The final major legal assault Democrats were clinging to in Georgia has officially imploded. On Wednesday, a key state official moved to dismantle the election-interference case against President Donald Trump—effectively shuttering the last remaining courtroom effort the left hoped would derail him heading into 2025. What was once hyped as a sweeping RICO prosecution has now fizzled out with barely a spark left.
Peter Skandalakis, who serves as the executive director of the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia, filed the request to have the case dismissed. His action comes years after Fulton County prosecutors unveiled their sprawling indictments against Trump and several of his advisers. Now, after conducting his own independent review, Skandalakis has determined the case simply did not hold up.
According to reporting from The Wall Street Journal, his examination began Nov. 14 and centered primarily on the racketeering accusations engineered by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis. Her office spent years portraying ordinary legal and political actions by Trump’s team as criminal activity, but the latest review dismantles much of that narrative.
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