Federal appeals court releases True the Vote leaders from jail
After spending nearly a week in jail, Catherine Engelbrecht and Gregg Phillips leaders of Texas-based right-wing voting activist group True the Vote have been released. Theyd been held for contempt of court since Halloween, having repeatedly refused to release the name of a man they called a confidential FBI informant who is a person of interest in a defamation and hacking case against them.
The person remains unidentified.
Their release came after True the Votes lawyers appealed the contempt order by federal district Judge Kenneth Hoyt to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, arguing the finding of contempt was in error and the pair should be released from jail. The appeals court granted their release but kept the remainder of Hoyts order in place.
Its the newest surprise in an unusual case. Konnech, a small election software company based in Michigan, filed a federal lawsuit in September alleging that True the Vote, and Engelbrecht and Phillips, led a social media campaign of allegations involving a Chinese election-meddling conspiracy that damaged its business and prompted threats to its founder, Eugene Yu.
Yu was arrested shortly afterward, and briefly confined to house arrest, after the Los Angeles County District Attorneys Office said Yu and Konnech violated the companys contract with Los Angeles County by illegally giving contractors in China access to data that was supposed to be stored only in the United States. That case is still pending, and Yu has filed for dismissal of the charges.
Read more: https://www.texastribune.org/2022/11/07/true-the-vote-jail-release/