The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Defense attorney urges YSL judge to restrict witnesses, pick up pace

Proceeding­s could drag into 2027, he warns in motion.

- By Jozsef Papp jozsef.papp-chang@ajc.com and Shaddi Abusaid shaddi.abusaid@ajc.com

If the pace of Fulton County’s ongoing “Young Slime Life” trial doesn’t pick up, proceeding­s could drag into 2027, a defense attorney said in a motion filed Tuesday.

“As this Court has broad discretion to exercise rea- sonable control over the pre- sentation of witnesses and evidence, the Court should use that discretion to prevent this trial from stretching into 2027,” wrote Doug Weinstein, who represents Deamonte Kendrick, known profession­ally as Yak Gotti.

Prosecutor­s initially said they would call 700 wit- nesses, then trimmed the list to 400. So far, they have gotten through 53.

Jury selection began on Jan. 4, 2023; opening state- ments followed more than 10 months later, on Nov. 27. Repeated delays, juror problems and time off have resulted in just 45 days of actual proceeding­s, some conducted outside the jury’s presence. It’s officially the longest criminal trial in Geor- gia history.

Weinstein’s motion urged Judge Ural Glanville to limit the number of witnesses called by the prosecutio­n and to “consider the rami- fications of the present pace of trial and its impact on the jury, the case, as well as the defendants.”

The motion was filed the same day a state’s witness, Adrian Bean, was excused from the stand after spend- ing six days over a two-week period answering ques- tions from prosecutor­s and defense attorneys.

Bean spent most of his tes- timony telling the attorneys he didn’t remember much about a September 2013 inci- dent involving a stolen vehi- cle and police shooting.

“This is simply untenable for the remaining 15 jurors or the defendants who remain jailed and without bond,” Weinstein’s motion read, “and the presentati­on of another 360 witnesses by the State would cause undue delay, would be a waste of time, and would amount to needless presentati­on of cumulative evidence.”

The motion also requested that the state provide a detailed witness list by April 15.

The 65-count indictment contains 191 “overt acts” that prosecutor­s allege were carried out in furtheranc­e of the gang. So far prosecutor­s have brought in multiple witnesses — mostly law enforcemen­t officers — to answer questions about each act. Some of those witnesses have been called back to the stand multiple times.

One witness, former defendant Trontaviou­s Stephens, remained on the stand about nine days before he was eventually excused.

Many of the acts listed in the indictment involved defendants who are no longer part of the trial, either because they accepted plea deals or have had their cases severed. All six defendants standing trial have been in jail without bond for two years.

Prosecutor­s say YSL, or Young Slime Life, is a south Atlanta gang responsibl­e for a rash of shootings, robberies and drug deals. They contend Atlanta rapper Young Thug is the cofounder and leader of the gang.

Defense attorneys for the Grammy winner, whose real name is Jeffery Williams, deny the charges. They say YSL stands for Young Stoner Life and is simply the name of the star’s record label.

 ?? SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM STEVE ?? Defendant Deamonte Kendrick sits with his attorneys ahead of opening statements in the “Young Slime Life” trial on Nov. 27 at the Fulton County Courthouse.
SCHAEFER/STEVE.SCHAEFER@AJC.COM STEVE Defendant Deamonte Kendrick sits with his attorneys ahead of opening statements in the “Young Slime Life” trial on Nov. 27 at the Fulton County Courthouse.
 ?? AJC FILE ?? A defense motion asks Judge Ural Glanville to “consider the ramificati­ons of the present pace of trial and its impact on the jury, the case (and) the defendants.”
AJC FILE A defense motion asks Judge Ural Glanville to “consider the ramificati­ons of the present pace of trial and its impact on the jury, the case (and) the defendants.”

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