Key Trump allies charged in fake electors scheme in Wisconsin
WASHINGTON β Three men involved in the so-called fake electors scheme to keep former President Donald Trump in office following his 2020 election loss have been charged in Wisconsin, according to court records.
Mike Roman, a Philadelphia native who served as the Trump campaign’s head of Election Day operations, was charged Tuesday, as was Kenneth Chesebro, an attorney who struck a plea deal with prosecutors in a separate 2020 election case in Georgia in October. James Troupis, a former judge and Trump campaign attorney, was also charged in connection with the fake electors scheme.
Chesebro, Roman and Troupis are all charged with felony forgery, according to court records. They are charged for their role in getting a slate of pro-Trump electors to sign paperwork attesting, falsely, that Trump had won Wisconsin in the 2020 election. Similar slates of fake electors for Trump were organized in several states and charges have been brought in Arizona, Michigan, Nevada and Georgia.
Wisconsin Attorney General Josh Kaul, a Democrat who brought the case, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The fake electors scheme is a major component of the charges that special counsel Jack Smith has brought against Trump in federal court in Washington, D.C. That case, assigned to U.S. District Judge Tanya Chutkan,Β is currently on hold while the Supreme Court decides on Trump’s claim of absolute immunity from prosecution. The trial is unlikely to go forward before Election Day.
Chesebro and Troupis previously settled a lawsuit related to the fake electors in Wisconsin that resulted in the release of more than 1,000 pages of emails and text messages, though neither man admitted any liability or culpability. The released documents revealed more information about the scheme in Wisconsin, and 10 of the fake electors in the Badger State admitted as part of litigation in December that President Joe Biden won the state in 2020.