UPDATE (Oct. 19, 2023 10:30 a.m. ET): Sidney Powell pleaded guilty to criminal charges in the Georgia election interference case on Thursday.
Last week’s indictment in Fulton County, Georgia, named Sidney Powell among 18 other co-defendants, including former President Donald Trump, accused of being part of a sprawling conspiracy to overturn the 2020 presidential election in the state. But a deep irony undergirds the particular legal threat to Powell, who turned herself in to the Fulton County jail for booking on Wednesday.
Among the wildest of her claims in the aftermath of the election was that a consortium of socialist countries had stolen votes from Trump by using an “algorithm” deployed against voting machines. And yet now, in the pursuit of trying to prove these and other entirely unsubstantiated claims about purported vote hacking, Powell is the one who’s been charged with cybercrimes.
In the pursuit of trying to prove these and other entirely unsubstantiated claims about purported vote hacking, Powell is the one who’s been charged with cybercrimes.
It’s hard to believe now that Powell began her career as an assistant federal prosecutor in Texas. Like so many “wackadoodle” charlatans who have risen to prominence in the last half-decade, Powell did so on Trump’s coattails. She became a conservative media darling for her attacks on the Russia investigation and her willingness to castigate the Justice Department’s case against former national security adviser Michael Flynn. Her on-air advocacy drew the attention of semi-professional TV watcher Donald Trump, who called her multiple times before she eventually became Flynn’s lawyer in 2019.
Fast-forward to November 2020, and there’s Powell, standing alongside erstwhile Trump lawyer Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis, another lawyer charged in the Georgia indictment. Ellis introduced the three of them as part of an “elite strike force” that intended to expose election fraud. But the news conference itself was nothing short of a fiasco, with Giuliani and Powell all but competing to see who could tell the least credible lies about the election’s results.
“The Dominion Voting Systems, the Smartmatic technology software, and the software that goes in other computerized voting systems here as well, not just Dominion, were created in Venezuela at the direction of Hugo Chavez to make sure he never lost an election after one constitutional referendum came out the way he did not want it to come out,” Powell said at one point during the conference. She added that the machines in question “can set and run an algorithm that probably ran all over the country to take a certain percentage of votes from President Trump and flip them to President Biden.”
None of her claims about Dominion Voting Systems or Smartmatic’s connections to Venezuela were even remotely true. There was, and is, no evidence that their systems had been used to switch votes from Trump to Biden. And as Dominion later showed in its defamation lawsuit against Fox News, hosts and executives at the network thought she was absolutely off her rocker for making such accusations — despite repeatedly putting her on-air to voice them. (Powell is currently the subject of a separate defamation suit from Dominion that is seeking $1.3 billion in damages from her.)
She wasn’t taken much more seriously inside Trump World initially. The House Jan. 6 Committee report revealed that when Powell repeated her claims in a call with Trump, he muted the speakerphone to tell others in the room: “This does sound crazy, doesn’t it?” The Trump campaign, including Ellis and Giuliani, issued a statement just four days later declaring that she “is practicing law on her own” and “is not a member of the Trump legal team” or “a lawyer for the president in his personal capacity.”
And yet she still remained part of the fold moving throughout December. She was at an Oval Office meeting on Dec. 18, 2020, at which her client, Flynn, floated the idea of the using the military to seize voting machines. There was also talk of her being named special counsel to oversee an investigation into claims of voting fraud. Neither suggestion was carried out, but Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis listed both suggestions at the meeting as “overt acts” to further the conspiracy to overturn the election.
And, crucially for the Georgia case, Powell signed a contract that month with SullivanStrickler, a forensic data firm based out of Fulton County, to run analyses on voting tabulators in Nevada and Michigan. According to the indictment, members of SullivanStrickler later accessed voting equipment and copies of sensitive data from Coffee County’s election systems without the same legal authorization that it had gotten in other states. Surveillance footage obtained by NBC News showed that they were escorted into the Georgia elections office where the alleged data breach took place. Their escort was Cathy Latham, then-chair of the county GOP, and also one of 18 “fake electors” who signed false documents purporting to cast the state’s electoral votes for Trump. (Latham has been charged in connection to both incidents in the Georgia case.)








