A New York state appeals court suspended Kenneth Chesebro’s law license on Thursday, a timely reminder of both the failed plot to subvert the 2020 election and the potential consequences for any would-be plotters this go-round.
The court cited Chesebro’s guilty plea last year in Georgia, where, as the court recounted in Thursday’s opinion, he was charged alongside co-defendants “in a scheme to submit false election results to Congress concerning the 2020 presidential election.” Chesebro pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit filing false documents. He has been charged in a similar case in Wisconsin as well.
The New York court recalled that the count to which Chesebro pleaded guilty in Georgia alleged that he, “along with [Donald] Trump, [Rudy] Giuliani, John Eastman and others, unlawfully conspired in Georgia between December 6, 2020 and December 14, 2020 to knowingly file, enter and record a document entitled ‘Certificate of the Votes of the 2020 Electors from Georgia,’ in a court of the US, while having reason to know that the document contained a materially false statement.”
The court concluded that because Chesebro “has been convicted of a serious crime, we accordingly suspend respondent [Chesebro] from the practice of law in New York on an interim basis.”








