‘No evidence of conspiracy, no fraud’: Georgia election board clears poll workers targeted by Trump and Giuliani

Wandrea ArShaye “Shaye” Moss

WASHINGTON, DC – JUNE 21: Wandrea ArShaye “Shaye” Moss (L), former Georgia election worker, testifies during the fourth hearing on the January 6th investigation as her mother Ruby Freeman (R) listens in the Cannon House Office Building on June 21, 2022 in Washington, DC.

Two Georgia poll workers targeted by former President Donald Trump and Rudy Giuliani with conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election have been cleared by state authorities.

“There was no evidence of any type of fraud as alleged,” the 10-page report from the Georgia Board of Elections declared flatly.

‘No evidence was provided’

For many Trump supporters, two public servants — mother Ruby Freeman and her daughter Wandrea “Shaye” Moss — have been the face of a supposedly vast conspiracy to rob the former president of victory in the Peach State. In lawsuits and congressional testimony, Freeman said the smear campaign left her besieged by threats and harassment, through dozens of text messages, hundreds of emails and in-person mobs forming outside her house. She was forced to leave her house for months, starting on Jan. 6, 2021, the day of the attack on the U.S. Capitol.

Since that time, Freeman and Moss have fought tenaciously to get back their names. Freeman delivered emotional testimony to Congress, introducing herself to the nation as “Lady Ruby,” and both women have filed defamation lawsuits against the far-right figures and media entities who allegedly smeared them.

On Thursday, Georgia election authorities delivered additional vindication in a report dispelling the paranoid theories surrounding them.

At the center of these were snippets of surveillance video of the absentee and military vote count at State Farm Arena.

After the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia on Nov. 20, 2020, Trump’s team disseminated footage they claimed showed them producing boxes with 18,000 fraudulent ballots — enough to surmount the former president’s 11,780-vote defeat. One America News, a pro-Trump broadcaster, aired the edited footage and entered into a settlement to resolve the poll workers’ defamation lawsuit a little more than a year ago.

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