Trump pardons Rudy Giuliani and other GOP operatives for trying to overturn 2020 election

President Donald Trump has pardoned one-time ally Rudy Giuliani and other Republicans for allegedly trying to overturn the 2020 presidential election.

The president signed the pardon listing 77 ‘fake electors’ and people involved with Trump’s campaign, including Giuliani and Sydney Powell, it was revealed late Sunday.

‘This proclamation ends a grave national injustice perpetrated upon the American people following the 2020 Presidential Election and continues the process of national reconciliation,’ Trump’s pardon attorney Ed Martin said.

Pardons also went to former chief of staff Mark Meadows as well as other 2020 campaign employees who were accused of trying to submit names of fake electors in key battleground states to Congress to keep Trump in office. 

It notes, however, that the pardon does not apply to Trump himself. 

The plot, according to Democratic state attorneys general, was to have fake electors sign fraudulent papers claiming Trump won their state’s presidential race – and then get then-Vice President Mike Pence to certify that Trump won those state’s electoral votes rather than his opponent, Joe Biden.

When Pence then refused to do so, a mob of Trump supporters stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021. The entire mob of convicted rioters have since been pardoned by Trump. 

Trump’s latest pardon came as attorneys general in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Wisconsin faced looming deadlines in their cases. 

President Donald Trump has pardoned Republicans for trying to overturn the results of the 2020 Presidential Election

Trump’s former personal lawyer Rudy Giuliani was among those who were pardoned

Prosecutors argued that Trump allies had conspired to get Vice President Mike Pence to declare certain states for the then-president, and when he didn’t, some of Trump’s supporters stormed the Capitol

In Arizona, for example, Attorney General Kris Mayes faced a decision on whether to press forward with her case or let it fizzle out after a state judge in May ordered prosecutors to return the case to a grand jury, The Hill reports. 

A group of politicians and party leaders there argued that prosecutors failed to present to a grand jury a century-old law they claimed excused their decision to send Republican electoral votes to Congress despite Biden’s victory in the state, according to the Courthouse News Service.

Maricopa County Jude Sam Myers agreed, ruing ‘a prosecutor has a duty to instruct the grand jury on all law applicable to the facts of the case.’

By omitting mention of the law Republicans said justified their actions, Myers ruled that the defendants – who included Giuliani, former White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows and campaign advisor Boris Epshteyn – were ‘denied a substantial procedural right.’ 

Mayes faced a deadline to either revive the case or let it be dismissed of November 21, and had hinted that she was planning on dismissing the case in an interview, according to 12 News.  

‘The one thing I do know for sure is that I am so proud of the prosecutors and investigators in the Attorney General’s office, and I’m proud of the work we did on that case,’ she said, notably using the past tense.

Meanwhile, in Michigan, a state judge dismissed charges faced by 15 pro-Trump electors in September after finding insufficient evidence to prove criminal intent.

District Court Judge Kristen Simmons, who was appointed to the court by Democratic Governor Gretchen Whitmer, ruled that the Republican defendants ‘seriously believed’ there was fraud in the 2020 presidential election.

‘I believe they were executing their constitutional right to seek redress,’ she wrote in her decision.

‘Right, wrong or indifferent, it was these individuals and many other individuals in the state of Michigan that sincerely believed that for some reason there were some serious irregularities with the election.’

Giuliani had been facing charges in Arizona for falsely signing documents saying Trump had won the election in the state, but the case was transferred back to a grand jury in May

Trump’s former chief of staff Mark Meadows was also among those charged in Arizona

Michigan District Court Judge Kristen Simmons dismissed charges faced by 15 pro-Trump electors in September after finding insufficient evidence to prove criminal intent

All the defendants, which included former Michigan GOP co-chair Meshawn Maddock, maintained their innocence throughout the trial.

Prosecutors during the initial indictment dropped charges against a 16th individual after the defendant agreed to cooperate with the attorney general’s office.

During her ruling, Simmons said the defendants lacked the ‘sophistication’ to carry out the crimes outlined by the prosecution.

‘The prosecution would like the court to believe that these named defendants were savvy or sophisticated enough to understand fully the electoral process, which the court does disagree because the document that was presented doesn’t even align with the level of sophistication that they want me to believe,’ Simmons added.

After Simmons’ brutal dismissal, the state attorney general stood by the case, claiming the defendants ‘knew they lied.’

‘The evidence was clear: They lied. They knew they lied, and they tried to steal the votes of millions of Michiganders,’ Attorney General Dana Nessel said while leaving the courthouse.

‘And if they can get away with this, well, what can they get away with next?’

In Georgia, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’s office was disqualified from prosecuting Trump allies after her affair with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, a member of her team, helped blow up the case

In Georgia, prosecutors also faced an uphill battle trying to convict Trump allies of falsifying election results after Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’s office was disqualified over her relationship with one of the prosecutors.

Ruling in a 2-1 opinion, the Georgia appeals court said she was ‘wholly disqualified from this case,’ and pointed to ‘a significant appearance of impropriety.’ 

The Georgia Prosecuting Attorney’s Council then faced the difficult task of appointing a new prosecutor, and Judge Scott McAfee gave the council until this Friday to provide a name or see the charges dismissed.

Trump allies were also facing prosecution in Nevada, but a fight over the venue has tied up the case against six alternate electors for more than a year. 

Nevada Attorney General Aaron Ford had filed his original case in left-leaning Clark County, home to Las Vegas.

But Judge Mary Kay Holthus determined he chose the wrong venue, ruling it should have been brought in Carson City, the state capital, where the sham ballots were cast in 2020.

Ford appealed that decision, which was heard by the Nevada Supreme Court in August. It had not yet issued a ruling on the matter.

In the meantime, the statue of limitations passed for one of the two charges, and Ford refiled the other charge in Carson City, which a source told The Hill was to ensure that charge wasn’t also lost.

Former President Joe Biden ultimately declared victory in the 2020 presidential election

Last month, though, Justice of the Peace Derek Dreiling ruled that forgery charges could proceed to a higher court, the Nevada Independent reports.

He called it the ‘hardest call I’ve had to make in my career.’ 

Trump’s pardon does not affect the state charges the so-called fake electors in that state face.

And in Wisconsin, a judge refused in August to dismiss charges against two former Trump attorneys and a former campaign aide.

A White House official, though, likened the cases to the alternate electors who voted for President John F Kennedy in 1960 – noting that those electors were ‘never prosecuted or even questioned.’ 

‘These great Americans were persecuted and put through hell by the Biden Administration for challenging an election, which is the cornerstone of democracy,’ White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt told the Daily Mail. 

‘Getting prosecuted for challenging results is something that happens in communist Venezuela, not the United States of America, and President Trump is putting an end to the Biden Regime’s communist tactics once and for all.’

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