A third co-defendant of former US President Donald Trumpattorney Kenneth Cisebro, believed to be the “mastermind” of the scheme to overturn the election result in the State of Georgia, pleaded guilty today, as part of a plea deal with state prosecutors.

This is the second defendant to reach an agreement with the prosecution in the last 24 hours.

She was preceded by attorney Sidney Powell, who was originally scheduled to go on trial Monday with Cisebro but will ultimately avoid the trial. She pleaded guilty to six counts of conspiracy to interfere with the implementation of the electoral project.

Cisebro, 62, was charged with seven counts but pleaded guilty only to forgery when he appeared in court today in Atlanta.

He was given a five-year suspended sentence, $5,000 in restitution and 100 hours of community service. He should also apologize to Georgia voters in an open letter.

In order to drop the remaining charges against him, Cisebro agreed to testify at future trials of other defendants, including Trump and his former personal attorney, Rudy Giuliani.

Among other things, Cisebro allegedly drafted and sent memos aimed at replacing Joe Biden’s Democratic electors in Georgia with pro-Trump Republicans.

A total of 19 people are accused of this case. In addition to Powell and Chisebro, another defendant, Scott Hall, had pleaded guilty on September 29.

Trump is set to go on trial on March 4 in a Washington federal court on charges of trying to sway the 2020 presidential election.