Trump Codefendant Harrison Floyd is Likely Still Violating Revised Bond Agreement
Harrison Floyd was recently in court over tweets flagged by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis who was attempting to revoke his bond. Floyd, who has been charged for compelling false statements from a witness for his interaction with election worker Ruby Freeman, had tweets naming Freeman and others named in the indictment, not a good look for someone with those charges.
MediasTouch has documented the tweets below and linked them back to the live posts on Twitter.
Floyd criticized Willis’ move to revoke his bond
Ahead of the bond hearing, Floyd criticized Willis' move to revoke his bond, drawing attention to reporting on his tweets naming witnesses. On November 15th, Floyd implied the move by Willis was "a high tech lynching."
In another post a few days later, Floyd replied to a video outlining his posts on Ruby Freeman and others calling them, "based."
Floyd's revised bond agreement and terms
The court heard testimony from election worker Ruby Freeman’s lawyer who stated rising threats were directed at his client when Floyd posted about her. The judge decided to revise the bond instead of revoking it.
Under section 14 of the revised bond, Floyd can’t post to social media mentioning anyone whose name appears in the indictment. He also can’t like or reply to tweets that name others in the indictment such as Ruby Freeman.
In section 16 of the revised bond, Judge Scott McAfee gave Floyd 12 hours to delete "any previously posted social media posts that violate any of the terms of this modified order." That means any past social media posts that violate the above guidelines were to be deleted.
It's been over a week and while Floyd has deleted some tweets, there are still several posts up that likely violate the revised bond agreement.
Floyd still has several active posts about Ruby Freeman
Floyd still has several tweets posted mentioning, replying to posts mentioning or implying reference to election worker Ruby Freeman. Floyd’s active posts mention Freeman and tag a Georgia official, imply perjury occurred, and accuse Freeman of having "racial prejudice against white people.”
Floyd also replied to posts calling Freeman "the next Jussie Smollet" and denied charges related to his interaction with Freeman.
In another post tagging Rick Wilson and the AJC, Floyd posts audio of Freeman and a Candace Owens tweet saying the Reuters report that Freeman was coerced to lie was "fake news."
Floyd has active posts about Georgia officials named in the indictment
Floyd has posts still up tagging, naming, or replying to posts naming Governor Brian Kemp, Chief Operating Officer of the Georgia Secretary of State Gabriel Sterling, Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger, and Lieutenant Governor of Georgia Burt Jones.
Kemp, Sterling, and Raggensberger are named in the indictment. Jones was identified as an unindicted co-conspirator by CNN. Floyd having these posts still up is a likely violation of his revised bond agreement.
Floyd has active social media posts about RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel who is named on the indictment
RNC Chair Ronna McDaniel is named in the Fulton Country RICO indictment and could be a potential witness. According to he revised bond, Floyd's posts mentioning McDaniel and replies to posts mentioning McDaniel should have been deleted by now.
Floyd has active social media posts up about codefendant Jenna Ellis
Floyd has two posts up about Jenna Ellis. one tagging the fellow codefendant in a reply to a post asking for Floyd to debate Jenna and calling Trump’s former lawyer, "a weak traitor." Floyd tagged Ellis saying he would do it and told her to “pull up.”
Floyd also replied to another post calling out those who didn't donate to him but donated to Ellis.
Floyd has active posts about others in the indictment including Trump
Floyd has active social media posts in relation to codefendants Trump and John Eastman. One post links to a thread involving Eastman and Trump. Others posts mention Trump and the indictment. These are also likely violations.
Will these posts lead to another bond hearing for Floyd? That will be up to the Fulton County DA and the judge.