The knock on his door ended his career. Within days, 700 boxes of Fulton County election records were hauled away, and the FBI’s top man in Atlanta was gone. Was he protecting the truth—or standing in its way? As secret voter rolls, UPS store “voters,” and century-old birthdates emerge, Georgia’s most volatile county is bac… Continues…
The sudden removal of FBI Atlanta chief Paul Brown, after he reportedly balked at aggressive searches tied to Trump-era fraud claims, has turned an already radioactive topic into a full-blown political drama. His refusal to execute certain warrants, followed by a massive raid seizing hundreds of boxes of Fulton County election records, has fueled competing narratives: a principled stand against politicized law enforcement, or an internal clash over how far to push a fragile democracy already on edge.
At the same time, Georgia Sen. Greg Dolezal’s revelations about voters registered to UPS stores, abandoned homes, closed shelters, and placeholder birth years have intensified doubts about Fulton County’s election administration. County leaders insist every prior audit and court ruling proves the 2020 result stands. Yet the imagery of boxes carted away and rolls riddled with anomalies ensures one thing: for millions of Americans, the question of what really happened in Georgia still refuses to die.