
Shocking new audio appears to show Donald Trump giving instructions to Republicans in Georgia on how to flip election results.
The recordings, obtained by the New York Times, allegedly reveal President Trump telling the speaker at the time, David Ralston, in a call on December 7, 2020, that the results of the election that year could be altered. Trump lost Georgia to then President-elect, Joe Biden.
The outlet dropped the bombshell report on Wednesday this week, claiming it had gained the clips as part of a 'trove of investigative documents' that were going to be used in the criminal election interference case against Trump and 18 of his advisors and allies by Fani T. Willis, the district attorney in Fulton County, before its recent dismissal.
In the 12-minute call with Ralston, who died in 2022, Trump could be heard calling a special legislative session for 'transparency' and to 'uncover fraud' in the election.
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"Who's gonna stop you for that?", Trump could be heard asking.

The late Republican lawyer then reportedly laughed before saying: "A federal judge, possibly."
Further on in the damning call, Trump apparently gives Ralston direction on how to operate the special session.
He went on to claim he had won Georgia by hundreds of thousands of votes, despite losing by roughly 11,000 across the state.
"You know we won this thing by 400,000 or 500,000 votes,” he told Ralston. “Just like we did Alabama and every other state in the South. And, uh, we won, we won, we won your state massively. They took votes away.”
Trump continued to share conspiracy theories about voter fraud at State Farm Arena in Atlanta including ballot boxes being stored in bins.
In the call, he claimed votes were 'coming out suitcases, luggage, and it was a lot of votes'.
"It was probably more than 100,000. You know they ran them through three or four times, you know, the same votes.
"If we had a special session, we will present, and you will say, ‘Here, it’s been massive fraud. We’re going to turn over the state,'" Trump reportedly said to Ralston.

Although Ralston never committed to holding the special session, the call was used as a package of evidence in Willis' Racketeering Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) prosecution.
The district attorney claimed Trump illegally solicited Ralston to violate his oath of office by calling a special session 'for the purpose of unlawfully appointing presidential electors from the State of Georgia'.
However, a state judge dismissed the case last month after finding Willis had a romantic relationship with a lawyer she had hired to oversee the case.
On November 26, a replacement prosecutor then put a final nail in the coffin after finding charges should now have been brought.
UNILAD have reached out to the White House for comment.
Topics: Donald Trump, Politics, US News