Special counsel zeroes in on Trump’s false election claims: report

The special counsel investigating former President Donald Trump’s role in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot is concentrating on whether he and his associates ripped off donors by boosting incorrect allegations of voter fraud in the 2020 election, according to a report. 

Jack Smith’s office has sent out a slew of subpoenas since the beginning of March to a number of Trump’s advisers, campaign aides, Republican political operatives and consultants involved in the 76-year-old’s failed re-election campaign, the Washington Post reported on Wednesday.

Along with seeking fundraising documents, a number of former Trump aides have testified to a Washington grand jury, including former senior White House adviser Stephen Miller and former acting deputy secretary of Homeland Security Ken Cuccinelli, the newspaper said. 

The fundraising part of Smith’s investigation is scrutinizing money raised between Nov. 3, 2020, and Jan. 20, 2021, when Trump left the White House, to determine whether the campaign violated wire fraud laws that make it illegal to send false claims via email with the intent to defraud people. 

The subpoenas targeted communications that will allow investigators to compare what Trump aides were telling each other about the veracity of the election and what they were repeating in the fundraising appeals to conservative donors.


Donald Trump speaks at a campaign rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25.
AFP via Getty Images

The newspaper pointed out that a report from the House select committee investigating the Capitol riot concluded that the Trump campaign and the Republican National Committee’s fundraising operation raked in $250 million between the November election and Jan. 6 and that up to 25 emails a day were sent to supporters during that time.

The fundraising appeals claimed the election was “rigged” and that Democrats had tried to steal the presidency from Trump. 

A federal judge in March shot down Trump’s claim of executive privilege, clearing the way for more former Trump aides, like one-time White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, to testify before the grand jury. 


Special counsel Jack Smith is investigating whether Donald Trump's aides and associates raised money after the 2020 election by promoting false claims of voter fraud.
Special counsel Jack Smith is investigating whether Donald Trump’s aides and associates raised money after the 2020 election by promoting false claims of voter fraud.
AP

Apart from the Capitol riot, Smith is also investigating the handling of classified documents found at Trump’s Mar-a-Lago Florida resort and whether the 45th president obstructed justice in that case. 

That probe is said to be further along than the investigation into Jan. 6, the report said. 

Trump also faces a 34-count felony indictment in Manhattan over a hush-money payment before the 2016 election to porn star Stormy Daniels and a grand jury investigation in Georgia over his attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 election in the Peach State.

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Trump sends out fundraising appeal hours before his arraignment

Former President Donald Trump ​​blasted out a fundraising appeal to his supporters ahead of his arraignment Tuesday, decrying the “loss of justice in America” and saying that he will be “out of commission” for a while. 

Addressing the email to “Patriot,” the 76-year-old Trump said, “today, we mourn the loss of justice in America.”

​”​Today is the day that a ruling political party ARRESTS its leading opponent for having committed NO CRIME​,” the email from the former president’s Make America Great Again campaign proclaimed. 

“As I will be out of commission for the next few hours, I want to take this moment to THANK YOU for all of your support​,” it continued. 

Trump added that he was “blown away” by the money, support and prayers he has received since Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg announced the indictment March 30. 

Since then, the 45th president has raised more than $8 million, including $4 million in the first 24 hours after charges were filed.


Donald Trump, speaking at a rally in Waco, Texas, on March 25, sent out a last-minute fundraising appeal before his scheduled arraignment on Tuesday.
Getty Images

​Trump has spent the past ​two weeks blasting Bragg’s investigation as a “political persecution” while soliciting donations from his MAGA supporters. 

The former president, ​who spent the night in New York after flying up from his Mar-a-Lago resort on Monday, also said, “it’s sad to see what’s happening – not for myself – but for our country.​ ​This is not the America you and I once knew.​”​​

He claimed the US was turning into a “Marxist Third World country that ​CRIMINALIZES dissent and IMPRISONS its political opposition​.​”​

However, Trump also implored his supporters, “do NOT lose hope in America​.”


Donald Trump’s supporters gather Tuesday outside the courthouse in lower Manhattan where the former president will appear for his arraignment.
Getty Images

“​We are a nation that declared its independence from the world’s biggest empire, won two world wars, and landed the first man on the moon. Resilience is in our blood​,” he said, adding that “we will prevail once again and WIN the White House in 2024.”​

Thanking ​his backers for their support, Trump asked: “If you can chip in, please make a contribution peacefully to SAVE AMERICA​.”​​

He signed off on the email with “Your favorite President Donald J. Trump.”​​

The email also contained a small provision.

“​(But if you’re doing poorly due to Biden’s policies, please ignore the donation request. Take care of yourself! We will soon Make America Great Again and our economy will come ROARING BACK!)​”



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