Former president Donald Trump's co-defendant in the election interference case, Harrison William Prescott Floyd, has reached a bond agreement after spending the weekend in jail. Floyd, who is accused of harassing an Atlanta-area election worker, posted a $100,000 bond on Tuesday. It remains unclear when he will be released from custody. Unlike the other defendants, Floyd initially did not retain a lawyer and did not contact the District Attorney's office to negotiate a bond agreement. As a result, he was held in jail for five nights until a public defender was assigned to his case. Floyd had already been evaluated by the Georgia Public Defender Counsel but was not taken as a client, suggesting he may not have qualified financially for indigent defense services. A lawyer in private practice has now been appointed to represent Floyd, and online fundraisers have raised approximately $300,000 for his legal defense.