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Trump posts discredited conspiracy theories following seizure of 2020 ballots in Georgia

2:12
Fulton County commissioner insists 2020 election was fair after FBI seizes ballots
Alyssa Pointer/Reuters
ABC's Jonathan Karl at the White House, May 16, 2017, in Washington.
ByJonathan Karl
January 29, 2026, 8:00 PM

In the hours after FBI agents seized 2020 election ballots from an elections facility in Georgia on Wednesday, President Donald Trump posted a series of thoroughly discredited conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election -- and the 2016 election too. 

Fulton County officials said Wednesday that the FBI seized original 2020 voting records while serving a search warrant at the county's Elections Hub and Operations Center. The FBI said they were conducting court-authorized activity at the facility, but said they would provide no further information.

Late Wednesday night, the president reposted to his social media platform a claim that Italian military satellites had been used to hack into U.S. voting machines to flip votes from Trump to Joe Biden.  

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Fulton County official slams Trump administration over FBI's seizure of 2020 ballots

"China reportedly coordinated the whole operation," the post reads. "The CIA oversaw it, the FBI covered it up, all to install Biden as a puppet."

That was just one of a flurry of posts and reposts by Trump making discredited claims about the 2020 election, directly tying the allegations to the FBI's seizure of ballots on Wednesday.  

"This is only the beginning," Trump said, reposting other posts about the FBI's action in Georgia. "Prosecutions are coming."

The development comes after Trump has repeatedly made baseless claims that there was voter fraud in the 2020 election, specifically in Georgia, that contributed to his election loss. Georgia officials audited and certified the results following the election, and numerous lawsuits challenging the election results in the state were rejected by the courts.

PHOTO: Members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Evidence Response Team hold cordon tape outside the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center in Union City, Ga. Jan. 28, 2026.
Members of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Evidence Response Team hold cordon tape outside the Fulton County Election Hub and Operation Center after the FBI executed a search warrant there in relation to the 2020 election, according to a law enforcement official familiar with the matter, in Union City, Ga. Jan. 28, 2026.
Alyssa Pointer/Reuters

Among the statements posted and reposted by Trump following the FBI's actions in Georgia is one on the 2016 election that falsely claims that "Barack Hussein Obama" falsified intelligence and "conspired with foreign powers, not one, not two, not three, but four times to overthrow the United States government in 2016."

In addition to being baseless, the claim ignores the fact that Obama was president in 2016, so if he tried to overthrow the government, he would have been overthrowing himself. 

The conspiracy theory about Italian military satellites is not new. In 2021, then-White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows directed both the Department of Justice and the Department of Defense to look into the matter.

As documented in my 2021 book, "Betrayal: The Final Act of the Trump Show," the conspiracy theory was brought to the White House by a woman who went by several aliases including "The Heiress" and was known at the Pentagon for her claimed ties to Somali pirates. She passed her material off to a national security council official at a supermarket parking lot in Arlington. 

The Italian spy satellite theory was just one of many unsubstantiated allegations made about the 2020 election by Trump and his supporters. At a Trump campaign press conference in November 2020, lawyer Sidney Powell infamously claimed that voting machines had been rigged using software that was "created at the direction of Hugo Chavez." This was an especially extravagant claim because Chavez, the former leader of Venezuela, had died three years earlier. 

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FBI seizes 2020 ballots in Georgia in apparently unprecedented action, alarming local officials

In 2023, Powell pleaded guilty to state charges of conspiracy to commit "intentional interference with performance of election duties" in Georgia and agreed to serve six years of probation and to pay a $6,000 fine.  

And now it appears that Sidney Powell is back. In a post on X Thursday morning, DOJ official Ed Martin posted a picture of himself with Powell, writing, "Good morning, America. How are ya'?"

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