A judge found that a Georgia GOP official and conservative talk show host who claimed that the 2020 election was “stolen” repeatedly committed voter fraud himself.
Georgia Administrative Law Judge Lisa Boggs ruled Wednesday that Brian Pritchard, the first vice chairman of Georgia’s Republican Party, violated state election law after voting unlawfully nine times from 2008 to 2010 while on probation for a felony sentence.
Boggs fined him $5,000 — $500 for each illegal vote and an additional $500 for unlawful voter registration — and said he must receive a public reprimand from the Georgia election board.
Pritchard was sentenced to three years of probation on felony forgery charges in Pennsylvania in 1996. His probation was revoked in 1999, after he moved to Georgia, then in 2002 and 2004, but it was ultimately extended through 2011, The Washington Post reported.
People on probation for felony convictions can vote in Pennsylvania but not in Georgia.
Pritchard testified in February that he thought his probation ended in 1999 and thus did not realize that he was voting illegally. “I felt it ended,” he said after a hearing, according to The Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “Do you think the first time I voted I said, ‘Oh, I got away with it. Let’s do it eight more times?’”
However, state attorneys disputed that he did not know what he was doing, citing records of his court appearances for probation revocation hearings.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., an avid 2020 election denier herself, on Thursday called for Pritchard’s resignation from his state GOP position. In a post on X, she wrote that it is “unacceptable for our party to have a man in leadership who has repeatedly committed voter fraud himself.”








