by Kaelan Deese at Washington Examiner
An effort by Donald Trump to secure a review of a Georgia judge’s order declining to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis was scheduled on Monday for an oral argument in October, cementing the likelihood of no trial until after the election.
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee declined to remove Willis from the case earlier this year after Trump and several of his co-defendants alleged there was a conflict of interest following revelations of a secret relationship between Willis and her hired special prosecutor, Nathan Wade. Now an appeals court will weigh the same question later this year on Oct. 4, just one month and a day before the high-stakes presidential election in November.
McAfee on March 15 declined to remove Willis under the condition that Wade resign as special prosecutor. He wrote that their relationship left an “odor of mendacity” in the case that needed to be handled by Wade’s departure.
Setting the hearing to weigh whether Willis can remain on the case just one month before the 2024 election marks a victory for the former president, who has challenged the validity of her case and sought to delay it before the Nov. 5 election.
“President Trump’s interlocutory appeal was docketed today in the Georgia Court of Appeals, and oral argument is tentatively scheduled for October 4, 2024,” Trump attorney Steve Sadow told the Washington Examiner.
The three-judge panel assigned to hear the case includes…
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