Tulsi Gabbard observes FBI agents conducting a search at Fulton County elections facility, as requested by President Trump.
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Gabbard says Trump asked her to observe FBI search at Fulton County elections facility

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Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard said President Donald Trump requested that she briefly observe the FBI’s execution of a search warrant at Fulton County’s elections facility near Atlanta on Jan. 28, and she told congressional intelligence leaders that she did not direct the operation.

Tulsi Gabbard, the director of national intelligence, said she was present for part of the FBI’s Jan. 28 search at Fulton County’s main elections facility in Union City, Georgia, after President Donald Trump asked her to attend.

In a letter to Sen. Mark Warner of Virginia and Rep. Jim Himes of Connecticut, the top Democrat and top Republican, respectively, on the Senate and House intelligence committees, Gabbard wrote that she “accompanied” senior FBI officials while agents carried out the court-authorized action. She said her role was limited to observation and that she did not give instructions to agents or participate in operational decisions.

According to the letter, Gabbard was with FBI Deputy Director Dan Bongino and Atlanta’s acting special agent in charge, Pete Ellis, for a “brief period of time” during the warrant’s execution. She said her presence was tied to what she described as her statutory responsibilities involving election security and related counterintelligence, foreign influence and cybersecurity issues, and that the Office of the Director of National Intelligence’s general counsel concluded her actions were within her legal authorities.

Gabbard also said that during a visit to the FBI’s Atlanta field office, she facilitated a short phone call in which Trump thanked personnel for their work and did not ask questions or issue directives.

The FBI confirmed at the time that it was carrying out a “court authorized law enforcement action” at the county elections site but did not publicly describe the scope of the search. Local reporting and subsequent national coverage said the activity centered on records tied to the 2020 election.

Gabbard’s disclosure drew criticism from some Democrats, who questioned why the director of national intelligence would be present at a domestic law-enforcement search. In a separate letter to Attorney General Pam Bondi, Democratic lawmakers from Georgia called for an inquiry and a briefing on the justification for the operation and on Gabbard’s involvement.

In her account to Warner and Himes, Gabbard argued that “election security is a national security issue” and said the intelligence community was reviewing information about vulnerabilities in electronic voting systems and other risks that could be exploited. She said the intelligence community planned to provide Congress with its assessments once completed.

Some additional details described in Gabbard’s letter—such as the identity of the federal court and the warrant being under seal—could not be independently confirmed from public court filings at the time of reporting.

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Discussions on X about Tulsi Gabbard's confirmation that Trump requested her to observe the FBI search at Fulton County's elections facility reveal a sharp partisan split. Pro-Trump users hail it as progress in investigating 2020 election fraud, predicting major revelations. Democrats and critics condemn it as inappropriate interference and politicization of federal agencies, demanding investigations.

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FBI agents seizing boxes of 2020 election ballots and records from Fulton County election hub, with officials and Tulsi Gabbard observing.
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FBI searches Fulton County election hub, seizing 2020 ballots and records as officials question purpose and oversight

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Federal agents executed a search warrant at Fulton County, Georgia’s main election facility this week and removed hundreds of boxes of 2020-election materials, including ballots and electronic records. The move, conducted with little public explanation and followed by the appearance of Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard at the scene, has intensified concerns among local and Democratic officials that the action could further erode trust in election administration even as Republicans defend it as a lawful investigation.

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard joined an FBI raid on a Fulton County, Georgia, elections office, fueling President Trump's baseless claims of 2020 election fraud. The action has raised alarms about potential interference in upcoming 2026 midterms. Critics, including Senator Mark Warner, warn it undermines democracy.

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FBI agents executed a search warrant at Fulton County’s elections hub near Atlanta in late January, removing about 700 boxes of ballots and other 2020 election materials. The operation — and reports that agents later spoke with President Donald Trump via a call facilitated by Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard — has reignited partisan disputes over Georgia’s voting system ahead of 2026 races.

The Pentagon has launched an investigation into Sen. Mark Kelly, a retired Navy officer, over his role in a video released by six Democratic lawmakers reminding U.S. service members and intelligence personnel that they are obligated to disobey illegal orders. The video, issued amid broader concerns about President Donald Trump’s use of military and intelligence authorities, has drawn fierce criticism from Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who have labeled the lawmakers’ actions as seditious. Kelly and his allies say the probe is politically motivated and intended to intimidate critics of the administration.

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At a Nov. 5 hearing in Alexandria, Va., a federal magistrate judge criticized prosecutors in the criminal case against former FBI Director James Comey and ordered the Justice Department to swiftly turn over investigative and grand-jury materials, as disputes over evidence handling and privilege intensified.

A U.S. magistrate judge in Virginia has temporarily barred federal investigators from reviewing electronic devices seized from Washington Post reporter Hannah Natanson while the newspaper and the reporter challenge the search on First Amendment and statutory grounds. The search was authorized by a warrant tied to a leak-related investigation of a government contractor, not Natanson, according to court filings described by The Post.

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The Pentagon says it has opened an investigation into Arizona Sen. Mark Kelly, a retired Navy captain, after he appeared in a video with other Democratic lawmakers reminding U.S. military and intelligence personnel that they must refuse unlawful orders. The video, released last week, has drawn fierce condemnation from President Donald Trump and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, who have accused the group of encouraging sedition. Kelly has denounced the probe as an effort to intimidate Congress, according to multiple news reports.

 

 

 

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