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In a detailed 23-page motion, Skandalakis made his conclusions unmistakably clear: there was not enough evidence to justify moving forward on the state’s RICO claims. After combing through the allegations and the supposed basis for the charges, his statement was blunt. He couldn’t find any legitimate grounds to proceed.
Skandalakis also emphasized another major roadblock for the prosecution—one that legal analysts have pointed out repeatedly. He stated there was “no realistic prospect that a sitting President will be compelled to appear” for any related proceedings. In other words, even the logistics of the case were fundamentally at odds with reality.
He went on to explain that his findings were rooted in a simple fact many Americans already knew: questioning an election is not a crime. Skandalakis wrote plainly that his evaluation was shaped by the understanding that it is not illegal for individuals to challenge or dispute election outcomes. Yet Democrats had spent years pretending otherwise.
The original case painted Trump and 18 co-defendants as participants in a vast criminal conspiracy—a storyline the left used repeatedly to stir panic and dominate headlines. Prosecutors argued that routine legal challenges and discussions amounted to “racketeering,” a claim that raised eyebrows from legal experts across the political spectrum. Every defendant pleaded not guilty, though four eventually struck deals with Fani Willis’ office.
Fulton County District Attorney Willis initially led the prosecution, but her involvement collapsed under scandal late last year. She was ultimately removed from the case after it was revealed she had been involved romantically with Nathan Wade, the very attorney she handpicked to help spearhead the prosecution. The revelation triggered an uproar over both ethics and financial entanglements.
Trump’s legal team forcefully argued that Willis’ personal relationship created an undeniable conflict of interest, and the court agreed. Once she was removed, the case limped forward—but now, with Skandalakis’ conclusion, even that faint momentum has vanished.
With Georgia’s RICO case now officially on its last breath, Democrats have lost the final major legal offensive they launched against Trump after he left the White House. Years of political theater, media hysteria, and taxpayer-funded investigations have ended with a simple truth: the evidence wasn’t there.
This collapse marks yet another legal victory for Trump—and a major defeat for the political operatives who hoped to weaponize the justice system to stop him.





Fani Willis is nothing but a fraud and a dumb broad.