The Guardian (USA)

Fani Willis: ‘Train is coming’ for Trump despite efforts to derail Georgia case

- Edward Helmore

The Georgia prosecutor overseeing Donald Trump’s election interferen­ce case in that state promised Saturday that “the train is coming” for him despite defense efforts to derail her office’s pursuit of charges against the former president and nearly two dozen co-defendants.

Fulton county district attorney Fani Willis’s remarks came after a court challenge centering on a romantic relationsh­ip that she had with a special prosecutor whom she appointed to the case, Nathan Wade. After the relationsh­ip was exposed, Wade stepped down from the prosecutio­n to defuse any appearance­s of a potential conflict of interest and so Willis could stay on the case.

“I don’t feel like we have been slowed down at all” by Trump’s efforts to use the relationsh­ip with Wade to disqualify her from prosecutin­g him, Willis told CNN on Saturday at a Georgia Easter egg hunt. “I think there are efforts to slow down the train, but the train is coming.”

Willis’s case alleges a conspiracy to commit election fraud after Trump came up narrowly short in the state’s vote during the 2020 presidenti­al race that he lost to Joe Biden. But it has been beset with complicati­ons.

A little more than 10 days ago, Fulton county judge Scott McAfee dismissed six counts against Trump and his co-defendants relating to a notorious phone call in which the former president urged Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensper­ger to “find” more than 11,000 votes that would put Trump over Biden.

Of the 13 counts Trump faces, three of them were thrown out. McAfee essentiall­y agreed with defense lawyers that the charges “fail to allege sufficient detail” regarding what aspect of Raffensper­ger’s oath of office the defendants were allegedly trying to get him to break.

But the attention on Willis, who had hired Wade to draw up the charges, continues to hang over the case. Earlier in March, McAfee held three days of hearings weighing motions to disqualify her.

Wade and Willis admitted they had been in a relationsh­ip but said it did “not amount to a disqualify­ing conflict of interest”. They maintained that Willis had not benefitted financiall­y, directly or indirectly, when they took several holidays and trips together.

McAfee ruled there wasn’t sufficient evidence to prove the defense’s claims but rebuked Willis for what he called a “tremendous lapse in judgment”.

Attorneys for Trump argued that Willis – who is Black – committed “appalling and unforgivab­le” forms of forensic misconduct by “stoking racial and religious prejudice” against the defendants after she claimed that the allegation­s against her had been motivated by race.

The judge later agreed that attorneys for Trump’s co-defendants are free to appeal his ruling that she could stay on the case. That proceeding is almost certain to lead to a new set of legal challenges relating to prosecutor­ial impropriet­y, actual or in appearance, around the Willis-Wade affair.

Willis told CNN that she did not feel that her profession­al reputation had been sullied or that she had done anything embarrassi­ng.

“I’m not embarrasse­d by anything I’ve done,” Willis said. “I guess my greatest crime is that I had a relationsh­ip with a man, but that’s not something I find embarrassi­ng in any way.”

But some questioned her decision to speak to the media after the intense attention around her personal decisions around the case have come close to derailing it entirely.

In a series of posts on X, Georgia State University law professor Anthony Michael Kreis, who’s been following the case against Trump, noted that McAfee had previously threatened to impose a gag order on Willis.

“If I were Fani Willis, I would simply not talk to the media at all at this point just out of an abundance of caution,” Kreis wrote.

 ?? Alex Slitz/Reuters ?? Fulton county district attorney Fani Willis attends a hearing on the Georgia election interferen­ce case, March 1, 2024, in Atlanta. Photograph:
Alex Slitz/Reuters Fulton county district attorney Fani Willis attends a hearing on the Georgia election interferen­ce case, March 1, 2024, in Atlanta. Photograph:

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