Las Vegas Review-Journal

Sides seize on grand juror’s media blitz

- By Kate Brumback

Almost as soon as the foreperson of the special grand jury in the Georgia election meddling investigat­ion went public this week, speculatio­n began about whether her unusually candid revelation­s could jeopardize any possible prosecutio­n of former President Donald Trump or others.

Emily Kohrs first spoke out in an interview published Tuesday by

The Associated Press, a story that was followed by interviews in other print and television news outlets. In detailed commentary, she described some of what happened behind the closed doors of the jury room — how witnesses behaved, how prosecutor­s interacted with them, how some invoked their constituti­onal right not to answer certain questions.

Lawyers for Trump say the revelation­s offered by Kohrs shattered the credibilit­y of the entire special grand jury investigat­ion. People hoping to see the former president indicted worried on social media that Kohrs may have tanked a case against the former president. But experts said that while Kohrs’ chattiness in news interviews probably aggravated Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who’s leading the investigat­ion, they were not legally damaging.

Willis likely “wishes that this woman hadn’t gone on the worldwide tour that she did,” said Amy Lee Copeland, a former federal prosecutor and criminal defense attorney in Georgia who’s not involved in the case. “But is this a headache that is grinding the machine to a halt? It’s not.”

Trump’s attorneys in Georgia, however, are jumping on the interviews.

Drew Findling and Jennifer Little, who represent Trump in the Fulton County case, said they’ve had concerns about the panel’s proceeding­s from the start but have kept quiet out of respect for the grand jury process. After Kohrs’ interviews, they felt compelled to speak out.

“The end product is, the reliabilit­y of anything that has taken place in there is completely tainted and called into question,” Findling said. But he also said he wasn’t attacking “a 30-year-old foreperson.”

“She’s a product of a circus that cloaked itself as a special purpose grand jury,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States