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Today was supposed to be the moment of truth.
After weeks of speculation, we were finally going to learn why the FBI executed a search warrant in Fulton County and seized ballots from the 2020 election.
And now we have the answer.
But if you were expecting bombshell evidence… you’re going to be disappointed.
Because according to the newly released affidavit, there was nothing new. Nothing groundbreaking. No hidden smoking gun. Instead, what we got was a recycled collection of the same election denial claims that have been circulating since 2020.
The affidavit reads less like a serious investigative document and more like a transcript from one of Donald Trump’s rallies — sprinkled with legal jargon and FBI terminology to make it look official.
The theories? The same ones we heard in 2020.
The grievances? The same ones from 2021 and 2022.
The allegations? Repackaged. Recycled. Reheated.
Yet somehow, a federal magistrate signed off on it.
And that’s where this gets troubling.

Because this wasn’t just paperwork — this was authorization for an unprecedented search of an election office. A move that raises serious concerns about how far federal power is being stretched.
The affidavit itself lays out the supposed “probable cause.” But instead of new evidence, it relies heavily on claims brought forward by well-known election deniers — including attorney Kurt Olsen, a figure who previously pushed efforts to overturn election results in multiple states.
Olsen’s history is well documented.
In 2020, he urged the Department of Justice to sue in the Supreme Court to invalidate the election.
When that failed, he was involved in Texas’s lawsuit attempting to overturn results in four other states — a case that was swiftly rejected.
Later, he represented election challenges in Arizona that also fell apart in court.
Now, his theories appear embedded inside a federal affidavit used to justify seizing ballots.
That’s not just concerning — it’s alarming.
Because if this thin framework was enough to clear the “probable cause” threshold once, what stops it from being used again?
Detroit.
Milwaukee.
Philadelphia.
Maricopa County.
If a judge somewhere signs off on a similar request, could we see more searches? More seizures? Possibly even targeting future elections?
And that’s the real fear here.
This isn’t only about relitigating 2020.
It’s about establishing a template.
A template that could be used in 2026 — before votes are even counted — or in the aftermath of another contested race.
The legal standard for a search warrant — probable cause — is relatively low. But that doesn’t mean judges are supposed to rubber-stamp whatever is placed in front of them.
Magistrate judges typically rely on the credibility of law enforcement. When an FBI agent explains evidence of a meth lab, for example, the judge assumes expertise and good faith.

But here’s the problem:
What if the information being presented is not credible to begin with?
What if it’s built on theories already rejected by courts across the country?
That’s where scrutiny should have come in.
Because while this particular search warrant does not create binding legal precedent, it does create something else:
Momentum.
A blueprint.
And unless courts push back harder next time, this blueprint could spread.
The big question now is whether future judges will look more closely at the origins of these claims — and refuse to participate in what critics argue is a recycled attempt to undermine confidence in elections.
Because once you normalize federal searches of election offices based on disputed theories, the implications go far beyond Fulton County.
And this may only be the beginning.