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Tag: Georgia

  • Dozens detained after a construction vehicle was set ablaze and bricks were thrown at the proposed ‘Cop City’ police training site in Atlanta, authorities said | CNN

    Dozens detained after a construction vehicle was set ablaze and bricks were thrown at the proposed ‘Cop City’ police training site in Atlanta, authorities said | CNN

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    At least 35 people were detained after a construction vehicle was set on fire and rocks and bricks thrown at officers Sunday evening as violent protests continued at the sprawling site of a planned police training facility in Atlanta opponents have dubbed “Cop City,” authorities said.

    Orange flames rose from a construction tractor and at least four other fires burned in and around the fenced site as people in black swarmed on both sides of the barricade before squad cars and armed officers arrived, surveillance videos released by the Atlanta Police Department shows.

    “A group of violent agitators used the cover of a peaceful protest of the proposed Atlanta Public Safety Training Center to conduct a coordinated attack on construction equipment and police officers,” the police department said.

    The group changed into black clothing, went into the construction area and threw large rocks, bricks, Molotov cocktails and fireworks at police officers, destroying construction equipment “by fire and vandalism,” the agency said in a statement. “The illegal actions of the agitators could have resulted in bodily harm.”

    “Appropriate charges” are being coordinated with DeKalb County prosecutors and the Georgia Attorney General’s office, Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum said Sunday in a news conference, adding some detained are not from Atlanta and no officers were hurt.

    “Officers exercised restraint and used non-lethal enforcement to conduct arrests,” the police statement added.

    Sunday’s scrap follows at least two “clearing operations” – one in which officers fatally shot a protester – this year by police at the forested site slated to host the $90 million, 85-acre law enforcement facility. Opponents with the “Stop Cop City” group and others object, saying the project would propagate police militarization and harm the environment.

    Atlanta police now will implement a “multi-layered strategy,” including “reaction and arrest” as more protests are planned in coming days, it said in its statement, adding it “asks for this week’s protests to remain peaceful.”

    “When you throw commercial-grade fireworks, when you throw Molotov cocktails, large rocks, a number of items at officers, your only intent is to harm, and the charges are going to show that,” Schierbaum said.

    Some arrested last year at the site were charged with domestic terrorism.

    Despite concerns from protesters and some neighbors of the DeKalb County site, Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens backs development of the training facility, which is due to include a shooting range, a mock city and a burn building. More than 200 acres around it will be protected greenspace, he has said.

    “The city of Atlanta has the most extensive training requirements in the Southeast,” Dickens said this year. “Our training includes vital areas like de-escalation training techniques, mental health, community-oriented policing, crisis intervention training, as well as civil rights history education.

    “This training needs space, and that’s exactly what this training center is going to offer.”

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  • 2 dead, 6 injured after shooting at Georgia house party that had more than 100 teenagers in attendance | CNN

    2 dead, 6 injured after shooting at Georgia house party that had more than 100 teenagers in attendance | CNN

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    CNN
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    Two people were killed and six others were injured after a shooting at a house party in Douglas County, Georgia on Saturday that had more than 100 teenagers in attendance, police said.

    Officials said the shooting stemmed from a confrontation at the house party in Douglasville, a city about 20 miles west of Atlanta.

    The Douglas County Sheriff’s Office (DCSO) asked that anyone with information about the assailant to contact its office as information about the incident is “very limited,” the agency said in a news release.

    Wounded partygoers were seen in neighboring yards after the shooting, according to CNN affiliate WXIA. The owner of the home told WXIA they held a Sweet 16 party for their daughter and they chose to end the party at 10:00 p.m., claiming some of the attendees were smoking marijuana.

    It’s unclear whether there were any adults present at the time of the shooting, which the owner told WXIA happened in a cul-de-sac outside the home.

    DCSO said the incident remains a “very active investigation.”

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  • Ex-Georgia football star Jalen Carter turns himself in after deadly crash

    Ex-Georgia football star Jalen Carter turns himself in after deadly crash

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    Jalen Carter, the former University of Georgia football star and a top NFL prospect, turned himself in late Wednesday night on charges linked to his alleged involvement in a January car crash that resulted in the deaths of a teammate and team staff member. Police had issued arrest warrants for him.

    Carter, 21, faces charges of reckless driving and racing, the Athens-Clarke County Police Department announced earlier on Wednesday.

    Records from the Athens-Clarke County Jail show that Carter surrendered at 11:33 p.m. and was released just before midnight on $1,500 bond on the reckless driving count and $2,500 bond on the racing count.  

    He is accused in connection with an accident initially characterized as a single-vehicle crash near the school’s campus on Jan. 15 that killed fellow Georgia football player Devin Willock and team staff member Chandler LeCroy.

    LeCroy, a 24-year-old recruiting analyst for the Bulldogs football team and University of Georgia graduate, was driving when the vehicle “left the roadway, striking two power poles and several trees” at around 2:45 a.m., police said in a statement issued directly after the wreck.

    Willock, an 20-year-old offensive lineman for the Bulldogs, was in the vehicle and pronounced dead at the scene. LeCroy was transferred to a nearby hospital where she later died from her injuries, according to police.

    A subsequent investigation found that LeCroy, driving a 2021 Ford Expedition, and Carter, driving a 2021 Jeep Trackhawk, “were operating their vehicles in a manner consistent with racing” leading up to the deadly crash, police said Wednesday. Both vehicles had left the downtown Athens area at around 2:30 that morning and proceeded to switch between lanes, drive in the center turn lane and drive “in opposite lanes of travel” while overtaking other motorists while driving at high speeds, “in an apparent attempt to outdistance each other.”

    Carter acknowledged the warrants in a statement shared on Twitter Wednesday afternoon.

    “There is no question in my mind that when all of the facts are known that I will be fully exonerated of any criminal wrongdoing,” Carter wrote. The statement also claimed that some reports about the January crash and charges against him are inaccurate.

    “Numerous media reports also have circulated this morning containing inaccurate information concerning the tragic events of January 15, 2023,” he said in the statement. “It is my intention to return to Athens to answer the misdemeanor charges against me and to make certain that the complete and accurate truth is presented.”

    In their announcement Wednesday, Athens-Clarke County police said evidence suggested LeCroy’s vehicle was traveling at about 104 mph before the crash and noted that her blood alcohol concentration was 0.197 when the accident occurred. 

    “Investigators determined that alcohol impairment, racing, reckless driving, and speed were significant contributing factors to the crash,” police said.

    Carter left the scene of the crash before returning, about an hour later, to provide statements to police, CBS Sports reported. Additional interviews reviewed by the Atlanta-Journal Constitution reportedly showed Carter misleading prosecutors as to his whereabouts at the time of the accident, first saying he was a mile away when it happened and later acknowledging that he was there, according to the newspaper. 

    Kirby Smart, the head football coach at the University of Georgia, responded to the arrest warrants in a statement released on Wednesday morning.

    “The charges announced today are deeply concerning, especially as we are still struggling to cope with the devastating loss of two beloved members of our community,” Smart said. “We will continue to cooperate fully with the authorities while supporting these families and assessing what we can learn from this horrible tragedy.”

    Carter is widely considered one of the top prospects in the upcoming NFL Draft, with many experts projecting that he will be a top-five pick, according to CBS Sports.

    He earned unanimous All-America honors after a standout junior season at Georgia. Carter posted seven tackles for loss and three sacks from the defensive tackle position, standing as a catalyst of Georgia’s historic 15-0 campaign.

    — additional reporting by Brian Dakss

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  • Ex-Georgia football star Jalen Carter was racing in deadly crash that killed teammate and staffer, arrest warrants allege

    Ex-Georgia football star Jalen Carter was racing in deadly crash that killed teammate and staffer, arrest warrants allege

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    Georgia football player, staffer killed in crash


    University of Georgia football player and staff member killed in crash following victory parade

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    Police have issued arrest warrants for Jalen Carter, the former football star at the University of Georgia and top NFL prospect who is now being charged for his alleged involvement in a deadly car crash that left two people dead in January.

    Carter, 21, faces charges for reckless driving and racing, the Athens-Clarke County Police Department announced on Wednesday. He is accused in connection with an accident, initially characterized as a single-vehicle crash near the university campus on Jan. 15, which killed fellow Georgia football player Devin Willock and team staff member Chandler LeCroy.

    This is a developing story. Check back for updates.


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  • Man and 15-year-old are arrested in shooting that wounded 9 children at Georgia gas station | CNN

    Man and 15-year-old are arrested in shooting that wounded 9 children at Georgia gas station | CNN

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    CNN
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    Two people have been arrested in the shooting that wounded nine children at a Columbus, Georgia, gas station earlier this month, police announced Friday.

    The suspects were identified as 35-year-old D’Angelo Robinson, Sr., and an unnamed 15-year-old male, who were both taken into custody on aggravated assault charges, according to a release from the Columbus Police Department.

    The February 17 shooting broke out when a group of minors at a party got into an altercation and went over to a nearby Shell gas station’s parking lot, where nine children all under the age of 18 were wounded – including a 5-year-old boy who was struck while there with a family member, Columbus police previously said.

    In the week following the shooting, investigators interviewed witnesses and gathered information and “were ultimately able to establish probable cause to issue arrest warrants for the two suspects,” police said.

    Robinson was charged with eight counts of aggravated assault, while the teenage suspect – who was described “a validated gang member” – was charged with one count of aggravated assault, the department said, adding that additional charges are pending.

    The teen is being held at a youth detention center, police said. CNN is working to determine if Robinson has legal representation.

    It’s unclear if Robinson was part of the initial altercation police described started at the party. It’s also unclear what prompted the incident or how it led to the gunfire.

    The wounded children were treated for injuries that weren’t life-threatening, according to the department. Police previously said the oldest person wounded was 17 years old and the youngest was the 5-year-old boy.

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  • Lo Jelks, Atlanta’s first Black TV reporter, has died | CNN

    Lo Jelks, Atlanta’s first Black TV reporter, has died | CNN

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    CNN
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    Lorenzo “Lo” Jelks, Atlanta’s first Black television news reporter, has died at 83, according to the Atlanta Press Club and CNN affiliate WSB.

    After graduating from Clark College (now known as Clark Atlanta University), Jelks was hired in 1967 by WSB-TV, where he stayed for nearly a decade, according to the Atlanta Press Club.

    “Once (WSB) took that opportunity of going with someone green like me, someone who had never been inside a television station, I think perhaps that helped with the other stations,” Jelks told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in an interview last year.

    After leaving WSB-TV, he created an AM radio station highlighting historically Black colleges and universities, and helped run a newspaper serving a group of local HBCUs, according to the Atlanta Press Club.

    “He really shined the light on the importance of education and I think in many ways changed the landscape of race relations in Atlanta and certainly in Georgia by his reporting,” Jocelyn Dorsey, former WSB director of editorials and public affairs, said in a tribute video for Jelks posted by the Atlanta Press Club.

    In 2022, Jelks was inducted into the Atlanta Press Club Hall of Fame.

    “The Atlanta Press Club is deeply saddened by the passing of Lorenzo ‘Lo’ Jelks,” the organization said in a statement after his death. “His legacy will live on with the 2023 Lorenzo ‘Lo’ Jelks Communications and Marketing Internship sponsored by the Georgia Power Foundation.”

    Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp also paid tribute to Jelks on Saturday.

    “As someone who made history for our state, he paved the way for other African Americans in media during a pivotal time,” Kemp said in a statement posted on Twitter.

    “As we pray for his loved ones, we’re also remembering his valued contributions,” the governor added.

    CNN reached out to Jelks’ family Saturday but did not receive a response.

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  • Charges dropped against Black inmate beaten in Georgia jail cell, DA says | CNN

    Charges dropped against Black inmate beaten in Georgia jail cell, DA says | CNN

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    CNN
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    Prosecutors have dropped all charges against a Black man who was beaten by multiple sheriff’s office employees while he was in custody at a Georgia jail in September 2022, according to a new court filing.

    Attorneys for the man, Jarrett Hobbs, also reached a “significant settlement agreement” with the Camden County Sheriff’s Office to resolve all civil claims from the incident, the lawyers said in a statement.

    In November, five Camden County Sheriff’s Office employees were placed on administrative duty amid an ongoing internal and a state investigation launched after surveillance video showed the employees beating Hobbs in a jail cell.

    Three employees of the jail were charged with battery and violating the oath of office, while two others were disciplined.

    “Let’s be clear: no one deserves to be beaten like that,” Hobbs’ attorney Harry Daniels said in a statement. “This settlement doesn’t make up for that, not by a long shot. But, at the end of the day, Mr. Hobbs’ charges were dropped, the officers who beat him have been charged and this settlement gives him and his family a new way forward. That’s something we can all be proud of.”

    The amount of the settlement was not disclosed.

    Hobbs had been on probation on a federal case out of North Carolina and violated that by being in Georgia, where he was charged with speeding, driving on a suspended license, possession of a controlled substance, and assault, battery and obstruction charges, according to the warrant dismissal.

    “State declines to prosecute drug and traffic charges further in the interests of justice,” the dismissal said, adding there is “insufficient evidence to prove that defendant is guilty” of the assault, battery and obstruction charges.

    The criminal charges against Hobbs included the charges for assault, battery and obstruction for justice which deputies filed after the beating, his attorneys said in the statement.

    Glynn County District Attorney’s Office confirmed all the charges from the incident were dropped, but declined to provide additional comment.

    CNN has reached out to Camden County Sheriff’s Office for comment.

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  • What the Hell Is the Trump Georgia Jury Forewoman Thinking?

    What the Hell Is the Trump Georgia Jury Forewoman Thinking?

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    The Fulton County DA’s investigation into the attempt by Donald Trump and his allies to overturn the 2020 election results in Georgia has long been seen as one of the biggest legal threats to the ex-president. As prosecutor Fani Willis told The Washington Post in September, “The allegations are very serious. If indicted and convicted, people are facing prison sentences.” In January, the special grand jury impaneled to examine the case wrapped up its work, and while its indictment recommendations remain under wraps, there is obviously a possibility that its members felt Trump (and/or some of his pals) should be prosecuted. One reason the former guy and his buddies might not end up being charged? The bizarre media tour that the jury’s forewoman has been on in the last 24 hours and counting, which some legal experts fear could jeopardize the DA’s ability to nail Trump to a wall.

    Speaking to The New York Times, forewoman Emily Kohrs revealed Tuesday that the special grand jury recommended multiple indictments, saying, “It is not a short list.” Asked if Donald Trump’s name was on that list, she told the outlet: “You’re not going to be shocked. It’s not rocket science…. It is not going to be some giant plot twist. You probably have a fair idea of what may be in there. I’m trying very hard to say that delicately.” In an interview with the Associated Press, Kohrs also indicated that the case involved immunity deals for witnesses as well as police escorts for her and her fellow jurors. Meanwhile, Kohrs told The Atlanta Journal-Constitution that the grand jury heard Trump phone calls that have not yet been disclosed to the public. “It is amazing how many hours of footage you can find of that man on the phone,” she said. When told that Trump had insisted he’d gotten “total exoneration” from the grand jury, she reportedly “burst out laughing” and asked, ”Did he really say that? Oh, that’s fantastic. That’s phenomenal. I love it.”

    Unfortunately, it doesn’t stop there; Kohrs went on TV too. In an interview with CNN, she reiterated that the jury had recommended that numerous people be indicted, again saying, “It’s not a short list,” and also noting that it would be “good” to assume that the jury had recommended charging more than a dozen individuals. While refusing to say if Trump was on the list, she noted that the group “discussed [Trump] a lot in the room,” adding, “When this list comes out, there are no major plot twists waiting for you.”

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    Later in the interview, asked what her reaction would be “if the DA decides against bringing any charges, after what you’ve seen,” she said she would be “sad if nothing happens.”

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    In a separate interview with MSNBC, she was asked if she had wanted to hear from Trump, to which she responded: “I wanted to hear from the former president, but honestly, I kind of wanted to subpoena the former president because I got to swear everybody in, and so I thought it would be really cool to get 60 seconds with President Trump—of me looking at him and being like ‘Do you solemnly swear…?’ and me getting to swear him in. I kind of just thought that would be an awesome moment.”

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  • CNN Panel Cringes At Trump Grand Jury Foreperson’s ‘Painful’ Media Appearances

    CNN Panel Cringes At Trump Grand Jury Foreperson’s ‘Painful’ Media Appearances

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    CNN host Anderson Cooper and legal analyst Elie Honig raised concerns on Tuesday about a spate of media appearances by the foreperson of the grand jury that investigated former President Donald Trump’s attempts to overturn the 2020 presidential election in Georgia.

    The foreperson, Emily Kohrs, has been interviewed by several news outlets, including CNN, about the grand jury’s deliberations, offering coy and cryptic hints about who might be indicted.

    “It’s not a short list,” she said on CNN earlier Tuesday, giggling, of the list of recommended indictments. Asked if Trump was among them, she said: “I really don’t want to share something that the judge made a conscious decision not to share,” but “it was a process where we heard his name a lot.”

    “Why this person is talking on TV, I do not understand,” Cooper said, according to a clip recorded by Mediaite. “She’s clearly enjoying herself. Is this responsible? She was the foreperson of this grand jury.”

    Honig, a former state and federal prosecutor, said that the interviews were a “horrible idea” and that prosecutors were probably wincing watching them, adding that it was “painful” to see Kohrs dropping hints.

    “This is a very serious prospect here,” he said. “Indicting any person, you’re talking about potentially taking away that person’s liberty. We’re talking about potentially [indicting] a former president for the first time in this nation’s history. She does not seem to be taking that very seriously.”

    Honig, a former assistant U.S. attorney, suggested that Kohrs’ comments could pave the way for Trump’s team to make a motion, should he be indicted, to dismiss the indictment based on grand jury impropriety.

    “She’s not supposed to be talking about anything really, but she’s really not supposed to be talking about the deliberations,” he said, describing Kohrs as “a prosecutor’s nightmare.”

    Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney allowed certain sections of the grand jury’s report to be made public last week but withheld the names of any people it may have recommended for indictment, citing due process concerns. The panel of 23 jurors reviewed evidence for seven months starting last May. Now it’s up to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis to decide whether to prosecute.

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  • Missing Alabama College Student’s Remains Identified After 47 Years

    Missing Alabama College Student’s Remains Identified After 47 Years

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    Skeletal remains found inside of a rusted-out vehicle in an Alabama creek roughly a year ago have been positively identified as a 22-year-old college student who vanished 47 years ago, authorities said Monday.

    Kyle Clinkscales’ remains, which were pulled out of the submerged 1974 Ford Pinto in late 2021, were confirmed with the help of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Georgia Bureau of Investigation, the Troup County Sheriff’s Office in Georgia said in a statement.

    An official report stating a manner of death has not been completed and so it will not be released, the sheriff’s office said.

    The Auburn University student vanished while returning to the Alabama campus from his hometown of LaGrange, Georgia, on the night of Jan. 27, 1976.

    Kyle Clinkscales was 22 when he vanished while driving from his hometown of LaGrange, Georgia, to Auburn University where he was a student.

    Troup County Sheriff’s Department

    The vehicle identification number of the car found in the muddy creek matched the one that Clinkscales had been driving at the time of his disappearance. His wallet was also found inside the vehicle, along with his identification and credit cards, authorities previously said.

    What remains unknown is how the vehicle ended up in the creek.

    Authorities for years investigated whether Clinkscales had been murdered, and in 2005, they arrested a man who they suspected was involved in his death.

    That man, who was later convicted of making false statements to police, told investigators that he had a conversation with another man who claimed to have shot Clinkscales and then moved his body to a place “where no one would ever find him.”

    The person he identified as the killer died years later, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.

    “Everybody was always wondering if he was going to show up somewhere,” Lauren Griffen, a friend of Clinkscales’, recently told Atlanta station WXIA-TV.

    Clinkscales was an only child and his parents never stopped holding out hope that they’d find him, Troup County Sheriff James Woodruff said at a press conference after the vehicle was found.

    Clinkscales’ father died in 2007 and his mother died in January 2021, just 11 months before his remains were found.

    “It was always her hope that he would come home. It was always our hope that we would find him for her before she passed away. Just the fact that we have hopefully found him and the car brings me a big sigh of relief,” said Woodruff.

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  • Inside the Trump grand jury that probed election meddling

    Inside the Trump grand jury that probed election meddling

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    ATLANTA (AP) — They were led down a staircase into a garage beneath a downtown Atlanta courthouse, where officers with big guns were waiting. From there, they were ushered into vans with heavily tinted windows and driven to their cars under police escort.

    For Emily Kohrs, these were the moments last May when she realized she wasn’t participating in just any grand jury.

    “That was the first indication that this was a big freaking deal,” Kohrs told The Associated Press.

    The 30-year-old Fulton County resident who was between jobs suddenly found herself at the center of one of the nation’s most significant legal proceedings. She would become foreperson of the special grand jury selected to investigate whether then-President Donald Trump and his Republican associates illegally meddled in Georgia’s 2020 presidential election. The case has emerged as one of Trump’s most glaring legal vulnerabilities as he mounts a third presidential campaign, in part because he was recorded asking state election officials to “find 11,780 votes” for him.

    For the next eight months, Kohrs and her fellow jurors would hear testimony from 75 witnesses, ranging from some of Trump’s most prominent allies to local election workers. Portions of the panel’s final report released last Thursday said jurors believed that “one or more witnesses” committed perjury and urged local prosecutors to bring charges. The report’s recommendations for charges on other issues, including potential attempts to influence the election, remain secret for now.

    The AP identified Kohrs after her name was included on subpoenas obtained through open records requests. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney advised Kohrs and other jurors on what they could and could not share publicly, including in interviews with the news media.

    During a lengthy recent interview, Kohrs complied with the judge’s instructions not to discuss details related to the jury’s deliberations. She also declined to talk about unpublished portions of the panel’s final report.

    But her general characterizations provided unusual insight into a process that is typically cloaked in secrecy.

    Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who was on the receiving end of Trump’s pressure campaign, was “a really geeky kind of funny,” she said. State House Speaker David Ralston, who died in November, was hilarious and had the room in stitches. And Gov. Brian Kemp, who succeeded in delaying his appearance until after his reelection in November, seemed unhappy to be there.

    Kohrs was fascinated by an explainer on Georgia’s voting machines offered by a former Dominion Voting Systems executive. She also enjoyed learning about the inner workings of the White House from Cassidy Hutchinson, who Kohrs said was much more forthcoming than her old boss, former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows.

    Kohrs sketched witnesses in her notebook as they spoke and was tickled when Bobby Christine, the former U.S. attorney for Georgia’s Southern District, complimented her “remarkable talent.” When the jurors’ notes were taken for shredding after their work was done, she managed to salvage two sketches — U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham and Marc Short, who served as chief of staff to former Vice President Mike Pence — because there were no notes on those pages.

    After Graham tried so hard to avoid testifying — taking his fight all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court — Kohrs was surprised when he politely answered questions and even joked with jurors.

    Former New York mayor and Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani was funny and invoked privilege to avoid answering many questions but “genuinely seemed to consider” whether it was merited before declining to answer, she said.

    When witnesses refused to answer almost every question, the lawyers would engage in what Kohrs came to think of as “show and tell.” The lawyers would show video of the person appearing on television or testifying before the U.S. House committee that investigated the Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol, periodically asking the witness to confirm certain things. Then the scratching of pens on paper could be heard as jurors tallied how many times the person invoked the Fifth Amendment.

    At least one person who resisted answering questions became much more cooperative when prosecutors offered him immunity in front of the jurors, Kohrs said. Other witnesses came in with immunity deals already in place.

    Trump’s attorneys have said he was never asked to testify. Kohrs said the grand jury wanted to hear from the former president but didn’t have any real expectation that he would offer meaningful testimony.

    “Trump was not a battle we picked to fight,” she said.

    Kohrs didn’t vote in 2020 and was only vaguely aware of controversy swirling in the wake of the election. She didn’t know the specifics of Trump’s allegations of widespread election fraud or his efforts to reverse his loss. When prosecutors played the then-president’s phone call with Raffensperger on the first day the jurors met to consider evidence, it was the first time Kohrs had heard it.

    “I just want to find 11,780 votes, which is one more than we have,” Trump said on the call.

    Though Kohrs said she tends to agree more with Democrats, Kohrs said she doesn’t identify with any political party and prefers to listen to all opinions.

    “If I chose a political party, it would be the not-crazy party,” she said.

    Kohrs called herself a “geek about the justice system” and noted the challenges some jurors faced balancing their responsibilities on the panel with outside duties. When she eagerly volunteered to be foreperson, she met no resistance from her fellow jurors, who were less enthusiastic about the time-consuming obligation stretching before them, she said.

    One of her first duties as foreperson was to sign a big stack of subpoenas.

    As the proceedings played out, one of her fellow jurors brought the newspaper every day and pointed out stories about the investigation. Prosecutors, Kohrs said, told jurors they could consume news coverage related to the case but urged them to keep an open mind.

    Kohrs said she mostly avoided stories related to the proceedings to avoid forming an opinion.

    “I didn’t want to characterize anyone before they walked in the room,” she said. “I felt they all deserved an impartial listener.”

    Of the 26 people on the panel — 23 jurors and three alternates — 16 had to be present for a quorum. There was a core group of between 12 and 16 who showed up almost every day they were in session, Kohrs said, and she could recall only one day when they couldn’t proceed because not enough seats were filled. The most they ever had in the room was 22 — on the day Giuliani testified.

    As the months passed, the grand jurors grew more comfortable with each other and with the four lawyers on Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ team who led the proceedings. But they’re not all best friends now that it’s over.

    “We are not meeting up now. We don’t have a group chat,” Kohrs said.

    While the jurors asked to hear from certain witnesses, most witnesses were decided upon by the district attorney’s office. But Kohrs said she didn’t feel as though prosecutors were trying to influence the jurors’ final report.

    “I fully stand by our report as our decision and our conclusion,” she said.

    ___

    Follow the AP’s coverage of investigations related to former President Donald Trump at https://apnews.com/hub/trump-investigations.

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  • CBS Evening News, February 20, 2023

    CBS Evening News, February 20, 2023

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    CBS Evening News, February 20, 2023 – CBS News


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    Biden makes unannounced visit to Ukraine; Octogenarians to travel around the world in 80 days

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  • Former President Jimmy Carter receiving hospice care

    Former President Jimmy Carter receiving hospice care

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    Former President Jimmy Carter receiving hospice care – CBS News


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    After a series of short hospital stays, former President Jimmy Carter decided to spend his remaining time at home in hospice care, the Carter Center said over the weekend. Since then, tributes to Carter have been pouring in. Robert Costa spoke with Carter’s personal pastor shortly after he visited the former president.

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  • At 98 years old, former President Jimmy Carter decides to seek hospice care

    At 98 years old, former President Jimmy Carter decides to seek hospice care

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    At 98 years old, former President Jimmy Carter decides to seek hospice care – CBS News


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    In a statement, the Carter Center revealed that 98-year-old former President Jimmy Carter has “decided to spend his remaining time at home with his family and receive hospice care.” Robert Costa reports from Carter’s hometown of Plains, Georgia.

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  • CBS Weekend News, February 19, 2023

    CBS Weekend News, February 19, 2023

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    CBS Weekend News, February 19, 2023 – CBS News


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    Former President Jimmy Carter honored in his hometown; Acting FAA administrator calls for aviation safety review following Senate panel grilling

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  • Former GOP Official Predicts Fox News’ Coverage Will Have Lasting Consequences

    Former GOP Official Predicts Fox News’ Coverage Will Have Lasting Consequences

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    Former Georgia Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan (R) offered his two cents on the damage Fox News has done with its “fanning of the flames of all these conspiracy theories” on its network.

    Duncan weighed the consequences of the network’s coverage on the Republican Party – and on viewers – during a “State of the Union” panel on Sunday.

    “What happened on Fox News was hard for the Republican party, right?” Duncan said.

    “It allowed, it might take a decade to unwind some of those, the fanning of the flames of all these conspiracy theories and it was painful to watch and listen to.”

    He added that all media outlets need to find a better balance in managing a for-profit business operation with its mission of sharing the news.

    Karen Finney, a spokesperson for Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidential campaign, also weighed in on the panel and slammed Fox News for promoting “lies that led to violence” like that seen during the Jan. 6 attack.

    “We are still in a country that is largely divided around whether or not you believe the 2020 election was legitimate,” Finney said.

    “Fox News – ‘news’ – has been part of creating that divisive part of America and it’s shameful, frankly.”

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  • Former President Jimmy Carter honored in his hometown

    Former President Jimmy Carter honored in his hometown

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    Former President Jimmy Carter honored in his hometown – CBS News


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    Jimmy Carter’s legacy was celebrated Sunday by his family and community in his hometown of Plains, Georgia. The 98-year-old former president has entered hospice care. Robert Costa reports.

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  • Lawsuit is latest evidence of bogus ‘stolen election’ claims

    Lawsuit is latest evidence of bogus ‘stolen election’ claims

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    Two years after former President Donald Trump’s false claims about widespread election fraud sparked an attack on the U.S. Capitol, more evidence is piling up that those who spread the misinformation knew it was false.

    On Thursday, the voting machine company Dominion filed court papers documenting that numerous Fox News personalities knew there was no evidence to support the claims peddled by Trump’s allies, but aired them anyway on the nation’s most-watched cable network. The same day, a special grand jury in Atlanta concluded there was no evidence of the fraud that Trump alleged cost him Georgia during the 2020 election.

    In December, the congressional Jan. 6 committee disclosed that Trump’s top advisers and even family members repeatedly warned him that the allegations he was making about fraud costing him reelection were false — only to have the president continue making those claims, anyway.

    The latest revelations are not just historical curiosities. They add to the wealth of evidence that there was no widespread fraud during the 2020 presidential election and that even some of Trump’s most prominent supporters were aware of that fact at the time.

    Trump has announced he’s running for president again in 2024 and continues to repeat the lie that he lost in 2020 only because of fraud and irregularities.

    “It demonstrates a profound cynicism about the political process and the gullibility of Trump’s supporters,” said Rick Hasen, a law professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, who has followed the election falsehoods closely since 2020.

    “It’s really playing with fire,” Hasen said. “It’s one thing to make extravagant and unsupported statements about someone’s position on taxes or immigration.” But doing the same about the actual process of voting and counting ballots is different, he said: “Lies about elections are much more dangerous than lies about actual policy.”

    From the beginning, it was clear that Trump’s assertions of widespread fraud were false.

    Trump’s own attorney general told him there was no evidence of significant wrongdoing related to the election. He and his supporters filed dozens of lawsuits and lost all but one of them — a bid to reduce the time voters had to correct errors on Pennsylvania mail ballots.

    Trump claimed that fraud cost him wins in key swing states that determined the White House — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. But, repeatedly, reviews of the vote tallies or Republican-controlled investigations in those states turned up no evidence that had happened.

    In Michigan, an investigation by the GOP-controlled state Senate found no widespread fraud and debunked several false claims of irregularities from Trump allies. In Nevada, the Republican secretary of state said there was no evidence of significant errors in the election. In Wisconsin, an audit from the nonpartisan Legislative Audit Bureau — which reports to the Republican-controlled Legislature — found the election there was “safe and secure.”

    In Georgia, where Trump’s efforts to overturn the results is being investigated, the 2020 ballots were counted three times — each tally confirming Biden’s win. That included a hand recount of the 5 million ballots cast in the presidential race.

    In Arizona, a months-long, error-riddled review of ballots in the state’s largest county, Maricopa, that was run by election conspiracy theorists ended by finding that Biden had won by a slightly larger margin than official results showed. The review was not more reliable than the official tally by Republican-run Maricopa County, which has repeatedly said there were no irregularities in the 2020 election there.

    The latest revelation that people spreading Trump’s false claims knew there was no evidence to support them comes from a court filing in a defamation suit filed by Dominion Voting Systems against Fox News. Dominion’s machines were the targets of Trump and other conspiracy theorists’ allegations in late 2020 and last year, including the contention that they had been rigged by an international cabal seeking to defeat Trump.

    In its latest filing, Dominion cites texts and emails between prominent Fox personalities who did not believe the allegations or the people closest to Trump who spread them most aggressively, former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani and attorney Sidney Powell.

    The Dominion filing alleges that the network was initially cautious about fraud claims, with its top anchor, Bret Baier, privately stating two days after the 2020 election “there is NO evidence of election fraud.”

    But after Powell and Giuliani began making allegations about fraud that were picked up by conservative competitors, executives and top hosts started worrying about losing viewers to the conservative network Newsmax, which repeatedly aired unrebutted allegations from Trump’s side. Fox started inviting the two Trump allies on their shows and top executives pushed back on news reporters who tried to fact-check the allegations.

    “Sidney Powell is lying” about having evidence of election fraud, Tucker Carlson told a producer about the attorney on Nov. 16, 2020, according to an excerpt from an exhibit that remains under seal. Two days later, according to the filing, Carlson told fellow Fox News host Laura Ingraham, “Our viewers are good people and they believe it.”

    The next day, the lawsuit notes, Carlson addressed the issue on his show less bluntly: “Maybe Sidney Powell will come forward soon with details on exactly how this happened, and precisely who did it. … We are certainly hopeful that she will.”

    Fox, in response, filed a counterclaim against Dominion alleging it was trying to chill coverage of a political controversy and that it aired denials of the allegations from Dominion and its representatives.

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  • 9 children were injured in a shooting during an altercation at a Georgia gas station, including a 5-year-old boy who was struck by gunfire | CNN

    9 children were injured in a shooting during an altercation at a Georgia gas station, including a 5-year-old boy who was struck by gunfire | CNN

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     — 

    Nine boys and girls under the age of 18 were wounded in a shooting at a Columbus, Georgia, gas station – including a 5-year-old boy who was struck by gunfire while there with a family member Friday night, authorities said.

    The gunfire broke out when a group of minors attending a nearby party got into an altercation and went over to the Shell gas station’s parking lot shortly after 10 p.m., Columbus Police Chief Freddie Blackmon said Saturday.

    Seven boys and two girls sustained non-life-threating injuries in the incident, Blackmon said in a Saturday news conference. Four of those injured have already been released from the hospital, he added.

    Blackmon said the oldest person wounded was 17 years old and the youngest was the 5-year-old boy.

    It’s unknown what prompted the altercation. Blackmon said there was no indication that the wounded 5-year-old was targeted.

    It’s also unclear who opened fire, how many weapons were involved and how many shots were fired.

    While some of the witnesses who were at the scene are cooperating with police, others are not, Blackmon said.

    Blackmon encouraged parents to get information from their children if they were at the shooting and share it with police. It’s unclear if any of the minors’ parents were at the gas station when shots were fired, he said.

    No charges have been announced as of Saturday afternoon and no one has been identified, given the ages of those involved.

    Instances like this will not be tolerated, Blackmon said.

    “As I always say, it takes our entire community to combat gun violence in our city. Especially when it involves children,” Blackmon said. “It takes our entire village. All of us have a responsibility because instances like this really impacts all of us.”

    Columbus Mayor Skip Henderson called the shooting “particularly horrific and particularly troubling” given the ages and numbers of those involved.

    “Our prayers are with all of these young people that are injured and certainly all of their families,” Henderson said. “Because even though we are so fortunate and grateful to God that we didn’t have anybody lose their life, it changed a lot of lives that night of those kids and the people charged with taking care of them.”

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  • Nine minors injured in Georgia gas station shooting, police said

    Nine minors injured in Georgia gas station shooting, police said

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    10 years since Sandy Hook shooting


    What has changed in 10 years since the Sandy Hook school shooting?

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    Nine children and teenagers were shot and injured in a shooting in Columbus, Georgia on Friday night. 

    Police were called to a Shell Gas Station on Warm Springs Road shortly after 10:00 p.m. local time. According to a statement from the police department, officers found “several gunshot victims and a large group of people.” 

    The nine victims have not been identified by name, but police shared their ages. A five-year-old boy is the youngest victim. Also wounded were a 12-year-old boy, two 13-year-old girls, a 13-year-old boy, a 14-year-old boy, two 15-year-old boys, and one seventeen-year-old boy. 

    All are being treated at local hospitals for non-life-threatening injuries. 

    Police have not released any information about the shooter. No arrests have been made at this time, police said. 

    Police have not said what led to the violence. It’s also not clear what relationships the children had with each other.

    “The rash of gun violence involving our youth is impacting communities across the country. While Columbus is not immune to these incidents, I want to assure citizens that the men and women of CPD are tirelessly working to get violent offenders off our streets,” said Chief Freddie Blackmon in a statement shared on Facebook. “It is going to take a community effort to combat gun violence in our city. The entire village has a responsibility because incidents like this impacts all of us.” 

    This is a breaking news story. Check back for updates.


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