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Latino voters concerned about economy, feel neither party pays them close attention, poll says

Rep. Reynaldo “Rey” Martinez a Republican from Loganville, said neither party can afford not to engage with Latino voters heading into next year. (Ross Williams/Georgia Recorder)

(GA Recorder) — With less than a year to go before the 2024 election, Georgia’s Latino voters are thinking about economic issues, and while they align more with the Democratic Party on average, majorities say both parties either don’t care too much about or are hostile toward their community.

Those are some of the findings of a UnidosUS survey of Latino voters in Georgia conducted last month.

Hispanics are the second-fastest growing group of Georgians in the 2020 census, after people who identify as Black, but the major parties have often misunderstood or oversimplified them, leading to weak or no efforts to earn their votes, said Clarissa Martinez, Vice President of UnidosUS’ Latino Vote Initiative.

“In 2022, only three months before the election, a large majority of Hispanic voters in Georgia reported no outreach from either party in what was a highly competitive midterm election,” she said. “We hope that improves this cycle. Our poll today shows that both parties have work to do to better engage and expand support with Hispanic voters.”

Top 5 issues for Latino voters

Pollsters asked the respondents to list their top three most important issues, and inflation led the pack with 53%, followed by jobs and the economy at 47% and health care at 41%.

“The focus or concern about health care, it’s really about costs,” said Sylvia Manzano, vice president of operations at BSP Research, which conducted the poll. “Premiums, co-pays, deductibles, it’s not so much about quality of care, but it’s about the ability to cover those expenses, and consistent with that concern is 76% of Latino voters in Georgia support Medicaid expansion in the state.”

Rounding out the rest of the top five issues for Latino Georgia voters are crime and gun violence at 24% and immigration and border issues at 23%.

Regarding immigration, 52% said they want elected officials to provide a path to citizenship for Dreamers, or undocumented people brought to the U.S. as minors, and 51% want paths to citizenship for long-U.S.-residing undocumented immigrants. Only 29% said leaders should prioritize increasing border security, and 18% said they should finish the wall on the U.S.-Mexico border.

Only 10% of the respondents said abortion is a top issue for them, but 69% said they think it is wrong to make abortion illegal.

Party alignment

A third of those surveyed said they think Democrats would be better at addressing their top concerns, compared with 25% for Republicans. Another 16% said both parties would be equally good, and 13% said neither would be any good. Men and people over 40 were slightly more likely to say Republicans would do better on their top issues.

Across a range of issues, Georgia Latinos said they believe the Democratic Party is closer to their values, but a sizable chunk said they aren’t feeling the love back.

Overall, 43% of those polled said the Democratic Party doesn’t care too much about the Latino community, with another 11% saying they are hostile toward the community and 46% saying they care a great deal.

But if Democrats have their work cut out for them to inspire Latino voters, Republicans’ work is even more daunting.

A full half of respondents said Republicans don’t care about the Latino community and the rest were split evenly into saying Republicans do care or that they are hostile toward the community.

President Joe Biden is relatively popular with Georgia Latinos, with 48% saying they approve of his job in the White House and 42% saying they disapprove. If the election were held today, 53% said they would vote for Biden over Republican frontrunner Donald Trump, who would get 32% of the Georgia Latino vote. Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis fares slightly worse, losing to Biden 22-57.

With Georgia’s electoral votes decided by fewer than 12,000 ballots in the 2020 election, Latino voters could help decide which party is celebrating this time next year.

Need for outreach

“It is incumbent upon elected officials and policymakers to make sure that they pay attention to the needs and wants of Latino voters,” said Jerry Gonzalez, CEO of the Georgia Association of Latino Elected Officials Latino Community Development Fund. “Latino voters will be a driving force in Georgia for the 2024 election cycle, and we’ll be deciding the outcome of those elections and we’ll have national implications as well.”

State Rep. Reynaldo “Rey” Martinez, a Republican from Loganville, said neither party can afford not to engage with Latino voters heading into next year.

“We’re waiting for both parties to reach out to us. It’s very, very important,” he said. “We have a lot to offer here in Georgia; we just crossed the million population mark. We’re about 10% of the population here in Georgia. It seems like both Republicans and Democrats are now reaching out to us and are concerned.”

Martinez predicted Latinos will show up in big numbers for the election, but just like in any other community, in order to win votes, the parties will need to put in work, he said.

“I’m very excited to see what the Hispanic community is going to offer in 2024, but again, both parties have a lot more work to do to reach out, whether it’s TV ads, radio ads, messaging, attending events, showing up where the Hispanic events are and just preaching their issues, whether it’s Democrat or Republican, we need to reach out to the Hispanic community.”

Rescued: 52 animals in Northeast Georgia hoarding, breeding case

One of the dogs rescued from a breeder who fled with over 150 other animals from a location in Flowery Branch. In all, 52 dogs and cats will soon be searching for new homes. (HSNEGA/Facebook)

Animal welfare agencies rescued 52 dogs and cats from a hoarding and breeding operation in Flowery Branch.

The Humane Society of Northeast Georgia (HSNEGA) and Hall County Animal Services jointly conducted the rescue. The animals range in age from three days to eight years old. Their owner left them behind while fleeing with over 150 other dogs and cats, a Humane Society press release states.

The animals suffered varying degrees of neglect. The Humane Society’s medical team is treating them for illness and infection. Most of the cats have upper respiratory infections. Two cats, which were pregnant when rescued, are in foster care until they give birth. All of the animals are receiving preventative treatment and will be spayed or neutered before becoming available for adoption.

HSNEGA says the animals will be ready to adopt in the coming days or weeks, depending on their medical needs.

(HSNEGA/Facebook)

A ‘lifetime of neglect’

“It’s evident that all of these animals have survived a lifetime of neglect while their owner profited from cruelty,” says HSNEGA President and CEO Allison Mayfield. “Despite how they have been treated, they are eager for human interaction and affection. We are deeply grateful for the opportunity to help end this cycle of cruelty and focus on the next, better chapter of their lives.”

Groomers clean up one of the rescued cats. (HSNEGA/Facebook)

Mayfield expressed appreciation for the partnership with Hall County Animal Services and the foster families who took in some of the rescued animals. She also thanked Angel’s Pet Grooming which spent two full days bathing and shaving animals with the most severe fur issues.

“Without our network of supporters, we would be unable to step up and change the course of these innocent lives,” she says.

HSNEGA urges future pet owners to consider adopting a pet before buying from breeders or pet stores. Those who do buy their pets should seek out responsible breeders who take care of their animals and adhere to standards established by The American Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals (ASPCA).

RELATED How to Sniff out a Good Dog Breeder

For updated information on the rescued animals, follow the Humane Society of Northeast Georgia on social media.

Hall County school superintendent signs on for three more years

Hall County School Superintendent Will Schofield

The Hall County Board of Education and Superintendent Will Schofield have agreed to a three-year extension of Schofield’s current contract, which is set to end June 30, 2024.

The new contract will begin July 1, 2024, and will run through Jun 30, 2027.

Schofield’s current salary is $287,000 a year. His new contract calls for an FY25 salary of $302,000.

“This is great news to extend Mr. Schofield’s contract for another 3 years,” said Board Chair Craig Herrington.

Herrington says Hall County Schools have made “great strides” during Schofield’s tenure.

“He has expanded programs of choice and our business partnerships throughout this area. It’s been great to have someone in his position with such a passion for serving our children.”

Schofield says he appreciates the board’s confidence in him and is looking forward to staying on as superintendent.

“God has richly blessed my family by enabling us to call Hall County home, reside in this community, and for me to be of service to our families as they raise the next generation,” he says. “I am grateful for the confidence of this board, and I commit to keep working to make this school system ‘the most caring place on earth.'”

US Supreme Court asked to quickly rule on Trump claims of presidential immunity

Special Counsel Jack Smith delivers remarks on the indictment against former President Donald Trump at the Justice Department on June 9, 2023, in Washington, DC. (pool livestream image)

WASHINGTON (States Newsroom) — Department of Justice Special Counsel Jack Smith asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to expedite a decision on former President Donald Trump’s claims of presidential immunity in the 2020 election interference case.

Smith asked the justices to rule on a matter that ordinarily would first go to a lower federal appeals court, arguing that another layer of appellate action would likely mean the Supreme Court wouldn’t hear the case until its term beginning in fall 2024, delaying the trial even further.

Such a delay would push a Supreme Court decision into the heat of a general election, when Trump is favored to again be the Republican candidate for president.

A definitive answer from the Supreme Court would keep the trial slated to begin March 4, 2024, on schedule, Smith said.

“The United States recognizes that this is an extraordinary request,” Smith wrote. “This is an extraordinary case.”

In a statement from the Trump campaign, an unnamed spokesperson repeated Trump’s position that the prosecution is politically motivated.

“Crooked Joe Biden’s henchman, Deranged Jack Smith is so obsessed with interfering in the 2024 Presidential Election with the goal of preventing President Trump from retaking the Oval Office, as the President is poised to do, that Smith is willing to try for a Hail Mary by racing to the Supreme Court and attempting to bypass the appellate process,” the spokesperson said.

District court ruling

The case, one of four criminal proceedings the former president faces as he campaigns for another term in the White House, involves claims he sought to illegally overturn his reelection loss in 2020.

Earlier this month, U.S. District Court Judge Tanya Chutkan denied Trump’s motion to dismiss the case based on the argument that as a former president, he is protected from criminal prosecution and that he was already acquitted by the U.S. Senate in an impeachment trial.

Trump appealed that ruling last week to the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals, an intermediate venue between the district court and the Supreme Court, and asked the trial court to pause proceedings while the appeal is ongoing.

Trump’s legal team in early October filed a motion to dismiss the case based on presidential immunity.

The scheduling situation is similar to what courts faced as President Richard Nixon’s 1974 trial date on charges related to the Watergate scandal approached, Smith said Monday. In that case, the Supreme Court accepted prosecutors’ argument and expedited the appeal, he wrote, adding that the high court should make a similar ruling for Trump.

“It is of paramount public importance that respondent’s claims of immunity be resolved as expeditiously as possible — and, if respondent is not immune, that he receive a fair and speedy trial on these charges,” Smith wrote. “The public, respondent, and the government are entitled to nothing less.”

Prosecutors also asked the D.C. Circuit Appeals Court on Monday to expedite Trump’s appeal in that court if the Supreme Court declines to rule on the issue.

Election interference and other criminal charges

A federal grand jury indicted Trump in August on four counts for his alleged role in knowingly attempting to subvert the 2020 presidential election results through a series of illegal actions and false statements that culminated in the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.

The charges filed in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia included conspiracy to defraud the U.S.; conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding; obstruction of, and attempt to obstruct, an official proceeding; and conspiracy against rights.

The 45-page indictment details false statements that Trump and unnamed co-conspirators made about election results in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, New Mexico, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin, and the subsequent fake electors scheme the group devised for those states.

The indictment also detailed Trump’s pressure campaign on former Vice President Mike Pence to “enlist” him in overturning election results.

Trump is facing four criminal cases as well as civil proceedings over his business matters in New York state as he leads in several polls ahead of the 2024 Republican presidential primary season. With less than five weeks left before the Iowa first-in-the-nation GOP presidential caucuses, a Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom poll released Monday found Trump is the first choice of 51% of caucus-goers surveyed.

In addition to federal election fraud charges in Washington, D.C. scheduled for trial in March, Trump is facing another potential March criminal trial in New York state for alleged hush money payments to an adult film star.

The former president also faces a federal criminal trial in Florida in May over felony charges alleging he removed classified documents from the White House at the end of his presidency and improperly stored them at Mar-a-Lago, his South Florida estate.

A trial date has not been set for a Georgia indictment alleging that Trump and several co-defendants engaged in racketeering and criminal organization to interfere with 2020 presidential election results.

Attorneys for Trump did not immediately respond to a message seeking comment Monday.

Clark Lavant Whitmire

Clark Lavant Whitmire, age 61, of Mt. Airy, Georgia, crossed over into the arms of The Lord on Friday, December 8, 2023.

Mr. Whitmire was born March 7, 1962, in Hall County, Georgia, to the late Dean Talmadge Whitmire and Betty LaPrade Whitmire. In addition to his parents, he was preceded in death by his brothers, Michael Dean Whitmire and Chester McKinley “Kent” Whitmire; father-in-law, Warren “Pastor Butch” Nichols.

A proud graduate of Habersham Central High, Class of 1980, Clark Whitmire was a lifelong resident of Habersham County. Mr. Whitmire dedicated a significant portion of his life to serving his country, with an honorable four-year tenure in the United States Navy from 1980 to 1984. Following his military service, he continued his commitment to public service by working for the US Department of Agriculture, serving a total of 20 years with the US Federal Government. Additionally, he devoted eight years of his professional life to Habersham Hardware. His love for the outdoors was evident in his enjoyment of camping and fishing, pursuits that brought him joy and solace throughout his life. A voracious reader, he found pleasure in the written word and shared his passion for literature with those around him. Clark was a man of deep faith; being of the Baptist Faith, he was an ordained minister. His spiritual journey led him to actively participate in various churches and nursing home ministries, where he lovingly shared his belief in the teachings of Jesus. He had an innate ability to connect with people through humor and a genuine desire to bring laughter into their lives. Clark was a known jokester, and his laughter was infectious, leaving a lasting impact on everyone he encountered.

Survivors include his loving wife of 35 years, Caprice Whitmire, of Mt. Airy; daughter, Amanda DuBois, of Alto; daughter and daughter-in-law, Brittany and Sabrina Barrett, of Mt. Airy; grandchildren, Emily DuBois, James Barrett, and Barbara Barrett; mother-in-law, Shirley Nichols, of Alto; brother-in-law and sister-in-law, Stacy and Melissa Nichols, of Winamac, IN; and numerous nieces and nephews.

Funeral Services will be held at 2:00 p.m., Wednesday, December 13, 2023, at the Whitfield Funeral Home, North Chapel, with Pastor Devin O’Kelley and Pastor Charles Grant officiating. Interment will follow in the Friendly Mission Baptist Church Cemetery with Pastor Eric Hulsey officiating and military honors provided by the US Navy as well as the Grant Reeves Honor Guard.

The family will receive friends from 1:00 p.m. to 1:45 p.m., Wednesday, December 13, 2023, at the funeral home prior to the service.

In lieu of flowers, the family respectfully requests that memorials be made to the family, in care of Whitfield Funeral Homes, P.O. Box 1113, Cornelia, Georgia 30531.

Arrangements have been entrusted to the Whitfield Funeral Homes & Crematory, North Chapel, at 245 Central Avenue, Demorest, Georgia 30535. Telephone: 706-778-1700.

Authorities seek relatives of homeless man found dead in Gainesville

The man's body was found in the woods behind the Department of Driver Services building on Aviation Boulevard in Gainesville, Georgia, on October 14, 2023. (Source: Google maps)

Authorities are searching for relatives of a man found dead in a wooded area near the Gainesville Department of Driver Services (DDS) in October.

The Georgia Bureau of Investigation used fingerprints to identify the man. The Hall County Sheriff’s Office released his identity on December 11. Investigators say 63-year-old Scott Robert Danner was part of Gainesville’s homeless community.

“While we typically do not release identities of deceased persons prior to next of kin notification, our investigators have been unable to locate any of Mr. Danner’s relatives,” a spokesperson for the sheriff’s office explains.

A DDS client walking around the parking lot of the building on Aviation Boulevard discovered Danner’s body on Saturday, October 14. They notified DDS employees, who called 911.

Sheriff’s investigators are still waiting for the final autopsy and toxicology exam before announcing Danner’s cause of death. At this time, investigators say they do not suspect foul play.

If you are related to Danner or know someone who is, please contact HCSO investigators at 770-533-7813.

Weather impacts Monday start to school in Rabun County

(File Photo)

Rabun County schools were delayed two hours Monday morning due to downed trees and broken power poles on the roadways. Rabun County Schools Director of Operations and Facilities Jason Hogan explained that there were multiple trees down across roads throughout the county this morning due to the wind late yesterday and overnight.

Hardest hit areas

The worst location, according to Hogan, was just north of Clayton on US 441 in the “George Eller Curve” near the hospital, where trees fell onto power lines causing 5 or 6 power poles to break, blocking both north and southbound lanes of the major thoroughfare.

Mountain Lakes Medical Center Facilities Manager Brian Turner stated that the hospital never lost power.

Another area heavily impacted was the Low Gap/Lakemont area of Rabun County, where trees and power lines were down on the roadways.

As of 2:30 p.m. Monday, Georgia Power was reporting 7 outages in Rabun County, affecting 243 customers. The main areas affected were in the Lakemont and Wiley areas of Rabun County, with smaller outages affecting customers in the Mountain City area.

Storm system

The storm system that passed through northeast Georgia over the weekend brought rain and wind and spawned tornado watches in the north and central parts of the state. Temperatures dipped to below-freezing overnight Sunday after a weekend of heavy rain.

The same storm system affected western Tennessee with severe weather, where at least six people died when tornadoes touched down east of Nashville and in Clarksville, Tennessee.

TFS women’s air rifle team member best in nation in 18U category

TFS senior Brianna Walter competed at the Women's Air Rifle Olympic Qualifier in Colorado Springs, Colorado, the weekend of December 9, 2023. (TFS Athletics)

Brianna Walter’s historic season continues. The Tallulah Falls School senior over the weekend participated in a Women’s Air Rifle Olympic Team qualifying event, which featured some of the top shooters in the nation.

Walter shot a 622.4 in the 60-shot standing match, which uses a decimal system down to the tenth of a point. The event featured several current and former Olympic team members. Walter came in 30th, a few spots ahead of 26-year-old Ginny Thrasher, a Gold Medalist at the 2016 Summer Olympics in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, when she was 18. Walter’s sister and college athlete Elysa Walter was 46th with a 617.9.

Brianna Walter at Olympic Qualifier (TFS Athletics)

The following day, Walter shot a 60-shot standing PR of 1124 in Colorado Springs at the Olympic Facility. Both days combined gave her a total of 1246.4, which was good enough to win first in the Under 18 category and 20th place overall. She was only 0.4 points behind 19th place (a current Olympic Team athlete) and was 2.5 points better than another current Olympic Team member.

Her performance this weekend makes Walter the top high school 60-shot standing athlete in the nation, as even the top U18 shooter on the men’s side was 1.6 points behind her. The last Team Qualifier is in March 2024 at Fort Moore (Ft Benning), GA.

Rain can’t dampen festive spirit of Christmas in Cornelia

(Photo by Daniel Purcell/NowHabersham.com)

A smaller than usual but steady stream of visitors braved the rainy weather and turned out Saturday for Christmas in Cornelia.

Although several planned activities were canceled -no hay ride, no train ride, and no fun zone for kids – the festive downtown celebration still sparkled with Christmas lights and good cheer.

People shopped late into the evening at local shops offering discounts. Vendors set up their holiday markets indoors.

While organizers caught some flack online for holding the event in the rain, they explained that too much work had gone into it to walk away.

“Our city staff, our business owners, and our vendors have put in too much time, money, energy, and planning to just cancel it. All of us have worked very hard to make this night an event that people want to be at…. even in the rain,” Cornelia Main Street posted to Facebook.

People sipped hot chocolate as they strolled through the streets, stopping to warm by the fire pit and roast marshmallows.

Cornelia Main Street likened it to a “Hallmark Christmas.”

“Our businesses were full and so are our hearts!” a post on the Main Street Facebook page said after the event. “And to the people who come to our events, rain or shine, cold or warm and support our local economy, we do all of this for you, and you support and benefit us, and we THANK YOU for that!”

The city has another reason to be thankful. An online auction of decorated Christmas trees held in conjunction with Saturday’s event raised nearly $1800 for the Cornelia Downtown Development Authority’s Facade Grant Program.

Witness list emerges in Fulton election interference case

Booking photos from the Fulton County conspiracy case charging Donald Trump and allies with trying to overturn Georgia’s 2020 election results. Top row, from left Jeffrey Clark, Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis, Michael Roman, Ray Smith, David Shafer, Sen. Shawn Still. Center row, from left, Mark Meadows, Rudy Giuliani, Donald Trump, John Eastman, Kenneth Chesebro. Bottom row from left, Robert Cheeley, Harrison Floyd, Stephen Lee, Scott Hall, Misty Hampton, Cathleen Latham, Trevian Kutti. As of Oct. 24, Powell, Ellis, Chesebro and Hall have pleaded guilty to various charges; the rest are awaiting trial. (Photos from Fulton County Sheriff’s Office)

(GA Recorder) — Former Republican Vice President Mike Pence tops the list of noteworthy potential witnesses who Fulton County prosecutors could put on the witness stand in the 2020 presidential election interference trial for Donald Trump and his co-defendants.

CNN was the initial media outlet to report last week that Pence was one of the high-profile names on the Fulton County District Attorney’s witness list in a felony racketeering case that accuses the former president of being a ringleader of a multi-state conspiracy to overturn the 2020 election.

Trump and many of his supporters assailed Pence for refusing to participate in a false electors scheme that intended to have Trump declared the winner in 2020 instead of President Joe Biden.

Pence has disputed assertions by Trump’s attorneys that the former president simply wanted his vice president to exert his authority on Jan. 6, 2021, by delaying Congress from confirming the electoral votes until after the election results could be more thoroughly challenged in Georgia and several other states in which Trump lost to Biden.

Pence said that the vice president has only a ceremonial role in counting electoral votes and he had no legal authority to reject the votes for Biden.

A rematch between Trump and Biden is likely to take place in 2024, as Trump remains the frontrunner for the Republican nomination. Following weeks of dismal polling numbers for his bid for the Republican nomination, Pence announced in October that he was dropping out of the race.

According to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Fulton prosecutors’ lengthy witness list also includes former Attorney General Bill Barr, former Trump adviser Steven Bannon and Pennsylvania GOP U.S. Rep. Scott Perry.

Barr testified at the Jan. 6th congressional committee hearing last year that he repeatedly warned Trump against making baseless claims of a stolen election. Barr resigned several weeks after the 2020 election.

Meanwhile, court documents that have since been removed from publicly available court docket in the Department of Justice’s election interference case appeared to show a December 2020 text message exchange in which Perry expressed support for Jeffrey Clark, a defendant in the case Fulton’s District Attorney is prosecuting, to lead the justice department’s crusade to overturn the election, according to Politico.

Fulton prosecutors also requested in October that judges in Michigan and Texas order Alex Jones, a far-right media personality, and Republican National Committee Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel to testify at the trial.

The petition says that McDaniel would testify about her interactions with Trump and his attorney John Eastman regarding the plot to create an alternate slate of Republican electors in Georgia and several other battleground states.

Prosecutors estimate they’ll call about 150 witnesses over the course of four-months. It’s expected that many of the state’s witnesses will be the same people who testified before a Fulton County special purpose grand jury, such as Republicans Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Gov. Brian Kemp.

The state’s witness list for the Fulton election interference trial tops the latest Georgia Recorder’s roundup of recent developments in the case.

Fulton defendant’s comments test bond condition limits

One of 19 defendants charged in the Fulton case is Trevian Kutti whose booking photo went viral for her Cheshire cat grin.

The former publicist for disgraced musician R. Kelly and the rapper formerly known as Kanye West could become the second Fulton 19 defendant who prosecutors seek to have a bond revoked for violating conditions that prohibit defendants from publicly criticizing state witnesses in the case.

During a Nov. 28 Instagram Live video, Kutti appeared to refer to former Fulton County election worker Ruby Freeman when using profanity while saying she would destroy an unnamed woman’s life, according to popular left-wing news network MeidasTouch.

It is alleged by Fulton prosecutors that Kutti, Harrison Floyd, the executive director of Black Voices for Trump, and Chicago Lutheran pastor Stephen Lee harassed and threatened Freeman in an attempt to force her to falsely confess to counting fraudulent absentee ballots for Biden.

At Nov. 21 bond hearing, Fulton Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee agreed with prosecutors that Floyd technically violated a bond agreement prohibiting him from publicly communicating about witnesses and co-defendants on his social media posts. McAfee decided that Floyd’s social media comments did not warrant sending him back to jail and instead called for greater clarity regarding how defendants can communicate publicly regarding their cases.

As of Friday, no filings had been made by the DA’s office concerning Kutti’s social media comments, according to superior court online records,

MeidasTouch also reported in its Dec. 5 article that Kutti also floated in the same video a wild conspiracy theory connecting Nancy Pelosi in a convoluted plot to assassinate Vice President Kamala Harris that would eventually lead to California Gov. Gavin Newsome becoming the 2024 Democratic presidential nominee instead of Biden.

Her attorney told CNN she didn’t violate a bond agreement by merely commenting about her case. Kutti also attacked MeidasTouch.com’s editor-in-chief for posting a story accusing her of being unhinged on social media.

Investigators with the secretary of state’s office and Georgia Bureau of Investigation found that the right-wing conspiracies claiming fraud committed by Freeman were unsubstantiated and false.

Freeman has spoken publicly about how the allegations spurred so many threats from election deniers that she had to move from a Fulton County home that she resided in for two decades.

Fulton DA levies critique at Trump trial date pushback

Fulton District Attorney Fani Willis took issue last week with Trump attorney Steve Sadow’s argument at a Dec. 1 hearing that putting the former president on trial close to next year’s Election Day would be an egregious example of election interference.

Willis said in an interview with CNN that Sadow’s comments were “ridiculous” while reiterating her intention to begin the trial for Trump and his 14 remaining co-defendants in August, soon after the GOP nominating convention and three months prior to the Nov. 5 election.

Sadow is requesting that Trump’s trial be postponed until after the election or after he leaves office if reelected.

Fulton prosecutors will have to avoid scheduling Georgia trial dates that conflict with three other trials involving Trump that are scheduled to take place during the first half of 2024.

McAfee has expressed apprehension about the possibility of having all co-defendants tried at the same time and instead has suggested splitting the defendants into smaller groups.

NGTC emergency training drill Dec. 13

Clarkesville, GA —North Georgia Technical College will conduct an emergency training drill between 8 a.m. and 12 p.m., Wednesday, Dec. 13, on the Clarkesville campus.

There may be numerous police and emergency services vehicles on campus and in the immediate area of the college participating in the training during this time.

The purpose of this drill is to test emergency response procedures, evaluate communication protocols, and identify areas for improvement. The college will be assisted by the Habersham County EMA, Sheriff’s Office, and Fire Rescue. GEMA/ Homeland Security is also scheduled to participate.

Students, faculty and staff of the Clarkesville campus will receive text notifications of the drill during the activity.

Signs will be posted around campus to remind that the activity will simply be a drill.

For more information or questions, please call 706-754-7852.

Baldwin Council to consider Precision Digital again, zoning request, policy updates

Baldwin City Council will consider approving the special use permit for Precision Digital to move forward with their crypto-mining business at their Monday night meeting. The measure failed at the November 27 meeting. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)

The Baldwin City Council is set to convene on Monday evening, December 11, at 6:30 p.m. in the Municipal Courtroom at 155 Willingham Avenue. The upcoming meeting will address crucial matters concerning zoning requests, policy updates, and community initiatives.

Zoning requests and public hearing

The meeting will revisit a zoning request from Precision Digital, a crypto-mining business. At the previous meeting on November 27, the ordinance and special use permit failed to secure the required three affirmative votes for approval. Despite support from Council members Alice Venter and Erik Keith, Council member Theron Ayers dissented, leading to a tabled discussion. With Council member Maarten Venter absent, the fate of Precision Digital remains uncertain. Mayor Stephanie Almagno can only vote in the event of a tie among the council.

Bellamy Auto Repair: A Request for Expansion

The second zoning request comes from Bellamy Auto Repair, seeking a variance for an expansion of its property at 151 Homer Drive. Owner Jacob Bellamy aims to enhance his business to provide more comprehensive auto repair services to the community. The council will conduct a public hearing for Bellamy’s variance request and subsequently consider the second reading of the ordinance.

Other business

Cemetery Policies and Procedures

The city council will deliberate on updated cemetery policies and procedures. Notably, changes involve the return of unused cemetery plots. Individuals on payment plans who wish to discontinue or return their plots can do so through The Cemetery Plot Revocation, with a refund of payments offered.

Mayor’s Reading Club Proclamation

The council will consider the Mayor’s Reading Club proclamation, an initiative by Georgia City Solutions. This non-profit organization, managed by the Georgia Municipal Association, aims to improve literacy skills among children and youth in Georgia cities. The program involves a commissioned children’s book series available in public libraries statewide. The Mayor’s Reading Club allows flexibility in administration, offering virtual, in-person, recorded readings, or on-demand options based on the mayor’s preference.

Updated Wrecker Ordinance

The second reading of the updated wrecker ordinance will also be on the agenda, addressing regulations and policies related to wrecker services in the city.

Residents are encouraged to attend the meeting to stay informed and engage in discussions shaping the future of Baldwin. The council’s decisions will impact various facets of the community, from business expansions to literacy initiatives and policy updates.