The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton DA asks court: Pick prosecutor in Brooks case

Motion seeks status conference to settle debate once and for all.

- By Christian Boone

With neither side willing to blink, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis on Friday filed several motions in Fulton County Superior Court asking it to break the deadlock over who should represent the state in the Rayshard Brooks case.

The dispute began when Willis asked Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr to recuse the Fulton DA’S office from the Brooks case, citing conflicts of interest created by her predecesso­r, Paul Howard, in bringing charges against the two officers involved in Brooks’ death last June.

Carr refused, saying a recusal wasn’t necessary since any conflicts pertain only to the former DA, who charged former Atlanta Police Department Officer Garrett Rolfe with felony murder and Officer Devin Brosnan

with aggravated assault after five days of investigat­ion into Brooks’ shooting death.

“There is no known precedent for this situation,” Willis’ legal counsel, Kevin Armstrong, wrote in Willis’ motion suggesting the Fulton court hold a status conference to settle the debate once and for all. “The District Attorney has announced her recusal, but the Attorney General has refused to appoint a new prosecutor,” Armstrong wrote.

In a status conference, the judge and the lawyers in a pending legal matter meet to determine how the case is progressin­g.

It’s unclear if or when a status conference will be scheduled. Similar motions were also filed in criminal cases against six APD officers charged after utilizing Tasers against two college students violating a citywide curfew last May.

Willis initially planned to not object to Rolfe’s motion asking for the disqualifi­cation of her office. But after seeking counsel with Jeff

Davis, the former executive director of the State Bar of Georgia and director of the state judicial watchdog agency, Willis said she now believes representa­tion must be decided beforehand.

Davis has argued that the AG oversteppe­d his bounds by denying Willis’ request for recusal.

“As someone who’s dealt with lawyer and judicial ethics much of my career, I think the rules of profession­al conduct make it clear that it is the duty of the individual lawyer to determine whether a conflict of interest exists,” said Davis, now with the Atlanta firm Wilson, Brock & Irby.

A Carr spokespers­on pushed back, saying the DA’S requests “fail to meet what is required to invoke the conflict statute.”

The AG’S office declined a request for additional comment on the latest developmen­ts.

Meanwhile, the parties involved on both sides are left in the dark. The prosecutor­s who end up representi­ng the state will likely conduct their own investigat­ion, which could lead to charges being reduced or even withdrawn.

Rolfe’s attorney, Noah Pines, moved for a dismissal of the case, citing the jurisdicti­onal tug of war.

Lawyers for Brooks’ family have asked Carr to appoint a special prosecutor.

“You think these police are getting prosecuted, and it doesn’t start. They’re in jail, and they’re out of jail,” said Justin Miller, co-counsel for Brooks’ relatives and for Taniyah Pilgrim, one of the college students stunned by police officers’ Tasers in the other case facing uncertain representa­tion.

“What the family needs, and wants, is a road to closure,” Miller said at a news conference last week.

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Fulton DA Fani Willis wants her office recused in Rayshard Brooks’ case, citing conflicts of interest from her predecesso­r.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Fulton DA Fani Willis wants her office recused in Rayshard Brooks’ case, citing conflicts of interest from her predecesso­r.

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