Trump co-defendant demands Congress find out ‘which votes to take away’ from Biden
Real America's Voice/screen grab

Harrison Floyd, one of Donald Trump's co-defendants in Georgia, has demanded Congress investigate "which votes to take away" from President Joe Biden so that he loses the 2020 presidential election.

During Tuesday's interview with Real America's Voice, Floyd recalled how federal agents came to his home before he was arrested for participating in a conspiracy to overturn the election for Trump.

"And so the federal government shows up at my doorstep, and they subpoena all my documents, anything I have related to Georgia," he said, noting Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis had a meeting with Vice President Kamala Harris just four days later. "So we have not only that but also the evidence that we've been able to gather from the case."

Floyd also pointed to "evidence" that illegal votes were counted.

"Now we've learned that Fulton County did not do signature verification on over 147,000 mail-in ballots, which is required by law," he insisted. "And I think President Biden only won by about 11,000 votes."

"So if we could go back and look and see how those people voted to determine which votes to take away, well, we can't even do that because, again, required by law is an image to be captured of each ballot and to be stored, and they didn't do that either," he added. "So what we really see and what we really have is a cover-up of things that transpired during the 2020 election that are required by law and that did not happen."

Floyd called on Congress to investigate the election.

"And so I believe, and we believe, what I notify Congress of is that we don't just have an issue when it comes to the election," he remarked. "We also have an issue when it comes to the Civil Rights Act and the Voting Rights Act of 1965."

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Floyd, a former director of Black Voices for Trump, is currently involved in a legal battle in Fulton County, Georgia. He faces three charges related to an alleged plot to force Ruby Freeman, a former Fulton County election worker, to confess to election fraud falsely. Floyd's lawyers, Todd Harding and Christopher Kachouroff, have been active in his defense.

On March 20, Floyd's legal team sought to appeal a decision by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee. This decision was related to a Plea in Bar filed on October 31, 2023, which argued that the Fulton County District Attorney had no authority to bring election-related charges against Floyd without a referral from the State Election Board. The court denied this plea on January 9, and Floyd's subsequent request for a Certificate of Immediate Review was also denied on March 14.

Floyd has requested more lenient bond conditions so that he can participate in Trump's 2024 presidential campaign and to use social media platform X for non-case-related discussions. Due to showing up without legal representation or a bond agreement, he was the only one of 19 defendants in the case to be jailed in Fulton County Jail in August. He was released on a $100,000 bond negotiated by his lawyer on August 30.

Additionally, Floyd faces federal charges for allegedly confronting two FBI agents. A hearing on March 28 will address motions related to former President Donald Trump and David Shafer, another defendant in the case.

Watch the video from Real America's Voice below or at this link.