Key Takeaways
- Georgia judge dismisses final criminal case against Donald Trump
- All three pre-election criminal cases against Trump now closed
- Charges against Rudy Giuliani and Mark Meadows also dropped
- Trump maintains separate New York conviction for business records
A Georgia judge has dismissed the last remaining criminal case against former President Donald Trump, effectively ending all legal efforts to prosecute him for alleged interference in the 2020 US elections. This marks the conclusion of all three criminal cases filed against Trump before his return to office.
The Georgia case was particularly significant because state convictions cannot be overturned by presidential pardon. However, Pete Skandalakis, head of the state’s nonpartisan prosecutor council, successfully petitioned the court to close the case on Wednesday.
Legal Reasoning Behind Dismissal
Skandalakis argued that the original charges brought by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis were invalid, stating that challenging election results does not constitute a crime. He also cited the Supreme Court’s ruling on presidential “absolute immunity” for official acts, which would have delayed any Georgia trial until after Trump leaves office in 2029.
The prosecutor emphasized that the federal investigation led by Special Counsel Jack Smith was the appropriate venue to review Trump’s actions regarding the 2020 election.
Case History and Setbacks
Trump was first indicted in August 2023 for his 2021 phone call to Georgia’s secretary of state, where he asked officials to “find” enough votes to change the election outcome. The case eventually expanded to include 18 allies.
The prosecution faced significant setbacks when Willis was removed from the case due to her past relationship with a lawyer she had hired for the prosecution.
Trump’s attorney Steve Sadow welcomed the dismissal, describing the case as politically motivated. Following Trump’s return to office, federal prosecutors had already dropped two other cases against him.
Despite these developments, Trump maintains a separate conviction in New York for falsifying business records, which remains unaffected by the Georgia dismissal.



