Trump judge in Georgia lets prosecutor stay case, deputy steps down
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[March 16, 2024]
By Jack Queen and Andrew Goudsward
(Reuters) -The Georgia judge overseeing Donald Trump's trial on charges
of trying to overturn his election defeat said on Friday that lead
prosecutor Fani Willis can remain on the case, but a deputy with whom
she had a personal relationship stepped down in keeping with the judge's
order.
Nathan Wade, the special counsel hired for the case, resigned on Friday
in an open letter to Willis.
Judge Scott McAfee's ruling was a blow to the Republican former U.S.
president, who seeks to unseat Democratic President Joe Biden in a Nov.
5 election. Trump has sought to delay trials in the four criminal cases
he faces until after the election.
Trump is accused in the Georgia case of illegally pressuring state
officials to overturn his loss to Biden there in the 2020 presidential
election.
McAfee's decision caps a tumultuous two months for Willis, the Fulton
County district attorney whose romantic relationship with Wade, the
special prosecutor she appointed to lead the case, was disclosed in a
January court filing by a Trump co-defendant.
It also ends three months of contentious litigation and evidentiary
hearings over the relationship that effectively paused the rest of the
case, though McAfee has yet to set a trial date.
"I am offering my resignation in the interest of democracy, in
dedication to the American public and to move this case forward as
quickly as possible," Wade wrote, according to letters provided by the
District Attorney's office.
Defense lawyers said the relationship posed a conflict of interest and
improperly enriched Willis and Wade, who vacationed together while Wade
was drawing a government salary.
McAfee found the relationship did not pose a conflict of interest but
said it created "a significant appearance of impropriety" that required
either Willis or Wade to step aside.
Trump's lawyer Steve Sadow said in a statement that he respected the
judge's ruling but believed it did "not afford appropriate significance
to the prosecutorial misconduct of Willis and Wade."
Trump has pleaded not guilty in all the cases against him. He has so far
been successful in delaying the start of any trial as he seeks to return
to the White House.
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Special prosecutor Nathan Wade sits in court Friday, March 1,
2024, in Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. The hearing is to determine whether
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis should be removed from
the case because of a relationship with Nathan Wade, special
prosecutor she hired in the election interference case against
former President Donald Trump. Alex Slitz/Pool via REUTERS/File
Photo
One in four self-identified Republicans and about half of
independents said they would not vote for Trump if he was convicted
of a felony crime by a jury, according to a February Reuters/Ipsos
poll. That would be a significant liability in a race where opinion
polls show Trump and Biden essentially tied.
The U.S. Supreme Court has agreed to review Trump's bid for
presidential immunity in a federal election interference case in
Washington, which could delay that trial until after the election.
The judge in Trump's upcoming trial in New York on charges related
to hush-money payments to a porn star during his 2016 campaign is
weighing postponing the March 25 scheduled trial start after federal
prosecutors turned over a mountain of new evidence.
Willis and Wade testified that their relationship did not begin
until after Wade was hired. Prosecutors argued the affair was
irrelevant because it did not harm the defendants.
Defense lawyers accused the prosecutors of lying to the court,
saying the relationship began before Wade was hired. In court papers
filed on Feb. 23, Trump's attorney cited location data from Wade’s
cellphone suggesting he made numerous late-night visits to Willis’
home before she appointed him.
Trump is also under indictment in Florida over his handling of
classified documents upon leaving office. The judge overseeing that
case is weighing Trump's bid to move his May 20 trial date.
(Reporting by Jack Queen in New York and Andrew Goudsward in Fort
Pierce, Florida; editing by Scott Malone, Jonathan Oatis and Howard
Goller)
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