Is the Fulton County election office search warrant online (preferably the affidavit, but I'll take the order itself)?

Searching on PACER, I can't find the docket.

Edit: it is; see thread.

A federal search warrant comes in two parts: the warrant itself, which authorizes the search and is signed by a judge/magistrate, and a supporting affidavit establishing probable cause that there is evidence of a specific crime to be seized (signed by an investigator). The latter is often sealed until arrests are made, but the warrant is generally unsealed at the time of execution. It identifies the items to be seized, and also the court, judge and docket number.

https://www.uscourts.gov/sites/default/files/ao093.pdf

Also, unless it's a "no-knock" warrant (which the Fulton County was not), a copy goes to the people being searched at the time it's executed. So Fulton County surely has a copy.
Anyway, I want to see the warrant because it will tell us what court issued it, what the FBI was looking for, and a docket number that might give some insight into what specific crimes are being investigated here.
The affidavit (which I'm less hopeful is unsealed) will be especially enlightening, because it is a sworn statement that has to articulate specific facts that establish probable cause about a specific crime for which there is evidence to be seized. (Not merely general suspicion).

Ah, @lawfare got the warrant, which you can read here: https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/26513986-1-28-26-fulton-warrant/ . Thanks @linuxandyarn for calling it to my attention!

Lawfare's analysis is quite good (https://www.lawfaremedia.org/article/we-have-questions-about-the-fbi-s-fulton-county-search); I won't add much to it except to highlight a few notable things below.

1-28-26 Fulton Warrant

First, the predicate crimes for the warrant are 52 USC § 20511 (https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=(title:52%20section:20511%20edition:prelim) and 52 USC § 20701 (https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?req=(title:52%20section:20701%20edition:prelim), and the warrant seeks records for the 2020 general election.

20701 requires certain election records to be retained for 22 months after the election; note that well over 22 months have already elapsed since the election, so it's unclear how the presence or absence of any 2020 records in the warehouse today would shed light on whether this section was violated.

20511 prohibits various kinds of election fraud, including fraudulent voter registration and casting fraudulent ballots, including by election officials.

But, as Lawfare notes, the statute of limitations here is five years, and more than five years have already elapsed since any 2020 election fraud would have occurred.

The warrant also refers to violations since October 12, 2020. It's not clear what the significance of that date is.

@mattblaze Early voting in GA began on 2020-10-12 so maybe that’s the reason for that date.

And as we all know, early voting something fraud something rigged something conspiracy so that’s the day on which all the criming would have started. (/s)

https://ballotpedia.org/Georgia_elections,_2020

Georgia elections, 2020

Ballotpedia
@stuartmarks That's possible, but it still has to be squared with the statute of limitations barrier. You generally can't get a warrant for something that can't be prosecuted.