ECHOES OF MARCIA CLARK & CHRIS DARDEN??

niniveh

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If the reports of extra-curricular hanky-panky are correct, is it likely to complicate the outcome of the case?


Georgia prosecutors remain silent days after explosive allegations
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has not responded to claims by a Trump co-defendant that she has had a romantic relationship with one of the case’s prosecutors
By Holly Bailey
and
Amy Gardner
January 12, 2024 at 6:27 p.m. EST
Special prosecutor Nathan Wade, left, listens as John Floyd speaks on behalf of the prosecution during a motions hearing for former president Donald Trump’s election interference case on Friday. (Elijah Nouvelage for The Washington Post)

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ATLANTA — The Georgia judge overseeing the criminal election interference case against former president Donald Trump and allies said he planned to schedule a hearing next month on a motion seeking to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis amid claims she had an improper personal relationship with a special prosecutor she appointed to the case.


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Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said during a Friday hearing that he was first waiting to see a response from Willis to misconduct allegations leveled in a Monday court filing by Mike Roman, one of Trump’s remaining 14 co-defendants in the criminal case and a former high-ranking campaign aide during the 2020 election. So far, there has been none.
Roman has moved to disqualify Willis and her office from the case, claiming Willis has been engaged in a “personal, romantic relationship” with Nathan Wade, whose firm has been paid more than $650,000 by the district attorney’s office since he was tapped as an outside prosecutor on the case in November 2021.



Willis has not publicly commented on the allegations, with a spokesman saying she will respond in a court filing. On Friday, McAfee asked Wade and other prosecutors in attendance, at a scheduled hearing on other matters in the case, if they wanted to respond to Roman’s motion.
As the judge waited for an answer, Wade, the lead prosecutor, remained seated. A few seconds later, Daysha Young, an executive district attorney assigned to the case, rose to respond. “Not at this time, your honor,” Young said.
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The interaction came during a hearing on motions filed by Trump and other defendants in the case. But it marked the first public appearance by Wade and other members of the prosecution team amid a controversy that threatens to delay or even upend the high-profile racketeering case alleging Trump and his allies illegally conspired to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss in Georgia.



Unlike other recent hearings in the case, Wade and prosecutors entered and exited from a back hallway into the courtroom on Friday, avoiding reporters. While Wade entered the courtroom with a smile, he avoided interacting with defense lawyers — out of the norm for a lead prosecutor who has been known to greet and shake hands with other lawyers in the highly charged case. He allowed other prosecutors to answer questions and make arguments — even at moments when he would usually do so.
In Monday’s motion, Roman claimed Wade’s hiring was improper and unethical because of what, he claimed, was an ongoing personal relationship between Wade and Willis that predated Wade’s hiring as an outside prosecutor.
The filing claimed Willis had benefited personally from Wade’s income from the case, alleging she had joined him on multiple cruises and other trips unrelated to work that Wade had paid for. Wade and Willis, Roman’s filing claimed, were “profiting significantly from this prosecution at the expense of the taxpayers.”



The filing provided no proof to back up those claims. Ashleigh Merchant, a prominent Cobb County defense attorney who represents Roman, later told The Washington Post that the claims were based on sources that she did not name as well as records she said had been disclosed as part of Wade’s ongoing divorce proceedings, which have turned contentious.
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On Monday, hours before Roman’s filing, Willis was subpoenaed to be deposed as a witness in Wade’s divorce case by Wade’s estranged wife, according to a court filing provided to The Post. It was not immediately clear why Wade’s wife was seeking to depose Willis, and an attorney for Joycelyn Mayfield Wade declined to comment on the subpoena.
Wade has not responded to requests for comment. Scott Kimbrough, Wade’s divorce attorney since November, also declined to comment on the pending case when reached by telephone on Friday.



The subject of Roman’s filing arose Friday during discussion of a motion over discovery issues lodged by Steve Sadow, an Atlanta attorney who is leading Trump’s defense in the Georgia case. McAfee asked Sadow to explain a request he had made to the judge in an email earlier this week asking if Trump could delay his decision on whether to join Roman’s motion to disqualify Willis.
“Suffice it to say that they are salacious and scandalous in nature,” Sadow said of Roman’s claims. “I’m leery of moving to adopt motions that make such allegations without having a better understanding or substantiation of the allegations.”
Sadow said he wanted to learn more about the claims and see Willis’s response before deciding if Trump would join Roman’s motion. Craig Gillen, an attorney for former Georgia Republican Party chair David Shafer, another co-defendant, told McAfee that he was conducting his own investigation to “determine whether or not we’re going to adopt that motion or supplement that motion.”



McAfee told the lawyers he’s willing to give some “leeway” to allow all sides to respond, but also warned he wanted to maintain control. Prosecutors, including Wade, offered little visible reaction to the back and forth.
The allegation threatens to disrupt a case in which Willis has shown momentum in recent months.
Four of Trump’s original 19 co-defendants have accepted plea deals and are cooperating in the case, while others, including former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, have been unsuccessful in their attempts to move the case from state to federal court.
If McAfee finds that Willis and her office should be disqualified from the proceedings, the decision on who takes on the case would be made by the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia. The council is still looking for an outside prosecutor to handle the case of Burt Jones, a Trump elector in 2020 who is currently serving as Georgia’s lieutenant governor.
A judge disqualified Willis and her office from investigating Jones in 2022 after Willis sponsored a fundraiser for a former colleague who was a Democratic challenger to Jones.
Gardner reported from Washington.
 

toguy5252

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If the reports of extra-curricular hanky-panky are correct, is it likely to complicate the outcome of the case?


Georgia prosecutors remain silent days after explosive allegations
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has not responded to claims by a Trump co-defendant that she has had a romantic relationship with one of the case’s prosecutors
By Holly Bailey
and
Amy Gardner
January 12, 2024 at 6:27 p.m. EST
Special prosecutor Nathan Wade, left, listens as John Floyd speaks on behalf of the prosecution during a motions hearing for former president Donald Trump’s election interference case on Friday. (Elijah Nouvelage for The Washington Post)

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ATLANTA — The Georgia judge overseeing the criminal election interference case against former president Donald Trump and allies said he planned to schedule a hearing next month on a motion seeking to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis amid claims she had an improper personal relationship with a special prosecutor she appointed to the case.


Sign up for Fact Checker, our weekly review of what's true, false or in-between in politics.

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said during a Friday hearing that he was first waiting to see a response from Willis to misconduct allegations leveled in a Monday court filing by Mike Roman, one of Trump’s remaining 14 co-defendants in the criminal case and a former high-ranking campaign aide during the 2020 election. So far, there has been none.
Roman has moved to disqualify Willis and her office from the case, claiming Willis has been engaged in a “personal, romantic relationship” with Nathan Wade, whose firm has been paid more than $650,000 by the district attorney’s office since he was tapped as an outside prosecutor on the case in November 2021.



Willis has not publicly commented on the allegations, with a spokesman saying she will respond in a court filing. On Friday, McAfee asked Wade and other prosecutors in attendance, at a scheduled hearing on other matters in the case, if they wanted to respond to Roman’s motion.
As the judge waited for an answer, Wade, the lead prosecutor, remained seated. A few seconds later, Daysha Young, an executive district attorney assigned to the case, rose to respond. “Not at this time, your honor,” Young said.
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The interaction came during a hearing on motions filed by Trump and other defendants in the case. But it marked the first public appearance by Wade and other members of the prosecution team amid a controversy that threatens to delay or even upend the high-profile racketeering case alleging Trump and his allies illegally conspired to overturn Trump’s 2020 election loss in Georgia.



Unlike other recent hearings in the case, Wade and prosecutors entered and exited from a back hallway into the courtroom on Friday, avoiding reporters. While Wade entered the courtroom with a smile, he avoided interacting with defense lawyers — out of the norm for a lead prosecutor who has been known to greet and shake hands with other lawyers in the highly charged case. He allowed other prosecutors to answer questions and make arguments — even at moments when he would usually do so.
In Monday’s motion, Roman claimed Wade’s hiring was improper and unethical because of what, he claimed, was an ongoing personal relationship between Wade and Willis that predated Wade’s hiring as an outside prosecutor.
The filing claimed Willis had benefited personally from Wade’s income from the case, alleging she had joined him on multiple cruises and other trips unrelated to work that Wade had paid for. Wade and Willis, Roman’s filing claimed, were “profiting significantly from this prosecution at the expense of the taxpayers.”



The filing provided no proof to back up those claims. Ashleigh Merchant, a prominent Cobb County defense attorney who represents Roman, later told The Washington Post that the claims were based on sources that she did not name as well as records she said had been disclosed as part of Wade’s ongoing divorce proceedings, which have turned contentious.
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On Monday, hours before Roman’s filing, Willis was subpoenaed to be deposed as a witness in Wade’s divorce case by Wade’s estranged wife, according to a court filing provided to The Post. It was not immediately clear why Wade’s wife was seeking to depose Willis, and an attorney for Joycelyn Mayfield Wade declined to comment on the subpoena.
Wade has not responded to requests for comment. Scott Kimbrough, Wade’s divorce attorney since November, also declined to comment on the pending case when reached by telephone on Friday.



The subject of Roman’s filing arose Friday during discussion of a motion over discovery issues lodged by Steve Sadow, an Atlanta attorney who is leading Trump’s defense in the Georgia case. McAfee asked Sadow to explain a request he had made to the judge in an email earlier this week asking if Trump could delay his decision on whether to join Roman’s motion to disqualify Willis.
“Suffice it to say that they are salacious and scandalous in nature,” Sadow said of Roman’s claims. “I’m leery of moving to adopt motions that make such allegations without having a better understanding or substantiation of the allegations.”
Sadow said he wanted to learn more about the claims and see Willis’s response before deciding if Trump would join Roman’s motion. Craig Gillen, an attorney for former Georgia Republican Party chair David Shafer, another co-defendant, told McAfee that he was conducting his own investigation to “determine whether or not we’re going to adopt that motion or supplement that motion.”



McAfee told the lawyers he’s willing to give some “leeway” to allow all sides to respond, but also warned he wanted to maintain control. Prosecutors, including Wade, offered little visible reaction to the back and forth.
The allegation threatens to disrupt a case in which Willis has shown momentum in recent months.
Four of Trump’s original 19 co-defendants have accepted plea deals and are cooperating in the case, while others, including former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows, have been unsuccessful in their attempts to move the case from state to federal court.
If McAfee finds that Willis and her office should be disqualified from the proceedings, the decision on who takes on the case would be made by the Prosecuting Attorneys’ Council of Georgia. The council is still looking for an outside prosecutor to handle the case of Burt Jones, a Trump elector in 2020 who is currently serving as Georgia’s lieutenant governor.
A judge disqualified Willis and her office from investigating Jones in 2022 after Willis sponsored a fundraiser for a former colleague who was a Democratic challenger to Jones.
Gardner reported from Washington.
I have no idea whether or not it is true but what difference would that make?
 

niniveh

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I wasn't thinking so much of the OJ verdict but rather the recently passed law in the Georgia legislature and signed by the Governor that looms over Willis like a sword of Damocles.
 
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Valcazar

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I wasn't thinking so much of the OJ verdict but rather the recently passed law in the Georgia legislature and signed by the Governor that looms over Willis like a sword of Damocles.
That's an interesting point.
That law got knocked back by the Georgia courts, but presumably it is just being rewritten and will be reinstated.
Using this - even if no real proof comes out - as a way to pull Fani Williams off the case is something I can see them trying.
 

niniveh

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Followup on the issue.


Trump Prosecutor in Georgia Seeks to Avoid Testifying in Colleague’s Divorce Case
Fani T. Willis was subpoenaed in the divorce case of a colleague she hired to manage the Trump prosecution in Georgia, with whom she is accused of having a romantic relationship.

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Fani T. Willis, the prosecutor who is leading the election interference case against former President Donald J. Trump in Georgia.Credit...Kenny Holston/The New York Times

Fani T. Willis stands at a lectern with a television camera directed toward her.

Richard Fausset
By Richard Fausset
Reporting from Atlanta
Jan. 18, 2024Updated 4:50 p.m. ET
Fani T. Willis, the district attorney prosecuting the Georgia election interference case against former President Donald J. Trump, is trying to quash a subpoena seeking her testimony in the divorce proceedings of a special prosecutor she hired to manage the case.
A court filing last week accused Ms. Willis of having a romantic relationship with the prosecutor, Nathan J. Wade.
The motion containing the accusation was filed by Michael Roman, one of Mr. Trump’s 14 co-defendants in the criminal case. The motion argues that the relationship, which it provided no proof of, amounted to a conflict of interest; it seeks to have Mr. Wade, Ms. Willis and her office dismissed from the case.
Mr. Roman’s lawyer has said that sealed court records in the pending divorce case between Mr. Wade’ and his wife, Joycelyn, contain documentation of his relationship with Ms. Willis. Ms. Wade’s lawyer subpoenaed Ms. Willis last week, requiring her to be deposed on Jan. 23.



On Thursday, Ms. Willis responded with a filing stating that she “lacks personal knowledge of any matter that is relevant” to the divorce. She did not directly acknowledge the allegation, but said there was no reason for her to testify because both Mr. Wade and his wife had declared their marriage to be “irretrievably broken.”
“It is well-established that when both parties in a divorce proceeding assert that a marriage is irretrievably broken, which is a legal conclusion signifying that there is no hope for reconciliation, there is no genuine issue of fact that remains to be decided concerning the divorce,” Cinque Axam, a lawyer for Ms. Willis, wrote in the filing.
Takeaways From Trump’s Indictment in Georgia
Card 1 of 4
A fourth criminal case. Former President Donald Trump was indicted for a fourth time on Aug. 14, this time over what prosecutors in Atlanta described as his efforts to unlawfully undo his election loss in Georgia in 2020. The indictment includes 13 charges against Trump, as well as charges against 18 of his allies. Here are some key takeaways:
Trump was charged under Georgia’s RICO Act. Prosecutors charged Trump and his allies under the state’s Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organization Act, which allows them to link various crimes committed by different people by arguing that they were acting together for a common criminal goal. At its heart, the statute requires prosecutors to prove the existence of an “enterprise” and a “pattern of racketeering activity.”
The charges reach far beyond Trump. Among the 18 Trump allies charged in the case are Rudolph Giuliani, the former New York City mayor and lawyer for Trump, and Mark Meadows, the former White House chief of staff. Also charged are several more lawyers who are accused of working to try to overturn the election, including John Eastman and Sidney Powell.
The charges fall into several baskets. Several of the individual counts stem from false claims of election fraud that Giuliani and two other Trump lawyers made at legislative hearings in December 2020. Another batch of charges concerns a plan to vote for a false slate of pro-Trump electors. A third raft of charges accuses several Trump allies of conspiring to steal voter data and tamper with voting equipment in Coffee County, Ga.



The filing also stated that Ms. Wade had “conspired” with “interested parties” in the Trump case “to annoy, embarrass and oppress” Ms. Willis. It noted that Ms. Willis had been subpoenaed around the same time that Mr. Roman’s lawyer, Ashleigh Merchant, filed motions seeking to unseal the divorce records and, in the Trump case, to remove the two prosecutors.
The filing also said that Ms. Wade had acknowledged having an affair with a longtime friend of Mr. Wade’s, and that the couple had agreed their marriage was “irretrievably broken” as early as 2017, before Mr. Wade and Ms. Willis had met.
Andrea Dyer Hastings, a lawyer for Ms. Wade, said she was preparing a response that she would file in court.



Ms. Merchant said in a text message, “Ms. Willis alleges that her deposition is being sought in an attempt to harass and damage her professional reputation. Why would her truthful testimony risk damaging her reputation?”

On Thursday, the judge presiding over the Trump case scheduled a hearing for Feb. 15 on Mr. Roman’s motion seeking to remove Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade from the case — and to dismiss the charges against him. The judge, Scott McAfee of Fulton County Superior Court, ordered Ms. Willis to file a written response to the motion by Feb. 2 and to appear at the hearing, which will be televised just as all the proceedings in the case have been.
A hearing on the unsealing of the divorce files is set for Jan. 31 in Cobb County, Ga., outside Atlanta.
Mr. Roman’s motion in the Trump case states that Mr. Wade, who has been paid more than $650,000 by the district attorney’s office, used some of that money for trips that he and Ms. Willis took together. The motion also questions whether Mr. Wade is qualified to play a central role in the high-profile prosecution.
The events of the past 10 days have added an unexpecteddimension to a case in which matters of race and gender have also been bubbling to the fore.



In a testy recent email exchange between defense lawyers and prosecutors, Ms. Willis wrote that “some people will never be able to respect African Americans.” The email exchange, portions of which were obtained by The New York Times, unfolded in the days before and after the filing alleging the romantic relationship.
In a group email thread that includes prosecutors and defense lawyers in the case, the lead lawyer for Mr. Trump in Georgia, Steven H. Sadow, expressed annoyance with prosecutors for ignoring a request he had made. On Jan. 5, he wrote to prosecutors: “For the life of me, I cannot understand why you refuse to respond to the series of emails below.”
Five days later, Daysha Young, an executive district attorney who, like Ms. Willis, is Black, wrote that she and Ms. Willis “are both aware, especially as an African American woman some find it difficult to treat us respectfully.”

She added, “Over the last month the emails of some of you have been disrespectful and condescending lacking both professionalism and decorum.” Ms. Young also said that she did not respond to some emails because they were disrespectful.
Mr. Sadow, who is white, responded with an email in which he said that it was “offensive, uncalled for and untrue” to suggest that racism was at play. He also said that Ms. Young’s lack of response to some emails from the defense “suggests a degree of haughtiness.”



Then Ms. Willis weighed in.
“In the legal community (and the world at large) some people will never be able to respect African Americans and/or women as their equal and counterpart,” she wrote in a note addressed to Mr. Sadow but sent to all of the defense lawyers, most of whom are white men. “That is a burden you do not experience. Further, some are so used to doing it they are not even aware they are doing it while others are intentional in their continued disrespect.”
Ms. Willis also made a case for her own fortitude. “Now you know, I cannot be bullied,” she wrote. She added: “As you are aware, I have now experienced some of the most powerful people in the country call me everything, but a child of God. But, yet here I and my team stand still pursuing justice.”
Mr. Sadow declined to comment when asked about the exchange on Thursday, as did Ms. Willis’s office.
In a speech on Sunday at a historically Black church in Atlanta, Ms. Willis suggested racism was playing a role in the allegations against her and Mr. Wade, who is also Black.
Ms. Willis has not addressed the allegation that she and Mr. Wade were romantic partners. She noted the frequent racist threats she has been subject to since starting her investigation of Mr. Trump in 2021.



Mr. Trump has sought to cast the Georgia case, and other criminal cases against him, as unfair “witch hunts” that are motivated in part by his being a white man. Without basis, he has called Ms. Willis “racist,” and has said the same of other Black prosecutors trying cases against him.
During a speech in August, Mr. Trump made an unsubstantiated claim that Ms. Willis was “having an affair” with a “gang member.” She said it was false.
Richard Fausset, based in Atlanta, writes about the American South, focusing on politics, culture, race, poverty and criminal justice. More about Richard Fausset
 
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