FBI searches Fulton County election office for 2020 records

The FBI conducted a search at the Fulton County Election Hub in Georgia on January 28, 2026, targeting materials related to the 2020 presidential election. The action follows a Department of Justice lawsuit against the county for election records and comes amid ongoing scrutiny of voting procedures in the state. Officials confirmed the warrant pertains to the election Trump narrowly lost.

On Wednesday, January 28, 2026, FBI agents executed a search warrant at the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center in Fairburn, just outside Atlanta, Georgia. The facility, opened in 2023 to modernize election operations, was the site of the court-authorized action focused on 2020 election materials. According to Fulton County officials, the warrant sought records from the 2020 presidential election, while reports indicated agents aimed to take custody of ballots from that year.

The FBI provided limited details, stating, "The FBI is conducting court-authorized law enforcement activity. No other information is available at this time." This raid aligns with a broader federal probe into alleged 2020 election interference in Georgia, where President Donald Trump lost to Joe Biden by under 12,000 votes. Biden's victory relied partly on a strong margin in Fulton County, which has faced repeated baseless fraud claims from Trump, including allegations of ballots being counted twice.

Last month, the Department of Justice sued the clerk of Fulton County superior and magistrate courts to obtain 2020 election documents, citing the need to verify Georgia's compliance with federal election laws under the Civil Rights Act. The suit followed a Georgia State Election Board subpoena, with a U.S. attorney general letter on October 30, 2025, demanding responsive records. A Fulton County judge denied the county's request to block the subpoena.

Fulton County recently admitted procedural violations in 2020, noting over 130 unsigned tabulator tapes for about 315,000 early votes and 10 missing tapes. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, a Republican, defended the process: "Georgia has the most secure elections in the country and all voters were verified with photo ID and lawfully cast their ballots." He added, "A clerical error at the end of the day does not erase valid, legal votes."

The county has been central to election-related cases against Trump. In 2023, he was indicted on racketeering charges by District Attorney Fani Willis, but the case was dismissed after revelations of her relationship with prosecutor Nathan Wade. Federally, Special Counsel Jack Smith indicted Trump on similar charges, calling Georgia "ground zero" for efforts to overturn the results through "knowingly false claims of fraud." Smith dismissed that case after Trump's 2024 election win. Last week at the World Economic Forum, Trump stated that "people will soon be prosecuted for what they did" regarding the 2020 election.

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FBI agents seize boxes of 2020 election records from Fulton County hub, sparking questions about Trump’s involvement.
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FBI seizes hundreds of boxes of 2020 election records from Fulton County, drawing questions about Trump’s role

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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.

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.

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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.

State and local election administrators say they are preparing for potential disruptions tied to federal actions ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, after President Donald Trump’s administration moved early in his second term to tighten voting rules and reduce federal election-security staffing. Officials cite concerns ranging from litigation and requests for voter data to the possibility of armed deployments near polling places and immigration enforcement activity that could intimidate voters.

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Democratic state attorneys general have stepped up legal and political efforts ahead of the 2026 midterm elections as President Donald Trump promotes federal changes to election rules, including a House-passed bill tied to proof of citizenship. A Heritage Action-commissioned poll reported majority support for those requirements in five states.

In a Fresh Air interview, The Atlantic's David A. Graham sketches out how President Donald Trump could try to tilt the 2026 midterms — from posting federal forces near polling places to pressuring election officials and even having agents seize voting equipment — while early moves on redistricting and federal monitoring show the ground already shifting.

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The FBI has intensified its Minnesota investigation into COVID-era fraud schemes, revealing money laundering ties to Kenyan real estate and a $120,000 juror bribery attempt, building on 78 indictments and 57 convictions for stealing over $250 million from child feeding and housing programs.

 

 

 

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