Fani Willis, the district attorney for Fulton County, gets into a heated argument with Harrison Floyd, one of the co-defendants in the criminal racketeering case brought against former President Donald Trump.
Willis is leading the lawsuit, which is centered on claims pertaining to Trump’s “efforts to overturn the 2020 election results” inside the state. According to Newsweek, Willis told Floyd to “shut his mouth” during the hearings. The court had already denied her plea to have Floyd imprisoned due to his social media usage.
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“It is unfair to those witnesses,” Willis stated in court on Tuesday. “And there are real consequences for allowing defendants to intimidate witnesses.”
Floyd, a former member of Black Voices for Trump, is presently being prosecuted for his alleged role in a campaign of harassment against Ruby Freeman, an Atlanta poll worker. Floyd is alleged to have violated his release arrangement by using social media to intimidate witnesses, according to prosecutor Willis. This August deal, made following Floyd’s five-day incarceration, expressly forbids him from getting in touch with any of his co-defendants or any witnesses.
“What’s going on in that jail, I’ve seen worse conditions in Iraq,” Floyd had previously in the year told Greg Kelly. “When I went to my cell for the first time, there was fecal matter smeared on one of the walls. The first morning that I woke up, the guy in the cell next to me was being tased.”
Floyd’s violation of his bond terms was accepted by Judge Scott McAfee; but, in spite of Willis’s protests, the bond had to be modified in order to address the complexities of social media interactions.
In his case about electoral meddling, Trump fiercely refutes all allegations, including those of racketeering and lying. Floyd was a devoted Trump fan who was instrumental in helping the outgoing president challenge the results of the 2020 election in Georgia.
Among the 19 defendants in the case, Floyd was the only one without a consent bond order. If he’d been given one, he could have made a plea and gone. This information was also validated by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.
Floyd posted a video of himself driving into Atlanta on social media the day he turned himself in. The video’s description said as much: “Lord Protect Me While Im in These Streets.”
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Floyd is accused of manipulating witnesses, conspiring to get false statements, and breaking Georgia’s RICO Act. He attempted to force an election worker to admit wrongdoing, according to the indictment.
Floyd was charged earlier this year for an altercation that happened in February. He was charged with attacking an FBI agent who had been to his Rockville, Maryland, house to serve him with a subpoena, according to The Washington Post.
A Subpoena reveals the Special Prosecutor’s Intense Probe Into Trump. Amid the dubious identifications of the agents, defense asserts self-defense. Georgia Filed RICO Statute Charges to Bring Serious Racketeering Charges Against Several Crimes.





People are sick and tired of the bullying by these crooked DA’s and the FBI. They make up bogus charges and then bully one until he is forced to defend himself. Fani needs to shut her Fani looking mouth.