Former President Donald Trump could face his first charges for trying to overturn the results of the 2020 election as early as this month.
On Friday, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis told the Associated Press that she expects to come to a decision on whether her office will charge the former president by June 30 for allegedly attempting to overthrow the results in Georgia.
“I certainly think that in the first half of the year that decision will be made,” Willis said.
Willis has been investigating Trump’s efforts to intervene in Georgia’s 2020 election for more than 16 months. Trump lost the state by a narrow margin of 0.23 points.
The district attorney has ramped up her investigation in recent months, interviewing more than four dozen people in the state and reportedly subpoenaing a number of state officials, including Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, who recently won the GOP nomination for re-election despite Trump’s efforts to replace him for failing to help him “find 11,780 votes.”
Earlier this year, Willis was granted approval for a special grand jury and has requested backup security from the FBI amid her investigation, citing the January 6 Capitol riot. But she has held off on having witnesses testify before the jury.
“I don’t want anyone to say ‘oh, she’s doing this because she wants to influence the outcome of this upcoming election,'” Willis, a Democrat, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution about waiting until after the state’s primaries. “The people will decide the outcome of this upcoming election. It will have nothing to do with this district attorney’s office.”
She also previously told Atlanta’s WSB-TV2 in February,”Anyone who violates the law will be prosecuted, no matter what their social status is. No matter what their economics are, no matter what their race or gender is. We are not going to treat anyone differently.”