Documents reviewed by POLITICO — and also in the hands of federal prosecutors — offer new details about Rudy Giuliani’s ill-fated efforts to reverse the 2020 election.
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Friess, who did not respond to inquiries, has not been accused of any wrongdoing — by prosecutors or by Congress. And she has not been mentioned in either of the criminal cases charging Trump with conspiring to subvert the election. Two Georgia election workers who are suing Giuliani for defamation tried unsuccessfully to subpoena and depose her. But after searching for her for months, they gave up, saying Friess “
vanished.”
The House Jan. 6 select committee also sought to depose Friess but never managed to secure her testimony. She sued to block the panel’s investigators from obtaining her phone records — and though they prevailed in the suit, there’s no public indication they ever got them.
Dozens of those documents, which have been reviewed by POLITICO, add new detail to the public understanding of how Trump’s allies operated after Election Day — and how they grappled with obstacles both immense and quotidian.
In other emails reviewed by POLITICO, Friess repeatedly sought payment for her work. On Dec. 26, 2020, she wrote to Kerik: “I am resending my first invoice, as I received a check from Trump for President, Inc., but it was for $905, which is $15,000 short of the full amount. Would be grateful if you could kindly check on that please.”
Kerik then forwarded Friess’ email to Boris Epshteyn, a Trump lawyer and campaign aide.
“???????” Kerik added…
In its final report, the Jan. 6 select committee homed in on an email sent on
Jan. 4, 2021 — provided to the committee by Trump ally Christina Bobb — in which Friess raised concerns about their evidence that dead people had voted.
“[M]any of the dead voters on the GA list sent their vote in before they passed,” she noted. “I don’t think this makes a particularly strong case … I think this makes the case for unfortunate timing … rather than nefarious activity.”
Despite that warning, Trump claimed in his speech on Jan. 6 that more than 10,000 dead Georgians voted in the 2020 election. Jan. 6 committee investigators pointed to Friess’ email as evidence that Trump’s advisers knew claims he pushed were false. Prosecutors could now use it to make the same argument about Trump himself.