The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Watchdog agency investigat­ing judge candidate

Challenger to Fulton Trump case judge being looked at for ‘campaign conduct.’

- By Bill Rankin bill.rankin@ajc.com

The state judicial watchdog agency is investigat­ing an Atlanta lawyer challengin­g the Fulton County judge overseeing the election interferen­ce case against former President Donald Trump, an agency official said.

The investigat­ive panel of the Judicial Qualificat­ions Commission is looking into lawyer Robert Patillo’s “campaign conduct,” JQC director Courtney Veal said in a statement.

Patillo is running against Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee. The contest will be decided in the May 21 primary election.

Veal sent the statement Monday in response to a query by The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on about Patillo’s campaign website, which says interested parties can email the campaign at the address judgepatil­lo.com. Patillo is not a judge.

A canon of judicial conduct says judicial candidates shall not publish a false or misleading statement about themselves. A JQC advisory opinion also says it is inappropri­ate for a candidate to use the designatio­n “judge” in political advertisin­g if the candidate is not presently a judge.

In her statement, Veal said the investigat­ive panel

authorized her to comment on the probe. “The commission expects all judges and judicial candidates to conduct their campaigns in accordance with the Code of Judicial Conduct and the binding authority set forth in our formal advisory opinions,” she said.

Patillo’s campaign website address initially was judgepatil­lo.com. He subsequent­ly changed the site’s name to PatilloFor­Judge. com, but not the email address.

Tuesday, Patillo said his campaign website’s address was changed after it was notified by the JQC about it. He said the campaign has not been contacted by the judicial watchdog agency since then.

“We’ve taken all the steps the JQC recommende­d,” he said. “We’ve taken all the measures that can be taken and we no longer have anything that says

Judge Patillo. That’s all been taken down.”

Patillo isn’t the only would-be McAfee opponent facing hurdles.

Tiffani Johnson, a former Fulton Superior Court law clerk who once prosecuted misdemeano­r cases and served as a public defender, was expected to appeal a decision disqualify­ing her from the ballot.

On April 4, a state administra­tive law judge upheld a voter’s challenge to disqualify Johnson’s candidacy because she lives in DeKalb County, not Fulton County.

Kendre-Sue Derby, a member of Johnson’s campaign team, told the AJC that Johnson would appeal that decision to Fulton Superior Court, contending she is qualified to be on the ballot because she plans to live in Fulton before she takes the bench, provided she wins the election.

Johnson also has faced questions about her campaign website, which described her as “a former Fulton County Solicitor General.” That would mean she headed that office. Instead, she was an assistant solicitor in the office, which she corrected on her website after the AJC inquired about it.

Local judicial races typically draw little attention and incumbents seldom face challenger­s. But McAfee has emerged as a national figure as he has steered the Fulton County case against Trump and his co-defendants. His opponents could use their platform as a proxy to criticize his oversight of the case.

 ?? ?? Judge Scott McAfee
Robert Patillo
Courtney Veal
Judge Scott McAfee Robert Patillo Courtney Veal

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