Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee scheduled a March 1 hearing for âall things disqualificationâ after three rounds of witness testimony related to the motion to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from prosecuting the high-profile racketeering case against former President Donald Trump and 14 others.
Last August, President Trump and 18 co-defendants were indicted for allegedly violating Georgiaâs Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) Act through their actions challenging the 2020 election results. Since then, four defendants have accepted plea bargains.
On Jan. 8, Ashleigh Merchant, legal counsel for defendant Michael Roman, filed a motion to disqualify Ms. Willis, alleging a conflict of interest and financial benefit in her appointment of Nathan Wade as special prosecutor to lead the case. Mr. Wade and Ms. Willis have acknowledged they had a romantic relationship; however, the timeline of that relationship and the alleged financial benefits are in question due to conflicting testimony.
Half of the defendants have joined the motion to disqualify, raising additional arguments of âprejudicial behaviorâ and impropriety on the prosecutorsâ part.
State Seeks to Discredit Witnesses
Mr. Abbate said both witnesses that contested the relationship timeline were âdisgruntledâ former associates of the prosecutors.
State attorneys had asked Ms. Yeartie if her resignation from the district attorneyâs office was because she was given the choice of being fired or resigning. Ms. Yeartie answered this was incorrect. Mr. Abbate argued that Ms. Yeartie had leaked confidential information, leading her to be at risk for a firing.
He argued that Mr. Bradley was a disgruntled former partner in Mr. Wadeâs law firm and had been âexpelledâ from a profitable practice after a sexual assault allegation, and had reason to make statements against Mr. Wade.
Judge Says Complaint Is Beyond âConjectureâ Now
The state cited an appellate court decision that ruled a prosecutor could not be disqualified for âappearance of impropriety alone.â
However, one of the cases cited dealt with a complaint made based on speculation.
âArenât we past the speculation and conjecture aspect of this though? The original and the core of the financial allegation is that there is a relationship and that money changed hands,â Judge McAfee said.
âThereâs maybe still an open question of where the ledger stands. I think it was conceded that that balance could run one way, in the district attorneyâs favor. Is that contested?â he asked.
âYes. Whatâs not contested is that a relationship did develop,â Mr. Abbate answered.
âAnd that purchases were made back and forth,â the judge interjected. âThatâs the stateâs position.â
âItâs no longer just the theory that money changed hands,â the judge added.
Mr. Abbate argued that money changed hands but not there was no evidence of financial benefit and claimed the hearings were done ni a way to âharass and embarrass the district attorneyâ and to
âimpugn her in front of the court.â
He argued that the âappearance of improperityâ standard applies to judges, not prosecutors.
State Argues Defense Has Not Met Burden
Mr. Abbate argued that the standard is that the defense has to show evidence that the prosecutor has a conflict of interest and gains based on the âoutcomeâ of the case.
âNot a single shred of evidence was produced through any of the exhibits or the witness testimony showing how their constitutional rights, their due process rights, were at all affected by the relationship that began in March 2022 with Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade,â he said. âThe motion to disqualify should be denied.â
He argued that the defense misrepresented the cases they cited, and the judge asked for specifics.
The defense cited cases where an appearance of impropriety was enough to warrant disqualification of counsel, and acknowledged there was ambiguity for the standard of âappearance of impropriety.â
Mr. Abbate argued these cases did not disqualify prosecutors without a showing of conflict of interest, and there was no ambiguity.
âAre you also saying that itâs only if a financial interest is affecting the final result, the outcome, thatâs the only one we should be worried about? Or is it the prosecution as a whole?â Judge McAfee said.
They agreed it was related to the âconductâ of the prosecution, not just the outcome.
State Says Key Testimony âInconsistentâ
Mr. Abbate asked the judge to consider Robin Yeartieâs testimony âinconsistent.â
Ms. Yeartie was a friend of Ms. Willisâs, and claimed the relationship began shortly after Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade met in November 2019. Mr. Abbate argued that Ms. Yeartie could not describe any behavior she witnessed, only echoing Mr. Sadowâs question about whether he saw them âhugging, kissing.â
State Says Defense Made âMaterial Misrepresentationsâ
Mr. Abbate argued that a half dozen members of the district attorneyâs office had been subpoenaed and Ms. Merchant had argued Mr. Bradley would impeach their testimonies. He said the accusations against Ms. Merchant were made because she had made âmaterial misrepresentations.â
âWe didnât hear from any of those individuals,â Mr. Abbate argued. âMr. Bradley impeached no one.â
âMr. Wade wasnât once confronted with a statement that he said to Mr. Bradley,â he added.
âI never called Ms. Merchant a liar, I never used those words,â he said.
Ms. Merchantâs claims and representations about Mr. Bradleyâs testimony were made during a court hearing on the stateâs motion to quash subpoenas and prevent the testimony of the district attorneyâs office.
âThose were material misrepresentations made to the court,â Mr. Abbate said.
Defense Attorney Says Prosecutors Have 6 Conflicts of Interest
Harry MacDougald, representing Jeffrey Clark, argued there were six conflicts of interest at issue: financially, personal and political ambition, pattern of deceit of concealment of the relationship and money, the church speech, a motion for protective order the district attorney filed in Mr. Wadeâs divorce case, and the way the state conducted the defense of the motion to disqualify.
âShe has to go to the county commission to get approval to pay him like she did. She cannot accept gifts from a prohibited source [county contractor]. She has to disclose gifts she receives. She evaded all of those requirements,â Mr. MacDougald argued, citing county guidelines.
Mr. MacDougald also accused Ms. Willis of violating ethical guidelines in threatening Mr. Wadeâs wife with prosecution in a civil case to benefit a criminal case.
Ms. Wade had sought to depose Ms. Willis regarding Mr. Wadeâs finances. In a motion to quash that subpoena, Ms. Willis had proposed an investigation into Ms. Wade for alleged interference in the racketeering case.
âIf this is tolerated, we’ll get more of it,â Mr. MacDougald said. âThis office is a global laughingstock because of their conduct.â
The defense reserved the last five minutes of their time for rebuttal. The state will present arguments after a short break.
Shafer Attorney Says DA Prejudicing Jurors
Craig Gillen, counsel for David Shafer, said there was a âsystematic, continuous pattern, a calculated plan, evidencing a design to prejudice the defendants in this case in the minds of the jurors.â
Mr. Gillen argued this was not a brief, off-the-cut comment, but that Ms. Willis had written down a speech and had given multiple interviews about the defendants.
Judge McAfee said caselaw points to prosecutors making comments that defendants were guilty.
Mr. Gillen cited one case where a pattern of improper comments disqualified a prosecutor.
âWhat we have here is someone who sat down and drew up a plan for two reasons,â he said.
âPretrial can create major problems for a defendant indeed more harmful than publicity during a trial, for it may set the community opinion as to guilt or innocence,â he cited.
He pointed out that the church speech had been prewritten, and therefore planned. Ms. Willis had invoked God in questioning her criticsâ motives and speaking about her will to pursue this case.
He argued that the prosecutorsâ testimony was a âfraud on this court,â and argued the secretive nature of the relationship pointed toward the prosecutors knowing what they did was wrong.
Trump Attorney Says Judge Can Believe Witness Texts Over Testimony
Terrence Bradley, former law partner to Mr. Wade, had sent texts telling Ms. Merchant she was âabsolutelyâ correct that the relationship before the hiring and offered additional information stating it began when Ms. Willis was a judge late 2019. On the witness stand, Mr. Bradley said this was âspeculation,â and he could not ârecallâ the circumstances around him sending the text.
âYou donât have to accept the fact that he was speculating,â Mr. Sadow argued, pointing to cases other cases with similar situations.
âYou can disbelieve that testimony and draw a negative inference,â he said, citing two cases. âYou can simply take the prior inconsistent statement as evidence.â
âWhere in the law do we find the remedy to an untruthful statement?â Judge McAfee asked. âGenerally, we send you down to the bar.â
Mr. Sadow pointed to cases where counsel, not prosecutors, were disqualified for similar ethical violations. âProsecutors are held to a higher standard, they are the ones seeking justice,â he added.
Judge McAfee asked whether, if he found the prosecutors untruthful, he would need to disqualify them from every case. Mr. Sadow said it was limited to the current case where they had testified under oath.
âAre we dealing with a preponderance standard?â the judge asked.
Mr. Sadow agreed and said it was indeed the defenseâs burden to show ethical violations.
Trump Attorney Says Willis Church Speech Was Improper
Steve Sadow, representing President Trump, argued Ms. Willis engaged in forensic misconduct.
He said that after he said in court his client was considering joining Mr. Romanâs motion, Ms. Willis made a speech at an Atlanta church days later suggesting defendants had made allegations about Mr. Wade and herself because they were black. The speech took place before the state responded to the motion.
Mr. Sadow said it was an âethical violation.â
The ethical guidelines âmake it clear that you must refrain from making extrajudicial comments that have a substantial likelihood of heightening public condemnation of the accused,â he cited.
âCan you think of anything more that would heighten public condemnation of the defendants than alleging that defense counsel and their defendants were making their motion based on race and religion?
âThatâs as bad as it gets in Fulton County, with all due respect,â he said.
He added that the appearance of impropriety was enough to warrant disqualification under Georgia law.
Roman Attorney Uses Argument Time to Defend Wife
Mr. Merchant said he had to take the time to defend Ashleigh Merchant, his wife, from accusations by the state that she was a âliar.â
Text messages between Ms. Merchant and witness Terrence Bradley have since been entered into the record, countering testimony from Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade.
Mr. Merchant argued that the state pushed back so hard on the timeline allegations because âthey did this, they knew it was wrong, they hid it, and even when they were called out on it they tried to create an excuse for it by saying it happened after the fact.â
Roman Says Willis Testimony Leaves More Than $9,000 Unaccounted
Mr. Merchant said that even accounting for the money Ms. Willis testified she gave to Mr. Wade in cash and how much Mr. Wade spent on Ms. Willisâs expenses according to financial statements, there was still $9,247 unaccounted for.
âItâs not necessarily the amount of the money, itâs the fact that she received it,â he added.
Defense Brings Up Previous Willis Disqualification
Mr. Merchant said this case was the âfirst impressionâ of its kind in Georgia, and he could not find another similar case.
âWeâre here today on this motion to disqualify DA Willis and her office because of her judgment, frankly. She is supposed to be disinterested under the Sixth Amendment and she is anything but that,â he said. âThis court represents the guardrails for the Sixth Amendment and Ms. Willis has already been disqualified once.â
Ms. Willis had previously been disqualified from prosecuting a case against Burt Jones, a Republican Georgia state senator.
Mr. Jones was at the time running for lieutenant governor in Georgia against Charlie Bailey, a Democratic candidate for whom Ms. Willis had hosted a campaign fundraiser.
âThe law in Georgia suggests, and is very clear, that we can demonstrate an appearance of a conflict of interest and that is sufficient,â he added.
Mr. Merchant noted that if the judge did not grant the disqualification, the defendants were prepared to seek appeal, and if the decision were overturned the entire case would have to be retried.
âWhat is that, personal interest?â Judge McAfee asked.
Mr. Merchant said there was âno definition for that under Georgia law.â
âIt could be a personal financial interest, it could be a personal interest related to bias, which sort of falls into the forensic misconduct box. But we have here a very personal financial interest laid out in terms of money received by Ms. Willis as a result of the scheme she set up,â Mr. Merchant said.
âYou know it when you see it,â he added, quoting a Supreme Court opinion regarding how to define âobscenity.â
Hearing Begins
Adam Abbate, chief deputy attorney general for the Fulton County District Attorneyâs office, was present on behalf of the state. Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade were not seen in the courtroom at the beginning of the hearing.
Each side was given an hour and half to argue.
The defense had wanted to reopen evidence and both sides wanted to call another witness, which the judge said he may allow additional evidence after hearing legal arguments today if he deems it necessary.
John Merchant, representing Mr. Roman, will argue on conduct and appearance of a conflict of interest.
Attorneys Steve Sadow and Craig Gillen will argue on forensic misconduct, including allegedly prejudicial statements Ms. Willis made and alleged fraud on the court.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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