
Donald Trump’s The team was warned by White House Attorney Eric Herschmann that the former president signed a court affidavit authenticating inaccurate evidence of voter fraud, Axios reports.
What happened: Hermann’s emails, divided through the publication showed he was concerned about Trump’s attorneys who were preparing to file a lawsuit against the governor of Georgia. Brian Kemp and the Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger around December 2020.
A near-final draft was sent by a former Trump adviser Cleta Mitchell to Herschmann on 12/30/2020, and a day later another draft was sent that was supposed to be a version of John Eastman, which worked to overturn the state’s election results and also incorporated Herschmann’s amendments, the report said.
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In his response dated December 31, 2020, Herschmann said: “I have not sent any edits to John, I have stated that I am concerned that the President will sign an acknowledgment of facts that may not be substantiated upon detailed examination.”
“I think we should limit certain factual ‘number’ claims to those that are necessary, ie, those claims that show the decision is outcome-determining,” Herschmann’s email shared by Axios indicated.
Why it matters: The disclosure comes against the backdrop of a US District Judge David Carter In a court filing Wednesday, he explained that Trump signed legal documents alleging fraud in the 2020 election, even though he knew the allegations were false.
The judge’s opinion was filed in response to Eastman’s lawsuit against the 6 Jan Selection Committee, requested the e-mails from him, which he did not want to pass on, citing attorney-client privilege.
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