The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Fulton DA hints at August charges

In letter to judge, Willis outlines timetable for most of her staff to be working remotely.

- By Tamar Hallerman tamar.hallerman@ajc.com bill.rankin@ajc.com

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis hinted that she might seek indictment­s in early to mid-august in her long-running inquiry of former President Donald Trump and his allies.

The timetable was disclosed in a Thursday letter to Ural Glanville, Fulton Superior Court’s chief judge, and 20 other county officials. Willis listed 10 days between July 31 and Aug. 18 in which she plans to direct a large percentage of her staff to work remotely.

“This remote work will reduce the number of Fulton County District Attorney’s office staff in the Fulton County Courthouse and Government Center by approximat­ely 70%,” Willis noted, adding that only her leadership team, armed investigat­ors and a couple of other teams will be working in the building those days.

The remote work dates correspond with when two regular grand juries with indictment authority are scheduled to hear evidence. What’s known among prosecutor­s as “Grand Jury A” meets on Mondays and Tuesdays; “Grand Jury B” gathers on Thursdays and Fridays.

Those grand juries, which have 16 to 23 members and meet in two-month terms, hear evidence for all sorts of felony cases on any given day, from murder and arson to shopliftin­g. For an indictment to be handed up, at least 12 grand jurors must agree that there is enough probable cause — more evidence for than against — that a person committed a crime.

Willis’ letter, which was first reported by The New York Times, is yet another strong signal that the DA is planning to seek charges against major players who aggressive­ly questioned Georgia’s 2020 election results, including Trump.

The DA has spent more than two years examining whether the former president and his allies broke any Georgia laws when they pressed state officials to “find” votes and call for a special legislativ­e session to reverse Democrat Joe Biden’s narrow win. Also under investigat­ion: the appointmen­t of a slate of “alternate” GOP electors, the accessing of sensitive election data in Coffee County and attempts to pressure a Fulton County poll worker, among other events between November 2020 and January 2021.

In her letter to Glanville, Willis also requested that Fulton judges not schedule trials and in-person hearings during the weeks of Aug. 7 and Aug. 14.

The judge already had been given a heads-up about Willis’ time frame to seek indictment­s.

During a May 8 hearing for alleged spa shooter and death penalty defendant Robert Aaron Long, the judge asked parties to provide him possible dates to hold pretrial hearings.

“There is a concern about security in the courthouse during the months of August and September,” Fulton prosecutor Michael Carlson told Glanville, a clear reference to the Trump inquiry and Willis’ charging decisions.

Still, Glanville said he was setting down Aug. 21-24 for the hearings, asking lawyers to check back with him early that month to see if “everything holds.”

Willis previously told local law enforcemen­t officials to be ready for “heightened security and preparedne­ss” between July 11 and Sept. 1 because she predicted her indictment decisions might “provoke a significan­t public reaction.”

In recent weeks, prosecutor­s have interviewe­d a half-dozen fake electors after offering them

immunity deals and worked to stymie attempts from Trump and GOP elector Cathy Latham to all but derail their inquiry.

On Friday, Fulton Superior Court Judge Robert Mcburney denied a push from Trump’s Atlanta-based attorneys to receive three weeks to file a reply to Willis’ response to the latter.

“To date, the Court has received well over five hundred pages of briefing, argument, and exhibits on the issues raised by former President Trump and Ms. Latham,” Mcburney wrote. “That is plenty.”

It is now up to Mcburney to determine whether to hold a hearing on Trump’s motion, which seeks to disqualify Willis from investigat­ing the former president, seal the final report of the special grand jury that recommende­d potential indictment­s and suppress any evidence the jury uncovered before any indictment­s are handed up.

In a separate “friend of the court” filing on Friday, a bipartisan group of former federal and state prosecutor­s, including former Dekalb DA J. Tom Morgan, urged Mcburney to dismiss

Trump’s motion. Any request for relief is “premature,” they said, since no one has been indicted.

“This Court should not grant the sweeping and unpreceden­ted relief that Trump’s motion seeks,” wrote the group, which includes former Fulton prosecutor and state Rep. Tanya Miller; ex-massachuse­tts Gov. Bill Weld; and Donald Ayer, deputy U.S. attorney general during the George H.W. Bush administra­tion. “Being subject to criminal investigat­ion and potential indictment is not a cognizable injury that can support standing.”

 ?? JASON GETZ/AJC FILE ?? Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said that only her leadership team, armed investigat­ors and a couple of other teams will be working in the building between July 31 and Aug. 18.
JASON GETZ/AJC FILE Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said that only her leadership team, armed investigat­ors and a couple of other teams will be working in the building between July 31 and Aug. 18.

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