Trump rages about election cheaters as Georgia charges loom

Donald Trump was indicted federally last week, leading New York Attorney General Letitia James to announce she would give preference to the feds trying their case. But when it came to Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, she said that her case was entirely separate from the documents case.
Willis has already asked for security assistance starting at the end of July so they will be prepared for the indictment she expects in the first week of August.
Former Republican Rep. David Jolly (R-FL) told MSNBC on Sunday afternoon that he assumed the only reason Trump was actually running for president again was to be able to pardon himself and dodge other legal problems.
On Sunday, Trump took to his social media site to complain again about the 2020 election saying that others "cheated" and implied that he only "reported on" or "questioned" the alleged cheating.
"THEY DON’T GO AFTER THE PEOPLE WHO CHEATED IN THE ELECTION, THEY ONLY GO AFTER THE PEOPLE WHO REPORT ON, OR QUESTION, THE CHEATING," Trump wrote in all-caps.
Trump didn't merely claim there was a conspiracy, and he launched over 60 lawsuits that were thrown out of court. One of his lawyers, Sidney Powell, who pushed the conspiracy, was sanctioned by a Michigan court for her involvement in the lawsuits. In May, Wisconsin sanctions were upheld by an appeals court as the governor attempted to recoup $106,000 in legal fees from Powell.