KEY POINTS
  • North Carolina authorities have opened an investigation into possible voter fraud by Mark Meadows when he was serving as White House chief of staff to then-President Donald Trump.
  • Meadows claimed in 2020 that his legal residence was a mobile home, which The New Yorker magazine says he never owned or apparently ever stayed at.
  • "The allegations in this case involve potential crimes committed by a government official," wrote Macon County DA Ashley Hornsby Welch in a letter to the state attorney general's office.
  • Trump, who lost his bid for re-election to President Joe Biden, has falsely claimed since that he was swindled out of a second term in the White House by widespread ballot fraud in several swing states.
White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows speaks to reporters following a television interview, outside the White House in Washington, October 21, 2020.

North Carolina authorities have opened an investigation into possible voter fraud by Mark Meadows related to his claim that his legal residence was a mobile home when he was serving as White House chief of staff to then-President Donald Trump, the state attorney general's office said Thursday.

"The allegations in this case involve potential crimes committed by a government official," wrote Macon County, North Carolina, District Attorney Ashley Hornsby Welch in a letter Monday to the attorney general's office asking that it designate agencies to investigate Meadows.