The Oklahoman

Attorneys clash over Trump’s Ga. trial

Willis says no reason to delay proceeding­s until after Nov. 5 election

- Josh Meyer

District Attorney Fani Willis said she is ready to bring Donald Trump and 14 co-defendants to trial well before the Nov. 5 election.

“The train is coming,” Willis said in an exclusive interview with CNN on Saturday, her first public comments since avoiding being disqualified in the Georgia election fraud prosecutio­n of the former president.

Prominent Georgia defense lawyer Ashleigh Merchant, who first disclosed Willis’ romantic relationsh­ip with special prosecutor Nathan Wade in a bombshell Jan. 8 court filing, says not so fast.

“We’re ready,” Merchant said Monday in response to Willis’ comments at a charity Easter egg hunt Saturday in Atlanta.

Merchant, who represents one of Trump’s 14 co-defendants in the election subversion case, said in an interview Monday that an appeal of a judge’s ruling rejecting Willis’ disqualification likely will take many months and will push the trial back well past the November election that likely will pit Trump against President Joe Biden.

Merchant represents Trump 2020 campaign official Michael Roman, who is charged with conspiring with local Trump supporters in Georgia and Washington, D.C., to overturn the election Trump lost to Biden in the Peach State in 2020.

In their Jan. 8 court motion, Roman and Merchant alleged that Willis created a profession­al conflict of interest by hiring private lawyer Wade to oversee the sweeping election case and having an affair with him.

Both Willis and Wade denied those allegation­s and said they committed no wrongdoing. Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee ruled March 15 that Willis could stay in charge of the election fraud case – but only if Wade stepped down. He did so hours later.

Days later, McAfee allowed Trump and at least eight other co-defendants to take an emergency appeal of his ruling to the Georgia state Court of Appeals. The defense lawyers, including Merchant and Steven Sadow for Trump, not only want Willis and her entire office thrown off the case, but the charges dismissed altogether, as some of them petitioned in their initial court motions back in January.

In her CNN interview, Willis acknowledg­ed the election racketeeri­ng case against Trump and the others was clouded by more than two months of legal wrangling over the motion to disqualify her.

That included explosive − and unproven − allegation­s by Roman’s defense team and others that Willis and Wade began their affair long before she hired him to oversee the case in November 2021 and then lied about it under oath in order to preserve the case and their lead roles in it.

McAfee held nearly three full days of evidentiar­y hearings before issuing his much-awaited ruling that defense lawyers had failed to prove that Willis had a conflict of interest. But the Republican-appointed judge sharply criticized Willis, saying she had created the “significant appearance of impropriet­y that infects the current structure of the prosecutio­n team” by having a romantic relationsh­ip with Wade.

McAfee also said Willis and Wade had severely damaged their credibilit­y while on the witness stand, and that “an odor of mendacity remains” due to “reasonable questions” over whether they had “testified untruthful­ly about the timing of their relationsh­ip.”

Through it all, however, Willis and her team never stopped working on the underlying case. No trial date has been set and Willis said there’s no reason to delay it.

“No, my team has been continuing to work” on the case and “all while that was going on we were writing responses and briefs. We were still doing the case in the way that it needed to be done,” Willis said. “I don’t feel like we’ve been slowed down at all. I do think that there are efforts to slow down this train, but the train is coming.”

Lawyers for Trump and the other defendants have 10 days from McAfee’s ruling to file an appeal. Then the Georgia appellate court has 45 days to decide whether to even hear the appeal.

If the appeals court agrees to hear the case, it could potentiall­y disqualify Willis and the entire Fulton County district attorney’s office − or it could order other fixes, or uphold McAfee’s ruling and allow the case to go forward.

Merchant, speaking on Fox News, said that the Georgia Court of Appeals could rule that Willis is disqualified and that a new prosecutor − or prosecutor’s office − must now step in.

Or, she said, “They can send it back and say ‘Judge McAfee, you actually made some errors. We think the actual, you know, impropriet­ies here is enough’ and tell him to go ahead and fix it,” Merchant said. “Or they could say ‘we’re not going to decide this,’ and then it’s going to go up to the Supreme Court” on an appeal of the appeal.

“It’s going to take at least a couple of months for this to work its way through the system to determine whether or not she actually is disqualified,” Merchant said.

As a result, Merchant said, “I don’t see any way that this could happen before the election. I mean, the appellate process takes about six months, once it’s initiated, and we’re not even there yet.”

In his ruling approving the appeal, McAfee said that “unless directed otherwise by an appellate court,” he will allow some aspects of the case to move forward.

“The Court intends to continue addressing the many other unrelated pending pretrial motions,” McAfee wrote, “regardless of whether the petition is granted Fulton County Superior Court.”

Clark Cunningham, a professor of law and ethics at Georgia State University College of Law, told USA TODAY that there’s a chance the Court of Appeals will not take the case, given what he says is its history of deferring to the judgment of the initial judge in question.

Either way, he said, whoever loses almost certainly will appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court, making it even less likely that Trump and others will sit before a jury before Election Day.

 ?? ?? In her exclusive interview with CNN on Saturday, District Attorney Fani Willis acknowledg­ed that the election racketeeri­ng case against former President Donald Trump and the others was clouded by more than two months of legal wrangling over the motion to disqualify her. ALEX SILTZ/POOL VIA USA TODAY
In her exclusive interview with CNN on Saturday, District Attorney Fani Willis acknowledg­ed that the election racketeeri­ng case against former President Donald Trump and the others was clouded by more than two months of legal wrangling over the motion to disqualify her. ALEX SILTZ/POOL VIA USA TODAY

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