Former President Donald Trump surrendered to Fulton County, Georgia, authorities Thursday evening, adding his face to the list of co-defendants who have had booking photos published this week after they were charged in a sweeping racketeering indictment.
So far, 11 of the 19 defendants in the case, including Trump, have surrendered and have been released on bond, but not before having their faces snapped for the public to see. Some defendants have resorted to frowns or straight faces, while others have even cracked a smile to lighten the mood, and a few have even changed their profile pictures on X/Twitter to embrace their new status as criminal defendants in the case.
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Here is a list of all of the co-defendants who have been booked and had their mug shots taken:
Donald John Trump
The former president is facing 13 felony charges, including violating Georgia’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, over his alleged illegal efforts to overturn the results of the state’s 2020 presidential election.
He was granted a $200,000 bond and was booked Thursday evening.
Rudolph William Louis Giuliani
The former New York City mayor and Trump attorney is, like Trump, facing 13 felonies. He and all of the other co-defendants’ charges include RICO violations.
Giuliani was granted a $150,000 bond and was released Wednesday afternoon.
John Charles Eastman
Eastman worked as an attorney for Trump and is now implicated in the indictment on nine charges. He is also facing disbarment in a separate case in California for persistently alleging voter fraud in 2020.
Eastman was granted a $100,000 bond and was released after surrendering on Aug. 22.
Mark Randall Meadows
As Trump’s former chief of staff, Meadows was present on a phone call between Trump and Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger in 2021, during which Trump told the secretary to “find” enough votes to win him the election. Meadows is facing two charges in the indictment.
Meadows was booked Thursday afternoon, released, and was granted a $100,000 bond.
Kenneth John Chesebro
Chesebro, a former Trump attorney, allegedly aided Trump with the “logistics” of establishing alternate electors in battleground states.
Chesebro surrendered Wednesday morning and was released on a $100,000 bond.
Jeffrey Bossert Clark
The former Justice Department official allegedly attempted to use the authority of the federal government to pressure state officials, including those in Georgia, by falsely claiming the DOJ had “significant concerns” about the 2020 election.
Clark has yet to surrender to local authorities ahead of a Friday at noon deadline.
Jenna Lynn Ellis
Ellis, a former attorney and Trump supporter who has pivoted her preference over to Gov. Ron DeSantis’s (R-FL) presidential bid, is accused of lying to local elections officials in the Peach State and aiding in the assembly of a false slate of electors to alter the outcome of the 2020 election.
Ellis was booked on Wednesday and released on a $100,000 bond.
Ray Stallings Smith III
Ray Smith, a lawyer at the firm Smith and Liss, is accused of advising alternate GOP electors who met at the Georgia Capitol building and signed documents claiming Trump had won despite his loss in the state.
He was released on Aug. 23 on a $50,000 bond.
Robert David Cheeley
Cheeley, a Georgia-based trial attorney, took part in public hearings before Georgia state lawmakers where he and other Trump allies pushed claims of election fraud. In December 2020, he displayed a video purporting to show “evidence” of vote-rigging in Atlanta that “should shock the conscience” of Georgians.
He posted a $50,000 bond and has until Friday at noon to surrender to local authorities.
Michael A. Roman
Mike Roman is a former Trump campaign official who was involved in a so-called “fake electors” scheme, where supporters falsely certified that Trump had won the 2020 election.
He was granted a $50,000 bond and has until noon on Friday to surrender himself.
David James Shafer
Shafer is a former Georgia GOP chairman and former state senator. He allegedly gathered 16 alternate electors in the Georgia State Capitol in December 2020, where they signed a form claiming that Trump won the state. Shafer also served as an alternate elector himself.
He was granted a $75,000 bond and was released on Aug. 22.
Shawn Micah Tresher Still
Still has been a Georgia state senator since January 2023. He allegedly acted as one of 16 alternate electors who signed the form claiming Trump had won Georgia.
His bond was set at $100,000, and he has until Friday at noon to surrender.
Stephen Cliffgard Lee
Lee is a Chicago-based pastor who allegedly tried to push election worker Ruby Freeman to falsely state that the election was fraudulent. He allegedly recruited Harrison Floyd to help him appeal to Freeman.
He was granted a $75,000 bond and has until Friday at noon to surrender.
Harrison William Prescott Floyd
Floyd, the head of the group Black Voices for Trump, was allegedly involved in a pressure campaign on local election worker Freeman. He allegedly recruited publicist Trevian Kutti to join the plan.
Floyd was previously charged earlier this year with assaulting an FBI agent when he was being served a subpoena. He is the only defendant who was not granted bond and remained in the local prison Thursday evening.
Trevian C. Kutti
A former publicist who once represented R. Kelly and Kanye West, Kutti is accused of attempting to influence the testimony of Freeman. Kutti allegedly suggested that Freeman was in danger and offered to give her help, and later told her to testify in Trump’s favor and falsely admit to election fraud.
Kutti was granted a $75,000 bond and has until Friday at noon to surrender to local authorities.
Sidney Katherine Powell
Powell was one of Trump’s election lawyers who said she would “release the Kraken” about nationwide vote-rigging. She was in contact with Trump supporters who breached a voting system in Coffee County, Georgia, which prosecutors say was an attempt to subvert the 2020 election.
She surrendered on Wednesday and was granted a $100,000 bond.
Cathleen Alston Latham
Latham is the former chairwoman of the Coffee County GOP and was one of the 16 people who served as alternate electors in Georgia and signed a form claiming that Trump won the state. She allegedly allowed Trump supporters access to a restricted area of the Coffee County election office.
She was granted a $75,000 bond and was released on Aug. 23.
Scott Graham Hall
Hall is a local bail bondsman and was allegedly involved in the Coffee County voting system breach.
His bond was set at $10,000, and he was released on Monday.
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Misty Hampton
Hampton was an election supervisor in Coffee County and was allegedly present in the election office at the time of the breach. She was also seen on surveillance footage allowing two men into an office who had been contesting the results of the 2020 election.
Her bond was set at $10,000, and she has until Friday at noon to surrender to local authorities.