- Window ‘closing rapidly’ on trial in Atlanta before election
- Willis seeking reelection amid judge’s admonition on speech
A Georgia judge’s refusal to bar
Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee did not disqualify Willis, the Fulton County district attorney, but issued withering criticism of her romantic relationship with the lead prosecutor, Nathan Wade. McAfee said Friday that either Willis or Wade must step aside to correct a “significant appearance of impropriety.”
Wade resigned hours after the ruling, clearing the way for resumption of the case against Trump and 14 others on allegations of illegally trying to overturn
“It’s not implausible that there could a late summer trial in Fulton County, but the window on that is closing rapidly,” said Georgia State University law professor Anthony Kreis.
Read More:
Willis and her prosecutors had pushed for an August trial, but the judge still hasn’t set a date. Trump’s other three criminal cases are also up in the air because of pre-trial disputes and appeals over such issues as whether he had immunity from criminal charges as president.
“The need is for speed,” said
Several obstacles remain. Trump could further slow the proceedings by asking McAfee to allow an immediate appeal. If McAfee assents, the
Continuing the Fight
“We will use all legal options available as we continue to fight to end this case, which should never have been brought in the first place,” Sadow said.
McAfee still has to rule on several pending motions that seek to limit or dismiss the sprawling racketeering indictment. On Wednesday, he
While Willis argued that all 15 defendants should be tried together, McAfee suggested during a Dec. 1
He said he “feels eight is the most we could do at once. My initial thought is the state would able to choose an A league and a B league” and decide which defendants should be tried first.
At that hearing, Sadow said the US Constitution’s Supremacy Clause would shield Trump from trial if he wins the White House. “I believe that under the Supremacy Clause and his duties as president of the United States, that this trial would not take place, if at all, until after he left his term of office,” Sadow said.
The case has essentially been frozen since a Trump co-defendant, Michael Roman, filed a motion on Jan. 8 disclosing the romantic relationship and claiming it amounted to a conflict of interest. With the ruling on Friday, the normal business of prosecuting a multi-defendant case may start to resume.
Four defendants have already
DA’s Reelection Bid
Willis, a Democrat, is also running for reelection, and she may be chastened as she moves forward. The judge was critical of a Jan. 14 speech that Willis gave at a historically Black church in Atlanta in which she said her critics were “playing the race card.”
The effect of the speech, McAfee said, was to “cast racial aspersions” on Roman for filing his motion. While it didn’t deny the defendants the chance at a fair trial, it was “still legally improper” and was the type of comment that “creates dangerous waters for the district attorney to wade further into,” McAfee wrote.
“The time may well have arrived for an order preventing the state from mentioning the case in any public forum to prevent prejudicial pretrial publicity,” the judge wrote.
Kreis, the law professor, said he expects Willis to be more constrained and disciplined on the campaign trail.
“Judge McAfee made clear that his tolerance for that is zero,” Kreis said. “She’s at a point where she’s made some very foolish decisions, and almost everybody agrees with this. If she makes further missteps in the coming weeks, that will be a massive liability.”
To contact the reporter on this story:
To contact the editors responsible for this story:
Elizabeth Wasserman, John Harney
© 2024 Bloomberg L.P. All rights reserved. Used with permission.
Learn more about Bloomberg Law or Log In to keep reading:
See Breaking News in Context
Bloomberg Law provides trusted coverage of current events enhanced with legal analysis.
Already a subscriber?
Log in to keep reading or access research tools and resources.