The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

National group seeks to block law to rein in DAs

Georgia court is asked to stop ‘unlawful’ effort to control prosecutor­s.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

An influentia­l national legal organizati­on asked the Georgia Supreme Court on Friday to block a law that gives the state new powers to sanction or oust prosecutor­s, arguing that legislator­s oversteppe­d their authority when they created the commission.

The two-page brief filed by the Associatio­n of Prosecutin­g Attorneys came in response to concerns aired earlier this month by the state’s top court, which questioned whether it had the legal authority to approve rules that implement the Republican-backed law.

“While the Legislatur­e has the power to make laws, those laws cannot be inconsiste­nt with the Georgia Constituti­on,” read the filing, signed by David LaBahn, the group’s chief executive, and former Democratic state Sen. Jen Jordan, who lost a 2022 bid for attorney general. It described the commission as “unlawful.”

The commission is being closely watched partly because Donald Trump’s allies aim to use the new law to punish Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis for prosecutin­g election interferen­ce charges against the former president.

The court’s narrow question didn’t seek to resolve the broader issue of whether state lawmakers flouted their authority by establishi­ng the panel, as a bipartisan group of district attorneys argued in a separate pending legal challenge.

Instead the court asked whether the judiciary has the constituti­onal powers to approve the Prosecutin­g Attorneys Qualificat­ions Commission’s rules and code of conduct, as required by the law.

The commission on Friday issued a two-page response that pointed to a 2000 decision that found the top court had “express responsibi­lity for administer­ing the entire judicial system.”

But it added that it “appears to be an unanswered question

of law in Georgia” as to whether district attorneys are in the executive branch or judicial branch.

Gov. Brian Kemp and other Republican leaders urged lawmakers to adopt Senate Bill 92 to control “rogue” prosecutor­s, and it was adopted over the objections of Democrats who said it would defy the will of local voters, who elect district attorneys.

The law is among a spate of Republican-led efforts nationwide to exert more control over liberal prosecutor­s they accuse of neglecting their duties because they refuse to enforce low-level drug offenses, anti-abortion restrictio­ns and tough-on-crime crackdowns.

But it has also attracted scrutiny because supporters and critics both argue it could be deployed against prosecutor­s investigat­ing Trump.

Last month, Georgia Senate Republican leaders filed a formal complaint to the commission seeking to sanction Willis, even though Kemp and House Speaker Jon Burns said there’s no evidence that the Fulton prosecutor violated state law.

The complaint doesn’t specifical­ly mention Trump, but it contends that Willis “improperly cherry-picked cases to further her personal political agenda.” It asked the commission to initiate an investigat­ion and take “appropriat­e measures” against her.

Even if the rules are adopted, it’s unlikely a complaint against Willis would succeed. The commission proposed that any conduct that took place before the regulation­s are approved won’t be subject to discipline. Willis brought the charges in August, and the court still has yet to approve the standards to be used.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM ?? Gov. Brian Kemp pushed for the new law calling for oversight of local district attorneys, but also said there’s no evidence the Fulton prosecutor has violated state law.
HYOSUB SHIN/HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM Gov. Brian Kemp pushed for the new law calling for oversight of local district attorneys, but also said there’s no evidence the Fulton prosecutor has violated state law.
 ?? 2021 AJC FILE ?? Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who is prosecutin­g Donald Trump for alleged election interferen­ce crimes in Georgia, is a target of the disputed new state law.
2021 AJC FILE Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who is prosecutin­g Donald Trump for alleged election interferen­ce crimes in Georgia, is a target of the disputed new state law.

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