Late on Friday evening, attorney Sidney Powell announced that she was making emergency filings in the states of Georgia, Michigan, Arizona and Wisconsin.The announcement from Powell came just hours after the Supreme Court shot down Texas’s lawsuit where they attempted to block the certification of the 2020 election results.
“Pay attention!” Powell tweeted. “We made emergency filings in #SupremeCourt tonight for #Georgia & #Michigan. Will be filing #Arizona #Wisconsin shortly. These cases raise constitutional issues and prove massive #fraud. Our plaintiffs have #standing #WeThePeople will not allow #rigged elections.”
Follow me on Parler by clicking here! (@CollinRugg)
Arizona case just filed.
Briefs and records will be uploaded at https://t.co/hWfqluMLgO
And at https://t.co/173MnvRx0S@realDonaldTrump @GenFlynn @RealRLimbaugh @BoSnerdley @MariaBartiromo @LouDobbs @LLinWood @KrakenWoodâ Sidney Powell ??âââ (@SidneyPowell1) December 12, 2020
At the same time as Powell, President Trump’s team simultaneously filed an emergency appeal to the Supreme Court in Georgia.
Atlanta News Now reports:
Trump initially filed the lawsuit Dec. 4. But the Fulton County Superior Court clerkâs office initially rejected it, saying the presidentâs attorneys didnât pay the proper filing fee or fill out the paperwork correctly.
Trumpâs attorneys corrected that on Monday â the same day state officials recertified the election results following a third tally of votes. The vote showed Biden won Georgia by 11,779 votes out of some 5 million ballots cast.
With the certification done, Trumpâs campaign withdrew an emergency motion for a temporary restraining order to prevent the certification. With the emergency motion withdrawn, Fulton County Judge Constance Russell issued an order Wednesday stating the lawsuit would proceed âin the normal courseâ â which means it will not be resolved any time soon.
On Friday, Trumpâs campaign appealed to the Georgia Supreme Court.
The appeal says Russell is not qualified to judge an election case under state law because she is a resident of Fulton County and an active judge â not a judge on senior status. Because of that and other miscues it says occurred at the county court, the appeal asks the Supreme Court to rule on the merits of its case before Monday.