The new date further indicates a trial won’t happen before the presidential election.
President Trump and eight co-defendants had appealed Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee’s ruling that Ms. Willis would not be disqualified so long as Nathan Wade, the special attorney she contracted to lead the case, stepped down.
Ms. Willis is prosecuting a racketeering case against the former president and 14 others, alleging that their challenge of the 2020 election results amounted to a criminal conspiracy.
The motion for disqualification had been filed in early January by defendant Michael Roman. He alleged an affair between Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade and misuse of funds that set off several investigations of the district attorney’s office.
About half the codefendants joined the motion, raising additional arguments of prosecutorial misconduct.
Defendants challenging the disqualification ruling are Mr. Roman, President Trump, Rudy Giuliani, Mark Meadows, Jeffrey Clark, Robert Cheeley, David Shafer, Harrison Floyd, and Cathleen Latham.
Ms. Willis and Mr. Wade had acknowledged during an evidentiary hearing that they had engaged in an affair but disputed the timeline put forth by the defense. They stated that the relationship was no longer romantic when the indictment was handed up.
After the dramatic, days-long hearing, Judge McAfee found that the affair and surrounding controversy—which included the district attorney’s public statements—amounted to an appearance of impropriety but not misconduct or a conflict of interest.
He ruled that the appearance of impropriety could be remedied by the removal of one but not both Ms. Willis or Mr. Wade, but acknowledged the unusual situation. The judge then allowed the defendants to challenge his ruling in higher court, writing that he would continue to hear and rule on pre-trial motions in the meantime.
Allegations of Prejudice
Beyond the affair that initiated the disqualification efforts, defendants argue that Ms. Willis’s extrajudicial statements are disqualifying forensic misconduct. Furthermore, they argue that her allegedly false testimony during the evidentiary hearing on the disqualification motion warrants disqualification.
Ms. Willis has been outspoken about the case, giving media interviews and public speeches in which she references the disqualification motion and defendants.
In a highly publicized speech days after the motion was filed, Ms. Willis implied that the defendants were targeting her because of her race. She boasted about her “superstar” team with a “conviction rate of 95 percent,” which defendants argue was implying the defendants were guilty before a trial and conviction.
Two weeks later, Ms. Willis gave an interview to writers working on a book about Ms. Willis as a “hard-charging” prosecutor going after a “rogue president.”
Soon after Judge McAffee’s decision not to disqualify Ms. Willis, she gave an interview to CNN during an Easter event suggesting defendants had tried to delay their case.
Defendants argued that she also failed to show any remorse, pointing to that interview.
“Let’s say it for the record, I’m not embarrassed by anything that I’ve done,” she said. “I guess my greatest crime is that I had a relationship with a man, but that’s not something I find embarrassing in any way.”
Defendants argue that the district attorney has “already significantly compromised Defendants’ due process rights.”
“No prosecutor has ever been so reckless and relentless in pursuit of personal gain that she provided endless pretrial interviews to the media, granted unprecedented pretrial access to the authors of a book, or attempted to distract from her disqualifying unethical behavior by publicly and wrongfully castigating Defendants as racists for exposing her, and proclaiming God has anointed her and was on her side,” they argued.
They argued that extrajudicial pretrial comments are a primary example of forensic misconduct.
Testimony Raised Doubts
The defendants also argued that the district attorney’s allegedly false testimony has raised serious legal and ethical violations.
The trial court judge had in court and through his written opinion cast doubt on Ms. Willis’s testimony, describing her answers about the relationship with Mr. Wade as one of “potential untruthfulness.”
While Judge McAfee found the testimony lacking and acknowledged the public may well have lingering doubts about the nature and timeline of the relationship, he ruled that it was not the court’s role to “ferret out every instance of potential dishonesty,” referring to other authorities like the state ethics board or Georgia bar.
“While all attorneys are officers of the court and have a duty of candor, prosecutors have a ‘heightened duty of candor to the courts and in fulfilling other professional obligations,’” defendants argued, citing ethical standards for prosecutors.
“Defendants submit that the DA’s untruthful testimony to protect her personal interests in this prosecution, over and at the expense of the case itself, is at the very least forensic misconduct.”