Face it folks. When it all comes to light, impeachment may not be good enough for this rotten bastard.
Is anyone surprised?
But I guess if your supporters allow you to get away with grabbing pussies, you can get away with anything.
 Chickens coming home to roost.
The headlines could read: THE DEVIL WENT DOWN BECAUSE OF GEORGIA
  
https://www.washingtonpost.com/polit...356_story.html
‘Find  the fraud’: Trump pressured a Georgia elections investigator in a  separate call legal experts say could amount to obstruction
       Amy Gardner
                9-11 minutes
       
                        President  Trump urged Georgia’s lead elections investigator to “find the fraud”  in a lengthy December phone call, saying the official would be a  “national hero,”  according to an individual familiar with the call who  spoke on the condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the  conversation.
 Trump placed the call to the  investigations chief for the Georgia secretary of state’s office shortly  before Christmas — while the individual was leading an inquiry into  allegations of ballot fraud in Cobb County, in the suburbs of Atlanta,  according to people familiar with the episode.
The  president’s attempts to intervene in an ongoing investigation could  amount to obstruction of justice or other criminal violations, legal  experts said, though they cautioned a case could be difficult to prove.
Secretary  of State Brad Raffensperger had launched the inquiry following  allegations that Cobb election officials had improperly accepted mail  ballots with signatures that did not match those on file — claims that  state officials ultimately concluded had no merit.
 In  an interview with The Washington Post on Friday, Raffensperger  confirmed that Trump had placed the Dec. 23 call. He said he was not  familiar with the specifics of what the president said in the  conversation with his chief investigator, but said it was inappropriate  for Trump to have tried to intervene in the case.
“That  was an ongoing investigation,” Raffensperger said. “I don’t believe  that an elected official should be involved in that process.”
The  Post is withholding the name of the investigator, who did not respond  to repeated requests for comment, because of the risk of threats and  harassment directed at election officials.
The White House did not respond to requests for comment.
Since  Election Day, Trump has made at least three calls to government  officials in Georgia in an attempt to subvert President-elect Joe  Biden’s victory, beginning with a 
conversation with Gov. Brian Kemp (R) in early December to berate him for certifying the state’s election results.
The  president is furious with both Raffensperger and Kemp, who have refused  to echo his claims that the election was rigged. He has complained that  they betrayed him after he endorsed both of their 2018 elections. At a  rally Wednesday in Washington, shortly before his supporters ransacked  the Capitol, he attacked them personally onstage, calling the two men  “corrupt.”
As Congress was set to certify Joe Biden’s victory, President Trump gave a speech filled with falsehoods. (The Washington Post)
Trump’s call to the chief investigator occurred more than a week before he spent an hour on the phone with Raffensperger, pushing him to  overturn the vote. In that Jan. 2 conversation, the president  alternately berated the secretary of state, tried to flatter him, begged  him to act and threatened him with vague criminal consequences if the  fellow Republican refused to pursue his false claims, at one point  warning that he was taking “a big risk.”
Legal experts 
said Trump’s  call to the secretary of state may have broken state or federal laws  that bar the solicitation of election fraud or prohibit participating in  a conspiracy against people exercising their civil rights.
Trump’s  earlier call to the chief investigator could also carry serious  criminal implications, according to several former prosecutors, who said  that the president may have violated laws against bribery or  interfering with an ongoing probe.
“Oh my god, of  course that’s obstruction — any way you cut it,” said Nick Akerman, a  former federal prosecutor in New York and a onetime member of the  Watergate prosecution team, responding to a description of Trump’s  conversation with the investigator.
Akerman said he  would be “shocked” if Trump didn’t commit a crime of obstruction under  the Georgia statutes. He said the fact that the president took the time  to identify the investigator, obtain a phone number and then call “shows  that he’s trying to influence the outcome of what’s going on.”
However,  such cases can be difficult to prove, and legal experts said the  decision to prosecute Trump — even after he leaves office — would be a  politically fraught one.
Robert James, a former  prosecutor in DeKalb County, Ga., said that proving obstruction would  hinge on what Trump said and the tone he used, as well as whether the  president’s intentions were clear.
Without the  audio of the call, it would be more difficult to prove wrongdoing, he  said. The later call with Raffensperger is more damning, he said,  because of the power of the audio that was made public.
“He says, ‘Go find me some votes.’ That can clearly be interpreted as asking someone to break the law,” James said.
In the wake of the Capitol siege by Trump supporters, Democratic House leaders said Friday they were 
preparing articles of impeachment that  they planned to vote on as soon as early next week. While they were  focused primarily on Trump’s role in inciting a violent mob to storm the  Capitol, 
an early draft circulated Friday  also mentioned Trump’s call to Raffensperger as an example of “prior  efforts to subvert and obstruct” the certification of the 2020 election.
Raffensperger 
briefly mentioned Trump’s  December call to the chief investigator in an interview with ABC’s  “Good Morning America” earlier this week. But the details of the  conversation had not been previously reported.
On  the call, Trump sounded much like he did while talking to Raffensperger,  according to the person familiar with the discussion — meandering from  flattery to frustration and back again.
 It was one  in a series of personal interventions by Trump and his allies in Georgia  since the November election. The president has obsessed about his  defeat in the state and expressed disbelief to aides that he could have  lost while other Republicans won.
It is unclear how  the president tracked down the chief elections investigator. Before his  Jan. 2 call to Raffensperger, Trump had tried to reach the secretary of  state at least 18 times, but the calls were patched to interns in the  press office who thought it was a prank and did not realize the  president was on the line, as The Post 
previously reported. White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows ultimately arranged the conference call between Trump, Raffensperger and their aides.
That conversation followed previous inquiries to state officials by Trump allies.
In mid-November, Sen. Lindsey O. Graham (R-S.C.) 
reached out to Raffensperger  to inquire about whether entire counties’ mail ballots could be tossed  if an audit found high rates of mismatched signatures in those  jurisdictions.
Raffensperger told The Post at the  time that Graham appeared to be suggesting that he find a way to toss  legally cast ballots. Graham denied that, calling that characterization  “ridiculous.”
Then in late December, Meadows traveled to Cobb County to see for himself how the ballot-signature audit was proceeding.
Meadows  said he was not trying to interfere with the investigation but just  wanted to “talk outside of the tweets,” Jordan Fuchs, the deputy  secretary of state, said at the time.
Meadows was  not allowed in the room where the audit was occurring, Fuchs said, but  he was able to peer through the window of the door.
Trump called the chief investigator the following day.
Raffensperger  announced the audit on Dec. 14 after allegations surfaced that ballots  were accepted in Cobb County without proper verification of voter  signatures on the envelopes.
No evidence has  emerged of widespread signature-matching anomalies in Cobb or elsewhere  in Georgia. Raffensperger ordered the audit, he said, because his office  pursues all allegations of election irregularities.
“Conducting  this audit does not in any way suggest that Cobb County was not  properly following election procedures or properly conducting signature  matching,” Chris Harvey, Raffensperger’s director of elections, said at  the time. “We chose Cobb County for this audit because they are well  known to have one of the best election offices in the state, and  starting in Cobb will help us as we embark on a statewide signature  audit.”
If large numbers of mismatched envelope  signatures had been discovered, it would have been impossible to pair  those envelopes with the ballots they contained, which are separated to  protect voter privacy as required in the Georgia Constitution.
In  the end, Raffensperger’s investigations team, working alongside the  Georgia Bureau of Investigation, found just two nonmatching signatures  among more than 15,000 examined during the audit in Cobb County. The  audit concluded on Dec. 29, six days after the president called the  chief investigator.
Trump was steaming about the outcome of the inquiry when he spoke to Raffensperger on Jan. 2.
“Why  can’t we have professionals do it instead of rank amateurs who will  never find anything and don’t want to find anything?” the president  said, according to 
audio obtained  by The Post. “They don’t want to find, you know they don’t want to find  anything. Someday you’ll tell me the reason why, because I don’t  understand your reasoning, but someday you’ll tell me the reason why.”