Georgia
Georgia prosecutor drops election interference case against Trump – UPI.com
Nov. 26 (UPI) — The prosecutor in the Georgia election interference case against President Donald Trump dropped the charges on Wednesday.
Pete Skandalakis, executive director of Georgia’s Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council, who took over the case when Fulton County prosecutor Fani Willis was disqualified, filed a motion Wednesday saying that he’s dropping the case “to serve the interests of justice and promote judicial finality”
“[The case] is on life support and the decision what to do with it falls on me and me alone. But unlike family members who must make the emotional decision to withdraw loved ones from life-sustaining treatment, I have no emotional connection to this case. As a former elected official who ran as both a Democrat and a Republican and now is the Executive Director of a non-partisan agency, this decision is not guided by a desire to advance an agenda but is based on my beliefs and understanding of the law,” he wrote.
Trump and 18 others pleaded not guilty in August 2023 to a racketeering indictment in their alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election. Willis brought the charges after a phone call from Trump to Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger asking him to “find” the votes needed to give the state’s electoral votes to Trump.
Skandalakis addressed the call to Raffensperger in his motion.
“While the call is concerning, reasonable minds could differ as to how to interpret the call. One interpretation is that President Donald J. Trump, without explicitly stating it, is instructing the Secretary of State to fictitiously or fraudulently produce enough votes to secure a victory in Georgia. An alternative interpretation is that President Donald J. Trump, genuinely believing fraud had occurred, is asking the Secretary of State to investigate and determine whether sufficient irregularities exist to change the election outcome. When multiple interpretations are equally plausible, the accused is entitled to the benefit of the doubt and should not be presumed to have acted criminally.”
Willis was eventually disqualified because of a romantic relationship with a special prosecutor on the case. After she was disqualified, Skandalakis was tasked with finding another prosecutor to handle the case. When none was found, on Nov. 14 he took on the case himself.
Some defendants in the case — Sidney Powell, Jenna Ellis, Kenneth Chesebro and Scott Hall — took plea deals after agreeing to testify. Trump later gave them all federal pardons.
Georgia
Georgia women building strong resume entering matchup with No. 11 Oklahoma
Georgia coach Katie Abrahamson-Henderson sat at the postgame podium with damp hair and a slight smile on her face. She had just come from the locker room, where the Lady Bulldogs doused her with water after their victory over No. 5 Vanderbilt.
For Abrahamson-Henderson, the win reinforced what she already knew about her team.
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Georgia
As Georgia investigates Roblox, a larger debate emerges over child safety in the digital age
If you ask most adults about Roblox, they might not know whether it’s a game, a social network, or something in between.
If you ask their children, they’ll tell you: it’s everything.
Roblox — the sprawling online platform where users build, play, and chat inside millions of user-generated worlds — has become a digital playground for tens of millions of kids and teens. But in Georgia, that playground is now under scrutiny.
When Kim Kardashian threatened legal action after her son encountered explicit, fake content on Roblox, it was dismissed by some as celebrity drama.
In Georgia this week, concerns about the same platform became something else entirely: a matter for the state’s top law enforcement officer.
Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr has launched an investigation into Roblox to determine whether the company is violating state consumer protection laws and placing children at risk.
Carr’s office confirmed the probe following repeated reports of child abuse and sexual exploitation allegedly linked to interactions that began on the platform.
The investigation follows troubling incidents involving minors. Earlier this year, Georgia State Patrol troopers recovered two girls who had gone missing from their Florida home after communicating with a 19-year-old man on Roblox. The suspect, from Nebraska, now faces kidnapping and other charges.
In a separate 2023 case, authorities said an adult posing as a child used Roblox’s chat function to contact a 12-year-old boy and later coerced him into sending explicit photos.
Those cases are now fueling a broader debate: How safe are children on platforms designed for them — and who should be held responsible when harm occurs?
A platform built for play and conversation
At Georgia Institute of Technology, Professor Munmun De Choudhury studies computational social science, analyzing how digital platforms affect personal and societal well-being.
She says the core risks experts see on platforms like Roblox are not new, but they are evolving.
“One of the main safety risks,” she explained,” is kids encountering strangers — sometimes adults posing as children — and being exposed to unsafe or harmful interactions that can lead to grooming.”
Roblox is not just a gaming platform. It’s also a social one. Players chat while they build, compete, and collaborate. That hybrid design is part of its appeal and part of its vulnerability.
“What makes Roblox different,” Professor De Choudhury said, “is that it is a space specifically popular with kids and teens. It’s not just about gaming. It’s about socializing.”
That distinction matters. When social interaction is layered onto immersive digital worlds, the line between play and persuasion can blur.
The limits of parental controls
Roblox, like many platforms, offers parental control settings. But Professor De Choudhury says there’s often a gap between the existence of safety tools and their real-world effectiveness.
“Parents may not fully understand how to configure those tools,” she said. “Kids may not be aware of them. And sometimes parental controls alone are not sufficient.”
Part of the problem, she explained, is that online safety often operates in “catch-up mode.” By the time platforms develop solutions, bad actors have already adapted.
Artificial intelligence now powers age verification systems and content filters across many platforms. But those tools are not flawless.
“Age verification algorithms can make mistakes,” she said. “Content filtering can catch obvious harmful language, but people who groom children often use coded or subtle phrasing.”
In other words: technology can help — but it is not a silver bullet.
Georgia’s investigation in a national context
Georgia’s probe into Roblox does not exist in isolation.
Across the country, lawmakers are grappling with how to regulate child-facing technology.
States have proposed stricter age verification laws, stronger data privacy protections, and new standards for platform accountability.
In Washington, bipartisan conversations continue about whether companies should face clearer legal duties to protect minors online.
The legal question often centers on a thorny issue: Should platforms be held responsible for harm caused by user-generated content?
Professor De Choudhury says one guiding principle could be borrowed from other industries.
“‘Do no harm’ is a principle we see in medicine and other consumer contexts,” she said. “There could be minimum safety standards that child-facing platforms must meet.”
Right now, she added, much of the burden rests with the platforms themselves.
“Anyone outside the platform cannot monitor those conversations. So providing guidance or standards could go a long way.”
For Georgia families watching this investigation unfold, that question is more than theoretical.
What parents can do now
While policymakers debate reforms, experts say there are immediate steps families can take.
Professor De Choudhury emphasizes “psychological safety” first.
“If somebody makes you uncomfortable online, I’m here for you. You can talk to me,” she suggests parents tell their children.
She also encourages active mediation — not just restricting access, but engaging with the platform alongside a child.
“Play the game with them,” she said. “It builds trust and helps parents understand where risks might lie.”
Clear digital rules, collaborative conversations, and media literacy — for both parents and children — remain among the most effective safeguards.
The bigger reckoning
As of February 2026, at least six state attorneys general have launched investigations or taken legal action against Roblox over concerns about child safety and exploitation, with several states already filing lawsuits.
For Georgia, the Roblox investigation is about state law and consumer protection. For the nation, it is part of a larger reckoning over how technology companies design products for children.
Roblox is unlikely to be the last platform to face scrutiny. As immersive technologies expand — from AI chatbots to virtual reality — the challenges around monitoring, moderation, and accountability will only grow more complex.
“The issues precede the solutions,” Professor De Choudhury said.
The question now facing Georgia regulators — and lawmakers across the country — is whether the solutions can finally catch up.
For millions of children logging in after school, that answer could shape the digital playground for years to come.
In a statement to CBS News Atlanta Roblox said: “We share Attorney General Carr’s commitment to helping keep children safe online. As a platform built with a young audience in mind, Roblox has a history of pioneering industry-leading safeguards designed to monitor for harmful content and proactively block the exchange of images and personal information in chat. Our commitment to safety has no finish line…”
Georgia
Georgia Public Service Commissioner Tricia Pridemore not seeking reelection in 2026
One of the three Republicans who make up a majority of the Georgia Public Service Commission says she won’t be running to keep her seat in November.
Tricia Pridemore, who represents District 5, has been on the five-member commission since she was appointed by former Gov. Nathan Deal in February 2018. She was elected to a full term later that year and has not been on the ballot since.
In a press release, Pridemore said that she came to the decision after speaking with her family, colleagues, and advisors.
“When I was elected in 2018, I pledged to lead with integrity and deliver real outcomes. I am proud to say we have kept that promise,” Pridemore wrote. “Together, we have led the nation in new nuclear development, addressing large-load energy demands, and adapting to a changing global landscape—all while keeping Georgia competitive and consumers first.”
In her release, Pridemore said that some supporters have encouraged her to run for Congress in Georgia’s 11th District. She had previously run in the 2014 Republican primary, but came in third to Barry Loudermilk, who is retiring after his term ends.
“While I have made no final decision, I deeply appreciate the support and will take the time to listen, pray, and carefully consider this,” Pridemore said.
Pridemore’s announcement comes months after Democrats Peter Hubbard and Alicia Johnson defeated Republican incumbents Tim Echols and Fitz Johnson to win two seats on the commission, becoming the first Democrats elected to a state-level statewide office in Georgia since 2006. Their wins were powered by public discontent over rising electricity bills and data center development
Georgia’s Public Service Commission regulates the rates charged by Georgia Power. With 2.7 million customers, the unit of Atlanta-based Southern Co. is the state’s only private electrical utility.
With Pridemore out of the race, no Republican or Democratic candidates have announced their plans to run to represent District 5 so far.
The other Georgia PSC seat on the ballot will be District 3, where the now-incumbent Hubbard may face Johnson, the man he replaced, in a rematch.
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