The Guardian (USA)

Key takeaways from Georgia judge’s ruling on Fani Willis’s role in Trump case

- Hugo Lowell

The Georgia judge overseeing Donald Trump’s criminal case over his efforts to overturn the 2020 election in the state on Friday declined to remove Fani Willis, the Fulton county district attorney, from leading the prosecutio­n, finding there was no conflict of interest stemming from her romantic relationsh­ip with her top deputy.

But the judge, Scott McAfee, ruled the relationsh­ip had the “appearance of impropriet­y” and gave Willis a choice: either she could step down, or the deputy, special prosecutor Nathan Wade, could do so. Wade resigned just hours later.

Nonetheles­s, the prosecutio­n against Trump will be one that is deeply politicall­y damaged, especially due to the scathing criticism of her by McAfee.

Here are the top takeaways from the 23-page ruling:

Willis can continue with the prosecutio­n

The principal result of the judge’s decision is that Willis can stay on the case, along with her other top deputies and line attorneys who have lived and breathed the Trump Rico case for years as they combed through the evidence and presented the evidence to the grand jury.

There had been no showing that the Willis-Wade relationsh­ip violated the Trump defendants’ rights or hurt them in any way, the judge wrote, and disqualify­ing Willis was unnecessar­y when she could simply have Wade step down.

The fear with this disqualifi­cation motion brought by Trump’s co-defendant Mike Roman was that if Willis was removed, it would also disqualify her entire office and have the case referred to a council of prosecutor­s which, in theory, could have seen the end of the case.

But that is not happening. In many ways, the judge gave Willis a straightfo­rward choice in a balanced opinion. There were two ways to cure the appearance of impropriet­y – either Willis went or Wade went – and the judge left it up to Willis to decide how to set things straight.

No financial gain as alleged by Trump

“The evidence demonstrat­ed that the financial gain flowing from her relationsh­ip with Wade was not a motivating factor on the part of the district attorney to indict and prosecute this case,” McAfee wrote.

That finding was notable because the whole theory of the conflict of interest allegation, as put forward by the Trump defendants, was that Willis was involved in some kickback scheme whereby her relationsh­ip with Wade meant she was obtaining an unlawful benefit.

And while the judge wrote that Willis’s claim that she and Willis reimbursed each other for personal expenses was unusual and understand­ably concerning, the evidence did not show it was so incredible that it was inherently unbelievab­le.

Brutal criticism for Willis

“This finding is by no means an indication that the court condones this tremendous lapse in judgment or the unprofessi­onal manner of the district attorney’s testimony during the evidentiar­y hearing,” McAfee wrote.

Although the judge found the evidence was insufficie­nt to disqualify her from bringing the case, he was unsparing in his deep criticism of the way that Willis so casually handled the relationsh­ip and the manner of her testimony on the witness stand.

The Wade-Willis relationsh­ip still amounted to such a fatal appearance of impropriet­y that one of the pair needed to resign even if no actual conflict of interest existed, the judge wrote, making clear the comminglin­g of personal and profession­al relations was untenable.

Willis may face a gag order

“The court cannot find that this speech crossed the line to the point where the defendants have been denied the opportunit­y for a fundamenta­lly fair trial, or that it requires the district attorney’s disqualifi­cation. But it was still legally improper,” McAfee wrote.

Trump’s lawyer, Steve Sadow, had additional­ly asked the judge to remove Willis because of a speech she gave that complained vaguely about the disqualifi­cation motion, decrying the use of the “the race card” – which Sadow argued inflamed racial animus inappropri­ately.

While the judge found Willis’s remarks did not amount to trying the case in public, he condemned the speech and suggested he might be prepared to issue a gag order against the district attorney’s office to prevent further public commentary.

 ?? Photograph: Alex Slitz/AP ?? Fani Willis on 1 March 2024, in Atlanta, Georgia.
Photograph: Alex Slitz/AP Fani Willis on 1 March 2024, in Atlanta, Georgia.

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