Judge rejects Justice Departments attempt to obtain names of 2020 election workers in Georgia

ATLANTA — The US Department of Justice cannot have the names and personal contact information for every person who worked during the 2020 election in Georgia’s Fulton County, a federal judge ruled Tuesday.The Justice Department in April obtained a grand jury subpoena seeking the names and personal contact information of county employees and volunteer poll workers.President Donald Trump has long claimed without evidence that widespread voter fraud in Georgia’s most populous county, a Democratic stronghold, cost him victory in the state in 2020.Fulton County asked a judge to quash the subpoena, arguing it was meant to “target, harass and punish the President’s perceived political opponents” and that it was “grossly overbroad and untethered to any reasonable need.”“Given the low need for the subpoenaed information and the highly burdensome nature of the disclosure of the same, the Subpoena is unreasonable and must be quashed,” US District Judge William Ray wrote in his ruling.While grand juries often work with federal prosecutors to investigate alleged crimes, “that does not give the DOJ the right to use the Grand Jury to do whatever the DOJ wants,” he wrote.Even if the records sought by the Justice Department could help find people who worked for the county during the 2020 election who support the theory that the election was unfair, the information couldn’t be used to charge anyone, Ray wrote.“That is because the statute of limitations for any possible crime arising from the 2020 Election has long expired,” he wrote.The subpoena came after the FBI in January served a search warrant at the Fulton County election hub and seized hundreds of boxes of ballots and other documents from the 2020 election.

A federal judge in May denied the county’s request to force the federal government to return the ballots.The Justice Department argued in a court filing that the subpoena was the “next step in the normal investigative process” ...

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Publisher: New York Post

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