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.
Federal Bureau of Investigation agents executed a court-authorized search at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center in Union City, Georgia, this week, seeking and removing records connected to the 2020 presidential election.
County and media reports said agents took large quantities of election materials, including physical ballots and other records such as vote tabulator tapes, electronic ballot images and voter rolls. The warrant authorizing the operation has not been publicly released in full, and officials said they were left with limited information about what, precisely, the FBI seized and where the records were being taken.
The operation touched off immediate political fallout because Fulton County has been at the center of years of unfounded allegations about the 2020 election advanced by Donald Trump and his allies. Joe Biden won Georgia by a narrow margin in 2020, and the outcome was reaffirmed through recounts and reviews. Trump’s recorded call urging Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to “find” 11,780 votes has remained one of the most cited episodes from his effort to overturn the result.
Fulton County also became a focal point after conspiracy claims about ballot counting at State Farm Arena circulated widely in late 2020. Those allegations targeted two election workers, Wandrea “Shaye” Moss and her mother, Ruby Freeman, who later won a $148 million defamation verdict against former Trump attorney Rudy Giuliani in Washington, D.C. Election investigators have repeatedly said the State Farm Arena footage showed routine ballot processing rather than fraud.
Adding to the controversy surrounding the FBI search, Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard was seen at the Fulton facility during the operation, prompting questions from Democratic lawmakers about why the nation’s top intelligence official was present at a domestic law-enforcement action involving election records. Gabbard did not provide a public explanation at the scene, and lawmakers called for oversight to clarify her role.
Some local officials and voting-rights advocates warned that the removal of sealed election materials could raise chain-of-custody questions and set a precedent that might be invoked in future election disputes. Republicans and Trump allies, meanwhile, cast the search as a legitimate investigative step tied to record-keeping and election integrity concerns.
Legal experts and election administrators said the episode underscores the need for clear court supervision, transparent documentation of any transfer of election materials, and rapid public clarification from federal authorities to avoid fueling misinformation. They also urged state and local officials to be prepared to seek judicial relief if election materials are seized or handled in ways that conflict with retention rules or existing court orders.
The Justice Department and the FBI have provided limited public details about the underlying investigation, and the full legal basis for the search remains unclear while key records are sealed.