TDS Trump grand jury foreperson’s bizarre press blitz stuns liberal media, surprises legal experts: 'No upside'

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
www.foxnews.com/media/trump-grand-jury-forepersons-bizarre-press-blitz-stuns-liberal-media-surprises-legal-experts-no-upside

Trump grand jury foreperson’s bizarre press blitz stuns liberal media, surprises legal experts: 'No upside'

Nikolas Lanum, Kristine Parks9-11 minutes 2/23/2023

The strange antics of the forewoman of a special grand jury in the media this week have surprised legal experts and annoyed liberal media pundits, who warned she could compromise a potential prosecution of President Trump and his associates.

Emily Kohrs, foreperson of the special Fulton County, Georgia, grand jury empaneled to investigate allegations of election meddling in 2020, seemed eager to share details of the lengthy probe in interviews with CNN, NBC News, The New York Times, The Associated Press and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution this week.

Clips circulating online of the 30-year-old woman smirking and bursting into giggles while teasing the grand jury’s recommended indictments – which have not yet been made public – raised concerns from even liberal media figures that she could be "destroying" the prosecution’s case.

In all her appearances, she appeared to strongly hint that Trump was among those recommended for criminal charges – the grand jury she was on did not have indictment powers. On television, her grins and coy behavior were odd enough that even left-wing MSNBC host Lawrence O'Donnell, after playing clips of her NBC interview, felt compelled to say she was not a seasoned media professional.

"I thought it would be really cool to get sixty seconds with President Trump of me looking at him, and being like, ‘Do you solemnly swear—' and me getting to swear him in. I just thought that would be an awesome moment," she said excitedly in one widely-shared clip.

Kohrs reportedly "rolled her eyes and burst out laughing," in a print interview, after reporters shared President Trump’s Truth Social post claiming "total exoneration" by the special grand jury.

"Did he really say that? Oh, that’s fantastic. That’s phenomenal. I love it," she told the AJC. Kohrs added her own coy response to the former president’s claim. "I invoke my Fifth Amendment right. That’s what I have to say to that."

While on CNN, Kohrs revealed multiple people would be recommended for indictments and chuckled. "It’s not a short list," she quipped. In one remark that drew particular criticism, she said she would be disappointed if no charges resulted from the grand jury's investigation, saying there was "too much of my time" and others spent on the matter.

Declining to answer if Trump was on the list, she smirked and held back a giggle. "Especially If they’ve been following the investigation, I can’t see it being a shocker," she said about the indictments.

"There may be parts of it that you did not expect, but I don’t believe that the season finale will have any major plot twists, you know what I mean?" she added to the AJC. On NBC News and CNN, she made similar remarks, at times smiling like she knew she was giving tantalizing remarks.

Liberal media figures from MSNBC's Charlie Sykes to "The View" co-host Joy Behar were frantic that the media blitz was going to end up helping Trump.

"Seriously, this woman should not be on television. She should not be doing this. There is no upside," Sykes tweeted.

Behar said Wednesday that Kohrs should "keep her big bazoo shut," and she "could destroy this case."

Mike Pence's former adviser Olivia Troye, a Trump critic, also worried that Kohrs would hurt the case's outcome.

"Really hope someone is advising Emily Kohrs on safety & security precautions for her own well-being. Also really hoping that her decision to go public as a Georgia Grand Jury foreperson, about one of the most significant cases for our country, doesn’t hurt the outcome in the end," she tweeted.

"Agreed. It would be helpful if she’d stop giving interviews," former journalist for the Sacramento Bee Anita Creamer tweeted.


On MSNBC Wednesday, former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman said she was "not much of a poker player" and that while she hadn't broken any laws, she had created a "marginal addition of trouble" for District Attorney Fani Willis, D.

Tuesday night after her media blitz, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper also questioned if it was "responsible" for the juror to give interviews.

CNN legal analyst Elie Honig said it was a "horrible idea" and that the prosecutors were likely "wincing."

"She shouldn't be doing this," ABC News legal analyst Dan Abrams told his outlet. "It isn't helpful to the perception of the objectivity of the criminal justice system, and it starts to feel like she's putting pressure on the district attorney to actually move forward with charges."

Legal experts said Kohrs' chatty media interviews were not necessarily ruinous in interviews with Fox News Digital, but they said they were certainly unusual and unhelpful in convincing the public of the seriousness of the case.

When asked about the impact of Kohrs’ media appearances, Gerard Filitti, senior counsel at the international nonprofit legal think tank The Lawfare Project, said that the conduct "certainly raises eyebrows."

While Georgia law requires each member of the grand jury to keep the deliberations of the grand jury a secret, Filitti said that so far, Kohrs has avoided crossing the line, mostly sharing personal observations about her experience.

He added that grand juries are generally kept under wraps for many reasons, like protecting the reputations of those not being charged, encouraging reluctant witnesses to come forward and avoiding attempts to improperly influence a grand juror.

"If anything, Kohrs’s approach - including talking about swearing in a witness while holding a popsicle - does more to trivialize the grand jury than assure the public of the seriousness with which it considered the evidence. This is the larger problem with her media tour, beyond whether she crosses the line and reveals actual deliberation," he said.

According to Filitti, the media blitz doesn’t put any future prosecution of Trump or anyone else in true jeopardy, but rather "serves as fodder" for individuals attempting to "obfuscate the issues" or "delay potential prosecution."

"Sensationalizing a special grand jury proceeding in this manner does little to further the interests of justice," he added.

Nicholas Creel, an assistant professor of business law at Georgia College and State University, said he was "pretty skeptical" about the idea Khors’ media appearances could hurt a potential case against Trump.

"For one, Trump is one of the most well-known people in the world. Almost nobody is going to learn about him or what he’s being accused of for the first time from these interviews. The coverage over his attempts to overturn the Georgia election was far too saturated for me to believe a few more new stories are going to make it any more difficult to get an impartial jury pool," he said.

Creel also noted that Kohrs steered clear of speaking to any of the contents of deliberations among fellow jurors, a move which is strictly forbidden under Georgia law. In fact, he added that had she wanted to, Khors could have gone further than she already had and spoken on the specifics of the report.

"For example, she could start to divulge the names of those the special grand jury recommended charges for as well as the statutes they were implicated under, who was offered immunity, and more," he said.

Criminal defense attorney Rachel Fiset, the co-founder and managing partner of Los Angeles-based firm Zweiback, Fiset & Zalduendo LLP, agreed that Kohrs did not break the law, but was walking a "very fine line."

While Fiset opined that the Fulton County prosecutors were probably "disgusted" by Khors’ actions, she said it appeared "unlikely" she would be prosecuted for them.

"The district attorney will not want to bring into focus any potential irregularities with her case moving forward – and, as this is all after the fact, it should not actually affect the recommendations of the grand jury," Fiset added. "Instead, Kohrs appears to be giving valuable insight to anyone in the crosshairs of an indictment by naming witnesses and potential charges the D.A. may elect to bring."

Nikolas Lanum is an associate editor for Fox News Digital.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
www.foxnews.com/media/cnn-hosts-agonize-over-trump-grand-jury-forewomans-bizarre-media-blitz-prosecutors-nightmare

CNN reporters agonize over Trump grand jury forewoman's bizarre media blitz: 'Prosecutor's nightmare'

Hanna Panreck4-5 minutes 2/22/2023

CNN reporters agonized over Emily Kohrs, the forewoman on Georgia's special grand jury investigating former President Donald Trump, who sat down for multiple interviews with the media about the grand jury's recommendations.

CNN's Anderson Cooper and Elie Honig discussed Kohrs' interview Tuesday night and wondered if her media blitz was "responsible."

"First of all, why this person is talking on TV, I do not understand. Because, she’s clearly enjoying herself, but, I mean, is this responsible? She was the foreperson of this grand jury," Cooper said.

Honig said it was a "horrible idea" and that the prosecutors were likely "wincing."

"I was wincing just watching her eagerness to, like, hint at stuff," Cooper added. Honig said the interviews were a "prosecutor's nightmare."

"Mark my words, Donald Trump’s team is going to make a motion, if there’s an indictment, to dismiss that indictment based on grand jury impropriety. She’s not supposed to be talking about anything, really. But she’s really not supposed to be talking about the deliberations. She’s talking about what specific witnesses they saw, what the grand jury thought of them. She says some of them we found credible, some we found funny. I don’t know why that’s relevant, but she’s been saying we found this guy funny or interesting. I think she’s potentially crossing a line here. It’s gonna be a real problem for prosecutors," Honig continued.

During "CNN This Morning" on Wednesday, analyst Maggie Haberman joined the hosts to discuss Kohrs' media appearances and seemed to echo Cooper and Honig's concerns as well.

"If I am the prosecutor, I am not sure that I want this media tour taking place because I'm confident that Donald Trump’s lawyers are going to use this," she said.

During the CNN interview on Tuesday with Erin Burnett, Kohrs was asked if the jury recommended charges against Trump.

"I really don’t want to share something that the judge made a conscious decision not to share," Kohrs said. "I will tell you that it was a process where we heard his name a lot. Um, we definitely heard a lot about former President Trump, and we definitely discussed him a lot in the room. And I’ll say that, uh, when this list comes out, you wouldn’t, there are no major plot twists waiting for you."

The Fulton County, Georgia, grand jury released portions of their findings from the probe into whether Trump and his allies interfered in Georgia's electoral process as part of an attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election.

Kohrs also sat down with NBC News as well on Tuesday and said during the interview that the jury recommended indicting over a dozen people and that the list of people "might" include Trump.

"I don’t think that there are any giant plot twists coming. I don’t think there's any giant ‘that’s not the way I expected this to go at all’ moments," she told NBC. "I would not expect you to be shocked."

Kohrs has also spoken with other outlets, including The Associated Press, The New York Times and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

Hanna Panreck is an associate editor at Fox News.
 

Dennis Olson

Chief Curmudgeon
_______________
www.foxnews.com/politics/parts-trump-georgia-grand-jury-report-released-suggesting-possible-witness-perjury

Parts of Trump Georgia grand jury report are released, suggesting possible witness perjury

Chris Pandolfo, Brooke Singman4-5 minutes 2/16/2023

A special grand jury in Fulton County, Georgia, released portions of a report detailing findings from the investigation into whether former President Donald Trump and his allies interfered in the presidential election in Georgia as part of a larger attempt to overturn the results of the 2020 election.

The report indicates a majority of the grand jury believes one or more witnesses may have committed perjury in their testimony and recommends that prosecutors pursue indictments against them, if the district attorney finds the evidence compelling.

"The long awaited important sections of the Georgia report, which do not even mention President Trump’s name, have nothing to do with the President because President Trump did absolutely nothing wrong," Trump campaign spokesman Steven Cheung told Fox News Digital.

"The President participated in two perfect phone calls regarding election integrity in Georgia, which he is entitled to do — in fact, as President, it was President Trump’s Constitutional duty to ensure election safety, security, and integrity. Between the two calls, there were many officials and attorneys on the line, including the Secretary of State of Georgia, and no one objected, even slightly protested, or hung up," Cheung continued. "President Trump will always keep fighting for true and honest elections in America!"

Prosecutors and several media organizations had pushed to release the grand jury's full report, but Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney refused to do so, citing "very limited due process" given to Trump's allies who've testified.

On Monday, the judge in Georgia said he would release the report's introduction and conclusion, along with the section in which the grand jurors expressed concerns that some witnesses may have lied under oath.

Any recommendations on who should or should not be prosecuted will remain secret for now to protect their due process rights, McBurney wrote.

The report comes as Trump is actively campaigning to return to the White House in the 2024 presidential election.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is leading an investigation into Trump, who is accused of pressuring Georgia officials to "find" enough votes to prevent President Biden from winning the state. Trump had made numerous claims of widespread voter fraud in Georgia and other states, though his attorneys were unable to support those allegations in various suits challenging the election results.

The special grand jury spent about seven months hearing testimony from witnesses, including high-profile Trump allies, such as attorney Rudy Giuliani and Sen. Lindsey Graham of South Carolina, and high-ranking Georgia officials, such as Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger and Gov. Brian Kemp.

McBurney wrote that the full report includes recommendations for Willis, including "a roster of who should (or should not) be indicted, and for what, in relation to the conduct (and aftermath) of the 2020 general election in Georgia."

Willis will decide whether to bring criminal charges against Trump or his allies in the coming months.


Fox News' Danielle Wallace contributed to this report.

Chris Pandolfo is a writer for Fox News Digital. Send tips to chris.pandolfo@fox.com and follow him on Twitter @ChrisCPandolfo.
 

vector7

Dot Collector
The strange antics of the forewoman of a special grand jury in the media this week
FplwpJ8WYAEoZK2



This is the foreperson of the Georgia Grand Jury that investigated Trump

BREAKING: @CNN interview with Foreperson Juror Emily Kohrs in Trump GA Grand Jury says "there will be no surprises" in indictments if you've been following. Also more than 12 people recommended for charges.
#grandjury #Trump2024 #Jan6th
RT 1:24secs
View: https://twitter.com/alx/status/1628277850397704193?s=20

Big fans below

Biden Voters...

Biden Groomers...
View: https://twitter.com/_NPOB1/status/1628442571868606465?s=20
 

Squib

Veteran Member
"She shouldn't be doing this," ABC News legal analyst Dan Abrams told his outlet. "It isn't helpful to the perception of the objectivity of the criminal justice system, and it starts to feel like she's putting pressure on the district attorney to actually move forward with charges."

Really? Most sane, honest people know the criminal justice system has no reliable objectivity!

The left just wants it to look like everything is proper and legally in order.
 

vector7

Dot Collector
Crazy eyes! She’s got them!

She’s the equivalent of the drunk that runs up behind a reporter doing a live coverage of an event…the drunk runs up and either waves, flips off, or moons the camera behind the reporter…this is insane.
There's a DNC pattern...

Inside Trump grand jury foreperson’s bonkers Pinterest account — which promotes witchcraft
View: https://twitter.com/DavarEchad/status/1628805867708776449?t=DpG0lxGisUTH0aYrMXFv4g&s=19
 

Hawkgirl_70

Veteran Member
FplwpJ8WYAEoZK2



This is the foreperson of the Georgia Grand Jury that investigated Trump

BREAKING: @CNN interview with Foreperson Juror Emily Kohrs in Trump GA Grand Jury says "there will be no surprises" in indictments if you've been following. Also more than 12 people recommended for charges.
#grandjury #Trump2024 #Jan6th
RT 1:24secs
View: https://twitter.com/alx/status/1628277850397704193?s=20

Big fans below

Biden Voters...

Biden Groomers...
View: https://twitter.com/_NPOB1/status/1628442571868606465?s=20
That montage of pictures of all those "Liberal Nuts" just made me lose my appetite for lunch . BLECH!
 

anna43

Veteran Member
The Left is so determined to convict Trump of something, anything that they just keep making a$$es of themselves trying. Unless and until they put the same determination into investigating and prosecuting the Clintons, Obama and the Bidens, I don't want to hear another word about Trump's so-called crimes. Accusing Trump of voting crimes is gaslighting to hopefully avoid anyone seeking answers to the REAL fraud in the 2020 election.
 

The Hammer

Has No Life - Lives on TB
FplwpJ8WYAEoZK2



This is the foreperson of the Georgia Grand Jury that investigated Trump

BREAKING: @CNN interview with Foreperson Juror Emily Kohrs in Trump GA Grand Jury says "there will be no surprises" in indictments if you've been following. Also more than 12 people recommended for charges.
#grandjury #Trump2024 #Jan6th
RT 1:24secs
View: https://twitter.com/alx/status/1628277850397704193?s=20

Big fans below

Biden Voters...

Biden Groomers...
View: https://twitter.com/_NPOB1/status/1628442571868606465?s=20
Some real "lookers" in that last group! :xpnd:

What do they expect? They've made their bed with crazies, loons, and nut cases. They're even high-ranking administration officials now. Did they expect they'd get calm, wise, well-spoken people for their rigged grand juries?
 

Bps1691

Veteran Member
The Left is so determined to convict Trump of something, anything that they just keep making a$$es of themselves trying. Unless and until they put the same determination into investigating and prosecuting the Clintons, Obama and the Bidens, I don't want to hear another word about Trump's so-called crimes. Accusing Trump of voting crimes is gaslighting to hopefully avoid anyone seeking answers to the REAL fraud in the 2020 election.
We see it but there is a very large percentage of our fellow voters that believe in the cult’s mantra-

orange man bad, MAGA bad, Christians bad, destroy them and dam the law

I am amazed at just how stupid and so easy to dupe into this cult of hatred and the ultimate destruction of personal freedom is for so many of the American people.

They’ve lived a golden life and they hate the very things that make it possible.
 

ghost

Veteran Member
www.foxnews.com/media/trump-grand-jury-forepersons-bizarre-press-blitz-stuns-liberal-media-surprises-legal-experts-no-upside

Trump grand jury foreperson’s bizarre press blitz stuns liberal media, surprises legal experts: 'No upside'

Nikolas Lanum, Kristine Parks9-11 minutes 2/23/2023

The strange antics of the forewoman of a special grand jury in the media this week have surprised legal experts and annoyed liberal media pundits, who warned she could compromise a potential prosecution of President Trump and his associates.

Emily Kohrs, foreperson of the special Fulton County, Georgia, grand jury empaneled to investigate allegations of election meddling in 2020, seemed eager to share details of the lengthy probe in interviews with CNN, NBC News, The New York Times, The Associated Press and The Atlanta Journal-Constitution this week.

Clips circulating online of the 30-year-old woman smirking and bursting into giggles while teasing the grand jury’s recommended indictments – which have not yet been made public – raised concerns from even liberal media figures that she could be "destroying" the prosecution’s case.

In all her appearances, she appeared to strongly hint that Trump was among those recommended for criminal charges – the grand jury she was on did not have indictment powers. On television, her grins and coy behavior were odd enough that even left-wing MSNBC host Lawrence O'Donnell, after playing clips of her NBC interview, felt compelled to say she was not a seasoned media professional.

"I thought it would be really cool to get sixty seconds with President Trump of me looking at him, and being like, ‘Do you solemnly swear—' and me getting to swear him in. I just thought that would be an awesome moment," she said excitedly in one widely-shared clip.

Kohrs reportedly "rolled her eyes and burst out laughing," in a print interview, after reporters shared President Trump’s Truth Social post claiming "total exoneration" by the special grand jury.

"Did he really say that? Oh, that’s fantastic. That’s phenomenal. I love it," she told the AJC. Kohrs added her own coy response to the former president’s claim. "I invoke my Fifth Amendment right. That’s what I have to say to that."

While on CNN, Kohrs revealed multiple people would be recommended for indictments and chuckled. "It’s not a short list," she quipped. In one remark that drew particular criticism, she said she would be disappointed if no charges resulted from the grand jury's investigation, saying there was "too much of my time" and others spent on the matter.

Declining to answer if Trump was on the list, she smirked and held back a giggle. "Especially If they’ve been following the investigation, I can’t see it being a shocker," she said about the indictments.

"There may be parts of it that you did not expect, but I don’t believe that the season finale will have any major plot twists, you know what I mean?" she added to the AJC. On NBC News and CNN, she made similar remarks, at times smiling like she knew she was giving tantalizing remarks.

Liberal media figures from MSNBC's Charlie Sykes to "The View" co-host Joy Behar were frantic that the media blitz was going to end up helping Trump.

"Seriously, this woman should not be on television. She should not be doing this. There is no upside," Sykes tweeted.

Behar said Wednesday that Kohrs should "keep her big bazoo shut," and she "could destroy this case."

Mike Pence's former adviser Olivia Troye, a Trump critic, also worried that Kohrs would hurt the case's outcome.

"Really hope someone is advising Emily Kohrs on safety & security precautions for her own well-being. Also really hoping that her decision to go public as a Georgia Grand Jury foreperson, about one of the most significant cases for our country, doesn’t hurt the outcome in the end," she tweeted.

"Agreed. It would be helpful if she’d stop giving interviews," former journalist for the Sacramento Bee Anita Creamer tweeted.


On MSNBC Wednesday, former U.S. Attorney Harry Litman said she was "not much of a poker player" and that while she hadn't broken any laws, she had created a "marginal addition of trouble" for District Attorney Fani Willis, D.

Tuesday night after her media blitz, CNN anchor Anderson Cooper also questioned if it was "responsible" for the juror to give interviews.

CNN legal analyst Elie Honig said it was a "horrible idea" and that the prosecutors were likely "wincing."

"She shouldn't be doing this," ABC News legal analyst Dan Abrams told his outlet. "It isn't helpful to the perception of the objectivity of the criminal justice system, and it starts to feel like she's putting pressure on the district attorney to actually move forward with charges."

Legal experts said Kohrs' chatty media interviews were not necessarily ruinous in interviews with Fox News Digital, but they said they were certainly unusual and unhelpful in convincing the public of the seriousness of the case.

When asked about the impact of Kohrs’ media appearances, Gerard Filitti, senior counsel at the international nonprofit legal think tank The Lawfare Project, said that the conduct "certainly raises eyebrows."

While Georgia law requires each member of the grand jury to keep the deliberations of the grand jury a secret, Filitti said that so far, Kohrs has avoided crossing the line, mostly sharing personal observations about her experience.

He added that grand juries are generally kept under wraps for many reasons, like protecting the reputations of those not being charged, encouraging reluctant witnesses to come forward and avoiding attempts to improperly influence a grand juror.

"If anything, Kohrs’s approach - including talking about swearing in a witness while holding a popsicle - does more to trivialize the grand jury than assure the public of the seriousness with which it considered the evidence. This is the larger problem with her media tour, beyond whether she crosses the line and reveals actual deliberation," he said.

According to Filitti, the media blitz doesn’t put any future prosecution of Trump or anyone else in true jeopardy, but rather "serves as fodder" for individuals attempting to "obfuscate the issues" or "delay potential prosecution."

"Sensationalizing a special grand jury proceeding in this manner does little to further the interests of justice," he added.

Nicholas Creel, an assistant professor of business law at Georgia College and State University, said he was "pretty skeptical" about the idea Khors’ media appearances could hurt a potential case against Trump.

"For one, Trump is one of the most well-known people in the world. Almost nobody is going to learn about him or what he’s being accused of for the first time from these interviews. The coverage over his attempts to overturn the Georgia election was far too saturated for me to believe a few more new stories are going to make it any more difficult to get an impartial jury pool," he said.

Creel also noted that Kohrs steered clear of speaking to any of the contents of deliberations among fellow jurors, a move which is strictly forbidden under Georgia law. In fact, he added that had she wanted to, Khors could have gone further than she already had and spoken on the specifics of the report.

"For example, she could start to divulge the names of those the special grand jury recommended charges for as well as the statutes they were implicated under, who was offered immunity, and more," he said.

Criminal defense attorney Rachel Fiset, the co-founder and managing partner of Los Angeles-based firm Zweiback, Fiset & Zalduendo LLP, agreed that Kohrs did not break the law, but was walking a "very fine line."

While Fiset opined that the Fulton County prosecutors were probably "disgusted" by Khors’ actions, she said it appeared "unlikely" she would be prosecuted for them.

"The district attorney will not want to bring into focus any potential irregularities with her case moving forward – and, as this is all after the fact, it should not actually affect the recommendations of the grand jury," Fiset added. "Instead, Kohrs appears to be giving valuable insight to anyone in the crosshairs of an indictment by naming witnesses and potential charges the D.A. may elect to bring."

Nikolas Lanum is an associate editor for Fox News Digital.
Trump, knows how to fight and win.
He doesn't back down for a fight of any kind ?
 

Dobbin

Faithful Steed
Grand Jury brings piddly indictments against everyone referenced - but not Trump.

Case goes to the Attorney General - who elects to not pursue.

"The Big One got away AGAIN!"

Dobbin
 

AlaskaSue

North to the Future
Some real "lookers" in that last group! :xpnd:

What do they expect? They've made their bed with crazies, loons, and nut cases. They're even high-ranking administration officials now. Did they expect they'd get calm, wise, well-spoken people for their rigged grand juries?

What strikes me is just how cookie-cutter they all appear! There are different designs in the frosting, but they are all the same 'baked' goods.
 

BadMedicine

Would *I* Lie???
meth. makes people move their mouth and eyes and facial expressions in over exaggerated and "stretching" ways because, their jaws feel wierd, the are over compensating expresssions to cover up the stretching jaw movement, added with the fluttery eyes all over the place... totally geeked out.
 

mikeabn

Finally not a lurker!
I wonder if she could actually be doing this to try to help Trump? Before you laugh, remember we ARE conspiracy theorists.
 

Yogizorch

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I thought she looked like Dobby with hair but I can definitely see a witch.
 

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