Maryland assault case On February 23, 2023, FBI special agents attempted to serve Floyd with a
federal grand jury subpoena related to the
U.S. Department of Justice's investigation into efforts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election. Hours after police responded to the 911 call, authorities returned and Floyd was arrested by local police after the FBI agents filed their complaint. On January 4, 2024,
Politico released body camera footage that it obtained through a public records request.
Georgia election racketeering prosecution In August 2023, Fulton County District Attorney
Fani Willis charged Floyd, along with former President
Donald Trump and 17 others, with violating Georgia's Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act. Floyd was also charged with influencing a witness and
conspiracy to commit solicitation of false statements. Floyd and two other Trump allies—Kutti, a Chicago-based publicist, and
Steve Lee, a chaplain and former police officer—are accused of harassing a Georgia election worker into falsely confessing to supposed election crimes. Of the 19 defendants, Floyd was the only one DA Willis did not previously make arrangements for release on bond. The Fulton County DA's office claimed, after surrendering on August 24, this is the reason he was held for six days at the
Fulton County Jail; However, at an emergency hearing 24 hours after his arrest, Judge Emily Richardson deemed Floyd a flight risk. This sparked an enormous backlash in the conservative community, and over $330,000 was crowdfunded for Floyd's legal defense. After public outcry of arresting the only black male defendant, on August 29, a judge set a bond amount ($100,000) along with conditions of pretrial release, and he was released the next day. He waived
arraignment and entered a plea of not guilty. In September 2023, after his release from jail while awaiting trial, Floyd said that he and
Joe Oltmann were directing $72,000 in contributions to his legal defense fund to help post bail for inmates in Georgia. He said the effort would prioritize parents charged with nonviolent crimes. In November 2023, Fulton County DA Willis failed to revoke Floyd's bond citing social media posts. DA Willis stated he had "engaged in numerous intentional and flagrant violations" of his bond agreement. Posting on rebranded Twitter his "effort to intimidate codefendants and witnesses, to communicate directly and indirectly with codefendants and witnesses, and to otherwise obstruct the administration of justice." Judge Scott McAfee found no intimidation in any of Floyd's cited posts. However, he did find a technical violation regarding tagging witnesses on the platform X. Judge McAfee declined to remand Floyd, and instead ordered a revision of his bond. ==Personal life==