CA, US & World
DOJ Seeks Personal Contact Info of Thousands of 2020 Fulton County Election Workers
ROME, Georgia — In a highly unusual legal battle, the U.S. Department of Justice is pressing a federal judge to force Fulton County, Georgia, to turn over the personal contact information of thousands of workers and volunteers who managed the 2020 presidential election.
During a federal court hearing held in Rome, Georgia, prosecutors clarified that they intend to use a sweeping grand jury subpoena to track down and interview poll workers, ballot counters, and mobile voting bus drivers. The move comes as part of an aggressive, renewed federal investigation into the 2020 election totals in Fulton County—a heavily Democratic stronghold encompassing Atlanta where Joe Biden secured more than two-thirds of the vote.
The Arguments for the Interviews
Federal prosecutor William McComb, who is working with the grand jury, told U.S. District Judge William Ray II that the Department of Justice is merely seeking a direct line of communication to question witnesses. McComb stated that investigators are trying to determine if any operational defects or voter fraud took place during the 2020 cycle and whether those issues present a continuing situation in upcoming election cycles.
"We’re simply asking for the employees and volunteers who worked with or had access to the ballots and the ability to contact them and question them as witnesses," McComb told the judge. When questioned by the bench about what specific federal charges the government was preparing to file, McComb admitted that prosecutors are currently unsure what charges could be brought, noting that uncovering those details is the core purpose of the grand jury's investigation.
Fulton County Resists Federal Subpoena
Lawyers representing the Fulton County Board of Registration and Elections have filed an emergency motion to quash the federal subpoena. They are fiercely resisting the data demand, characterizing it as an invasive and politically motivated "fishing expedition" designed to revive baseless, repeatedly debunked fraud claims.
Fulton County attorney Kamal Ghali argued in court that forcing the county to turn over the private names, residential addresses, emails, and phone numbers of roughly 3,000 everyday citizens would trigger widespread intimidation. The county expressed grave concerns that revealing the data would allow the administration to target and harass seasonal election workers, ultimately chilling civic participation and discouraging people from volunteering for future elections. Furthermore, Ghali pointed out that the federal five-year statute of limitations for any potential crimes associated with the 2020 vote has already expired, making the criminal basis of the subpoena legally invalid.
An Overlapping Federal Probe
The push to identify individual workers marks a significant escalation in a broader federal campaign targeting past swing-state data. In January, FBI agents executed a high-profile raid at a Fulton County elections warehouse, seizing roughly 700 boxes containing millions of 2020 general election ballots and confidential auditing logs. A federal judge subsequently rejected a civil lawsuit filed by the county to force the immediate return of those materials.
The sweeping scope of the new subpoena has also drawn sharp condemnation from Georgia's congressional delegation. Led by U.S. Senator Raphael Warnock, lawmakers have demanded formal explanations from top Justice Department officials regarding why a grand jury based in northern Georgia is utilizing out-of-state prosecutors to demand sensitive personal data from public servants without a narrowly tailored rationale.
Judge Ray questioned both sides extensively during the hearing, noting that workers who do not align with the current administration may have justifiable fears about their private records being compiled by federal agents. The judge has taken the motion under advisement and has not yet issued a final ruling on whether to block the subpoena.
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By: NBC Palm Springs
May 26, 2026


