Atlanta-area DA says Lindsey Graham testimony ‘crucial’ to investigation

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The Fulton County District Attorney’s Office wrote in a court filing Friday that Graham should have to appear to testify before the county’s special purpose grand jury next week because he is “crucial” to its investigation and “not simply because he possesses necessary and material information but also because he is expected to provide information regarding additional scources of relevant information.”

It went on to say that “delaying the Senator’s testimony would not simply postpone his appearance; it would also delay the revelation of an entire category of relevant witnesses or information.”

The filing was in response to Graham’s attempts to get a federal judge to stay a decision requiring him to appear before the special purpose grand jury until he can appeal.

Graham has argued that he should not be forced to testify before the grand jury, which is investigating efforts to overturn the 2020 result in Georgia — which saw Democrat Joe Biden narrowly win the state — because his actions surrounding the state’s election were related to legislative activity as then-chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee and should be protected under the Constitution’s speech and debate clause.

The judge had given Fulton County prosecutors until Friday at 9 a.m. to respond to Graham’s motion to stay her ruling.

In their response, Georgia prosecutors argued, “Given the possibility that Senator Graham’s testimony could reveal additional routes of inquiry, staying remand and enjoining his appearance at this stage could ultimately delay the resolution of the (Special Purpose Grand Jury)’s entire investigation.”

“The public interest is served by allowing Senator Graham’s appearance to proceed, ensuring the efficient continuation of the Special Purpose Grand Jury’s investigation,” Chief Senior Assistant District Attorney F. McDonald Wakeford wrote.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, a Democrat who is leading the investigation into former President Donald Trump and his allies, has said in court filings that Graham’s actions appear interconnected with Trump and that the grand jury needed to hear from the senator about at least two calls he made to Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and his staff in the wake of the 2020 election.
On Monday, Atlanta-based federal Judge Leigh Martin May denied Graham’s motion to quash his subpoena. May, an Obama appointee, wrote in her decision to deny that there were “considerable areas of inquiry” that were not legislative in nature when the senator placed the two calls to Raffensperger’s office.
On Wednesday, Graham and his attorneys asked a separate federal judge to issue a stay on the ruling so he does not have to appear before the grand jury on August 23. In a court filing, they wrote that Graham “will suffer irreparable harm if forced to appear before his appeal concludes.”

“[He] should not be afforded the opportunity to increase that delay while he continues to advance arguments that he is not subject to subpoena at all,” Wakeford wrote in the Fulton County district attorney’s response on Friday.

“The District Attorney asks that this Court deny Senator Graham’s motion in order that he, for a single day, can assist them in that great task without further delay. The People have requested Senator Graham’s testimony and stand ready to receive it. All that is left is for the Senator to meet them,” Wakeford added.

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