U.S. District Court Judge J.P. Boulee ordered the unsealing of the affidavit supporting the FBI's January 28 raid on Fulton County election offices for 2020 ballots, with records released on February 10, 2026, between 8:15 PM and 8:45 PM UTC, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution as cited by Faytuks Network on X. Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger responded during this 29-minute window, stating, "As Secretary of State, I’ve made Georgia the safest and most secure place to vote. Instead of wasting time and tax dollars trying to change the past with baseless and repackaged claims, let’s focus our efforts on building a safer, more affordable future for all hardworking Georgians," per Laura Bluestein's X post linking to the affidavit. This follows the affidavit's unsealing announced in the prior reporting period by Anna Bower. The affidavit references Clay Parikh, previously involved in unsuccessful Maricopa County election claims, as noted by Garrett Archer on X in this window. AJC reported Judge Boulee, a Trump appointee, set a February 10 deadline for unsealing the records related to the FBI seizure. State Senate Minority Leader Jason Esteves announced his candidacy in this period, posting on X, "I’m running to make sure the next generation doesn’t just inherit Georgia’s future, they shape it," thanking Gwinnett Young Democrats. Separately, WJLA reported Virginia Gov. Abigail Spanberger claimed half her “Affordable Virginia Agenda” proposals passed the House of Delegates or Senate, though analysis found most would not significantly lower costs, as shared by Nick Minock on X.