

Meadows questioned about setting up call where Trump told Georgia officials to "find" votes to win state​

From CNN's Jeremy Herb, Marshall Cohen, Katelyn Polantz and Jason Morris

Former White House Chief of Staff during the Trump administration Mark Meadows speaks during a forum titled House Rules and Process Changes for the 118th Congress at FreedowmWorks headquarters on November 14, 2022 in Washington, DC.
Former White House Chief of Staff during the Trump administration Mark Meadows speaks during a forum titled House Rules and Process Changes for the 118th Congress at FreedowmWorks headquarters on November 14, 2022 in Washington, DC. Drew Angerer/Getty Images

Mark Meadows was questioned by a prosecutor with Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ office about then-President Donald Trump’s January 2021 phone call with Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.

In the call, which is included in the Fulton County indictment, Trump asked Raffensperger to “find” enough votes for Trump to win Georgia.

Meadows said that Trump had “a concern” about potential fraud in Atlanta and was hoping to figure out "a less-litigious way of resolving” his issues with the election results in Georgia.

Willis’ prosecutors have repeatedly highlighted that Meadows included outside, pro-Trump lawyers on that call – people who were not federal employees and didn’t work at the Department of Justice, for instance.

Meadows said multiple times that he could not recall all of the outreach he did to set up the call.

“I don’t recall. I’ve tried to recall a number of times,” Meadows said when asked who he reached out to among attorneys who took part on the call on Trump’s side.

Meadows said he didn’t recall a specific conversation with Cleta Mitchell, a private attorney assisting Trump, to get her on the call with Raffensperger. He said he also couldn’t recall looping in members of Trump’s campaign to the call.

Meadows grew somewhat exasperated as the prosecutor questioned why his role would include setting up a call to settle private litigation. Meadows pointed to Trump’s needs as he perceived them.

“I dealt with the president’s personal position on a number of things. It’s still a part of my job to make sure the president is safe and secure and able to perform his job,” Meadows said. “Serving the president of the United States is what I do, to be clear.”

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has subpoenaed two outside attorneys assisting Trump who took part in the call to testify at the Meadows hearing.

Prosecutors asked Meadows why he wanted them on the call. Meadows responded: “My understanding was that the president wanted signature verification.”

Meadows is continuing to distance his politically adjacent activity while he was chief of staff from Trump’s campaign. Instead, Meadows is trying to connect these post-election actions to his official-government job.

“There is a role for the chief of staff to make sure those campaign goals and objectives are implemented at the federal level,” Meadows argued.
In one instance, Meadows was pressed about a text message he sent to a Georgia election official where he asked if the ballot signature-matching process could be sped up if the Trump campaign paid for it.

Meadows testified that he made that offer without discussing it with the Trump campaign, and claimed he was trying to learn about the election process so he could advise Trump about the speed of the process.

In other words, even though the outcome Meadows was seeking would have benefited candidate Trump, Meadows is arguing that he was asking about the signature matching to advise Trump as president.

The court is on recess until 2 p.m. ET when Meadows will return to take the stand.

Read the full transcript and listen to Trump’s 2021 audio call with Georgia's secretary of state.
 
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