Yesterday, April 1, 2025, I took the first step to sue the Georgia Secretary of State (SOS) for their relentless defiance of the Open Records Act. For over 14 months, they’ve ignored my daily requests for public records—logs or filings from the prior day—slapped on unjustified $30 fees, missed legal deadlines, and dodged accountability. The Attorney General and Inspector General brushed me off; SOS staff, including Gabriel Sterling, even ran when I said hello. Enough is enough.
I’m teaming up with Joy Ramsingh, a powerhouse open records lawyer, to crack those doors open. She’s on board, betting we’ll win and recover fees under the law (O.C.G.A. § 50-18-73). I’ve initiated the process today—legal papers are in motion. This isn’t just my fight—it’s for every Georgian denied answers. What’s the SOS hiding? Election quirks? Corporate favors? We’ll find out.
But I need your help. Legal fees could hit $5,000 fast, and my resources are thin. That’s why I’ve launched a GoFundMe campaign “Support Brant Meadows’ Legal Battle for Public Records”—with a $5,000 goal to cover the initial push (filing, injunction, early motions). Every dollar gets us closer to forcing transparency. I’m also assisting Joy with records for another case—our trust is rock-solid, and she’s ready to strike.
Here’s the plan: we’re pushing for a quick injunction to make the SOS release my records pronto—could end this in weeks, not months. If they dig in, we’ll fight to the finish. The SOS’s pattern of secrecy (2021 audits, 2022 voter rolls, travel records ignored) is our ammo—courts won’t ignore it.
Join me. Donate at [GoFundMe]—$10, $25, whatever you can. Share this on X with #OpenTheBooks and tag @GaSecofState to turn up the heat. Follow @DogeGeorgia on X for updates, and check DogeGeorgia.org for the full saga (docs, emails, proof). Together, we’ll make them regret betting against us. Let’s open the books—now.