Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis can stay on and prosecute the Georgia 2020 election interference racketeering case against former President Donald Trump and 14 of his co-defendants, Judge Scott McAfee ruled Friday.
After more than two months marked by a flurry of court motions and hearings, which included fiery testimony from Willis on the stand defending her relationship with her special prosecutor Nathan Wade, the sprawling conspiracy case against Trump and his 2020 allies will now proceed.
Ashleigh Merchant, attorney for Trump co-defendant Mike Roman, initially alleged their relationship was conflict of interest and claimed they lied about when it began.
Citing financial statements turned up in Wade’s divorce proceeding, Merchant claimed Willis financially benefited when Wade took her on lavish vacations after she hired him as special prosecutor in late 2021 as the investigation into Trump and his allies was heating up. Willis denied there was anything improper about their relationship.
However, potentially conflicting information about when exactly the romance started was a central issue that derailed Willis’s prosecution against Trump and his allies, an investigation she started almost immediately after taking office in 2021.
“I do not consider our relationship to have become romantic until early 2022,” Willis testified on February 15, in an evidentiary hearing on the allegations to have her removed.
When she was elected to the DA position, Willis inherited a backlog of more than 16,000 cases, in part because of delays caused by the Covid-19 pandemic. Wilis chose to dedicate much of her energy on what she believed was the most important case; prosecuting Trump for his attempts to steal the Georgia election in 2020.
Willis spent three…
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