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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
National
Tamar Hallerman, Bill Rankin and Wilborn P. Nobles III

Gov. Kemp testifies before Georgia grand jury on 2020 election; Flynn fights summons

ATLANTA — Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp testified for roughly three hours Tuesday before the Fulton County special grand jury examining whether former President Donald Trump and his allies criminally meddled in the state's 2020 elections.

The Republican, who cruised to reelection last week, is the highest-ranking state official to appear before the 23-person grand jury, which was convened in May to aid Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis with her criminal investigation.

Kemp’s closed-door testimony came hours before attorneys for another witness, Michael Flynn, were set to argue that a Sarasota, Florida, judge should reject a Fulton County summons seeking to compel the former Trump national security adviser to travel to Atlanta.

Willis’ “assertion that Gen. Flynn is a material witness is based on nothing more than innuendo, speculation, and hearsay,” Flynn’s lawyer, Jared J. Roberts, wrote in a Monday court filing.

The maneuvering came as the grand jury ramped up its public activities following a monthlong quiet period before the November elections.

U.S. Sen. Lindsey Graham and former White House counsel Eric Herschmann are expected to testify in the days ahead, and CNN has reported that former White House aide Cassidy Hutchinson is slated to appear Wednesday. Hutchinson’s attorney did not return a request for comment.

Meanwhile, another witness, former Georgia Congressman and House Speaker Newt Gingrich, moved to appeal a recent Virginia judge’s ruling that compelled him to testify in Georgia.

In downtown Atlanta, Kemp entered the Fulton courthouse through an underground entrance, bypassing the reporters assembled in the brisk, drizzly weather. His office declined to make him available afterward for an interview.

His blockbuster appearance represented a hard-fought victory for the DA’s office, which had been angling for Kemp’s testimony for a year and a half.

Kemp had been ordered to appear “some date soon after” the election by a Fulton Superior Court judge in August.

He’s considered a central witness to the investigation, which Willis launched in February 2021.

In late 2020, Kemp faced a barrage of attacks from Trump and his allies after he refused their calls to illegally convene a special session of the state legislature to undo Democrat Joe Biden’s narrow victory in Georgia. Kemp said that state law barred him from “interfering.”

Kemp subsequently became a frequent punching bag at Trump rallies. The president said he was “ashamed” to have endorsed Kemp in 2018, and recruited former U.S. Sen. David Perdue to wage an ultimately doomed primary challenge against him.

Unlike Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, whose Jan. 2, 2021, conversation with Trump was recorded, the details of Kemp’s behind-the-scenes interactions with the commander in chief are largely unknown.

Fulton prosecutors previously said they were interested in questioning Kemp about the identities of the people who tried to get in touch with him following the 2020 elections; the contents of phone calls Kemp had with Trump or his associates; evidence the Trump campaign provided in support of its theory that Georgia’s election was rigged; whether Trump specifically sought a special election or other relief; and any threats that might have been made.

A spokesman for the Fulton DA’s office did not respond to a request for comment.

With his reelection campaign behind him — a victory he secured without Trump’s help — some observers suggested that Kemp might have been more open to answering questions from jurors and prosecutors. Just how forthcoming he was, however, isn’t known since grand jury proceedings are secret.

Kemp’s testimony on Tuesday was the result of a contentious court battle earlier this summer.

He had initially cooperated voluntarily with the investigation, agreeing to a July 25 taped interview under oath. But communications soured between his team and prosecutors over the summer, according to internal emails shared in August court filings. When the two sides couldn’t agree on ground rules for the interview, Kemp’s aides called it off, and the governor was subpoenaed shortly thereafter.

The day before Kemp was scheduled to appear before the grand jury on Aug. 18, the governor’s attorney moved to quash the subpoena, arguing that it was a politically-motivated summons designed to hurt Kemp less than 90 days before the election by Willis, a Democrat. His counsel also argued that Kemp was shielded from testifying due to sovereign immunity, executive privilege and attorney-client privilege.

Fulton Judge Robert McBurney, who is overseeing the grand jury and has worked to insulate it from appearing overly partisan, rejected Kemp’s argument that he shouldn’t have to testify. But he said Kemp’s testimony could be delayed until after his rematch with Democratic rival Stacey Abrams.

McBurney also clarified in August that Kemp is facing no accusations of criminal activity as part of the investigation.

It’s rare for a sitting governor to be subpoenaed, particularly for a criminal investigation. But the grand jury has already heard from the state’s three other top GOP officials: Raffensperger, Lt. Gov. Geoff Duncan and Attorney General Chris Carr.

Flynn, meanwhile, was summoned to testify by the grand jury last month.

A former U.S. Army lieutenant general, Flynn served briefly as national security adviser under Trump in early 2017. But later that year, he pleaded guilty to making false statements to the FBI during special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election. Trump granted Flynn a full pardon in 2020.

Flynn’s summons cites comments he made during an appearance on Newsmax a month after his pardon. During the interview, he said Trump “could order — within the swing states, if he wanted to — he could take military capabilities, and he could place them in those states and basically re-run an election in each of those states.”

In the material witness certificate, which will essentially function as a subpoena if approved by the Sarasota judge, Fulton prosecutors noted that the day after the Newsmax interview Flynn was at the White House meeting with Trump campaign officials and attorney Sidney Powell. Media reports have said the meeting focused on invoking martial law, seizing voting machines and appointing Powell as special counsel to investigate the 2020 election, none of which happened.

In his court filing, Roberts argued that Flynn couldn’t be compelled to travel to Georgia because the grand jury lacks indictment powers and is thus civil, not criminal, in nature. He also said that Florida does not have an equivalent to Georgia’s special grand juries.

“Sister states grant comity to one another’s laws, with the assurance that there are reciprocal protections for their citizens,” Roberts wrote. “In the case of Georgia’s (special purpose grand jury), there is no reciprocity, and there should be no comity.”

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(Atlanta Journal-Constitution staff writer Greg Bluestein contributed to this report.)

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