To get news like we saw this week — where an Arizona grand jury indicted 18 allies of Donald Trump, including Mark Meadows and Rudolph W. Giuliani, over their efforts to overturn the 2020 election — takes more than dislike of Trump or Republicans.
Prosecutors are sending a warning as Donald Trump and his supporters continue to spread conspiracy theories: that disrupting elections can bear a heavy legal cost.
What is an indictment? It's an accusation of wrongdoing brought by a grand jury after its investigation. Prosecutors present evidence to a grand jury for consideration. Sometimes, people with ties to a case are subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury.
Christina Bobb is the lawyer overseeing the RNC's "election integrity" efforts. She was also just indicted by a grand jury for election-related crimes.
Prosecutors gave enough details in the indictment, dated Tuesday and posted on social media by a Politico reporter, to reveal Meadows as one of the defendants whose names are redacted.
Arizona prosecutors indicted 18 Trump allies Wednesday, reportedly charging attorneys Rudy Giuliani, Jenna Ellis, John Eastman and Christina Bobb over their efforts to overturn the 2020 election—the latest in a string of lawyers who are facing consequences for their work with former President Donald Trump.
Less than a week after the Republican National Committee unveiled a “historic” new program to monitor the polls for fraud, a top lawyer with the committee was among those indicted for an alleged scheme to use false fraud claims to overturn the results of Arizona’s presidential election.
Attorney General Kris Mayes has released the names of five more people who were indicted by a grand jury for the part they played in Arizona’s 2020 fake elector scheme to keep former President Donald Trump in the White House.
The Georgia charges came in a sprawling racketeering indictment in Fulton County in August that accused Donald Trump and 18 others of participating in a wide-ranging scheme — that included the
Donald Trump claimed at the Supreme Court he should get immunity for his acts after the 2020 election. Arizona's indictments of fake electors says otherwise.
Eleven Republicans who signed documents falsely claiming that Donald Trump won the state in 2020 are facing criminal consequences in Arizona for the first time. A state grand jury on Wednesday issued an indictment in which the electors are each charged with nine criminal counts,
So far, the state’s attorney general’s office has disclosed 11 identities of the 18 people indicted for their role in an alleged scheme to overturn the 2020 presidential election, reports
There's new reaction following the indictment of 11 fake electors in Arizona. The group of Republicans are accused of trying to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in favor of Donald Trump.
The far-reaching felony indictments in Arizona for election tampering, combined with Donald Trump's own legal problems, could hasten one or more of the accused to flip on the former president in a race with their co-conspirators to secure the best deal.
A grand jury in Arizona has returned an indictment for several close associates of former President Donald Trump as well as lower-level individuals who served as false electors in Arizona during the 2020 presidential election.
Attorney General Kris Mayes announced Wednesday that a grand jury had indicted 18 people in a fake elector scheme that aimed to install Donald Trump as president after he lost the 2020 election. Those indicted included two Arizona state senators and the former head of the Arizona Republican Party.
A n Arizona grand jury on Wednesday indicted 18 people on felony charges related to a 2020 scheme to reverse former President Donald Trump's loss in the state, Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes (D) said.
Eleven top Arizona Republicans were among 18 people indicted on felony fraud, forgery and conspiracy charges for their part in a plan to present themselves to Congress as the state's presidential electors and throw the election to Donald Trump.
NPR Scott Detrow talks with law expert Ned Foley on how nearly three dozen so-called fake electors have been charged for signing documents falsely claiming Trump won their states in 2020.
A grand jury has indicted 18 people, including two Arizona state senators and the former head of the Arizona Republican Party, in a fake elector scheme that aimed to install Donald Trump as the president after he lost the 2020 election to Joe Biden.
Arizona Attorney General Kris Mayes announced on Wednesday that a state grand jury returned an indictment against 18 individuals associated with former US President Donald Trump's effort to overturn
Eight months after a Fulton County grand jury handed up an indictment accusing former President Donald Trump and 18 of his allies of engaging in a criminal conspiracy to overturn the results of Georgia’s 2020 election,
Following Arizona’s indictment of Trump allies including Rudy Giuliani, revisit FRONTLINE’s reporting on a pressure campaign involving “fake electors.”