Perhaps nothing better reflects the breakdown of the guardrails that thwarted President Trump’s rashest impulses in 2020 than his creation last fall of a special White House post reinvestigating his loss to Biden, reported ProPublica.
In
December 2020, just days after AG William Barr rebuffed Trump’s Antrim County claims,
lawyers in the White House counsel’s office helped prevent the president from
heeding activists’ call to essentially declare martial law to seize voting
machines. This multihour shouting and cussing match has been called the craziest
meeting of the first Trump administration.
But the
lawyer whom Trump hired in 2025 as his director
of election security and integrity, Kurt Olsen, had worked to overturn
Trump’s loss in court in 2020 and was later sanctioned
by judges, including for making baseless
allegations about Arizona elections.
Olsen’s
work in the second Trump administration has breached the firewall between the
White House and DOJ officials, established after Watergate to prevent law
enforcement officers from making decisions based on political pressure, said
Gary Restaino, a former U.S. attorney in Arizona.
“This is
not a constitutional or even a statutory requirement,” Restaino said, “but it’s
a democracy requirement to make sure that citizens throughout America
understand that decisions about life and liberty are being made in an objective
and consistent manner.”
In a
previously unreported series of events, around the end of 2025, Olsen flew to
Georgia to meet with Paul Brown, the head of the FBI’s Atlanta field office,
according to people familiar with the matter.
Olsen
wanted the FBI to seize 2020 ballots from Fulton County, a Democratic
stronghold, and gave Brown a report he claimed would justify the extraordinary
action. Brown and his team emphasized to Olsen that any investigation his team
did would be independent and fair.
When Brown
and his team examined the report, they found that Georgia’s election board had
already looked into its allegations, dismissing
many altogether, and concluding that others came down to human error, not
criminal wrongdoing. The report had been assembled by a longtime ally of
Olsen’s and participant in the Election Integrity Network who had a
history of discredited claims, ProPublica has reported.
Based on
their own investigation, Brown’s team submitted an affidavit to their superiors
at DOJ that did not make a strong enough case to move forward with what Olsen
wanted.
Soon
after, Brown was offered a choice: retire or be moved to a new office, people
with knowledge of the exchange told ProPublica.
Olsen did
not respond to requests for comment.
An FBI
spokesperson said that Brown “elected to retire” and that its “work in the
election security space is entirely consistent with the law.”
Brown’s
ouster after refusing to carry out the seizure of 2020 election materials has
been reported, but Olsen’s involvement and the details of their
interactions leading to Brown’s retirement have not been previously
disclosed.
With Brown
gone, the case moved ahead under his replacement.
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