Legal AF by MeidasTouch - Judge Issues ORDER on Trump Motion to DISQUALIFY DA Willis
Episode Date: March 15, 2024Legal AF anchors Michael Popok and Karen Friedman Agnifilo analyze the BREAKING NEWS that Fulton County DA Fani Willis WILL NOT BE DISQUALIFIED and removed from the Georgia prosecution of Trump and th...e other co-conspirators, as long as she quickly fires her special prosecutor Nathan Wade from the case, nor will the indictment against Trump be dismissed for prosecutorial misconduct. Upgrade your sleep with Miracle Made! Go to https://TryMiracle.com/LEGALAF and use the code LEGALAF to claim your FREE 3 PIECE TOWEL SET and SAVE over 40% OFF. Visit https://meidastouch.com for more! Remember to subscribe to ALL the MeidasTouch Network Podcasts: MeidasTouch: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/meidastouch-podcast Legal AF: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/legal-af The PoliticsGirl Podcast: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-politicsgirl-podcast The Influence Continuum: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-influence-continuum-with-dr-steven-hassan Mea Culpa with Michael Cohen: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/mea-culpa-with-michael-cohen The Weekend Show: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/the-weekend-show Burn the Boats: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/burn-the-boats Majority 54: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/majority-54 Political Beatdown: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/political-beatdown Lights On with Jessica Denson: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/lights-on-with-jessica-denson On Democracy with FP Wellman: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/on-democracy-with-fpwellman Uncovered: https://www.meidastouch.com/tag/maga-uncovered Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to a special edition of Legal AF. We got breaking news. Literally, Scott McAfee, the judge
in Georgia, has made the decision that we were waiting on. And I'm going to give you the headline.
Fonny Willis has not been disqualified from the case as long as she fires Nathan Wade as the special
prosecutor along with her against Donald Trump. Let me repeat, Fonny Willis by order of the court has not been disqualified for
either an actual conflict, for a financial interest in the case against Donald Trump, or because of
her bad judgment, let's put it, let's call it for what it is, in dating somebody in her office, she's
gonna be able to remain in the case. That's her choice. The judge gave her a choice. She can either
fire herself and the entire Fulton County attorney's office and turn the case over
to the prosecution counsel in Georgia for reselection of a prosecutor. Let me just fast
track that. She's not doing that. Or she can fire Nathan Wade as the special prosecutor
and hire somebody else. That's the choice that was made. Now that is at the end of a 20 page decision by the judge
in which he went through,
just as we had predicted on Legal AF
and I'd done on a hot take,
he went away that we hoped he wouldn't go,
but he felt he had to, which is to say,
I don't find an actual conflict of interest.
I don't find an actual financial motive
for Fonny Willis to continue to prosecute
Donald Trump. That's not why the prosecution exists. It doesn't exist to feather the nest
of Fonny Willis. However, I don't like the appearance of impropriety called it the odor
of mendacity. The odor of mendacity that hangs over the case.
Now I had said in an earlier hot take,
and I'm kind of predicting this,
that this is the second time that Fonny has been
the subject of a motion to disqualify.
And when the then chief judge of Fulton County, McBurney,
disqualified her from going after representative
or state Senator Jones, Bert Jones,
who was also part of the fake
elector scheme and turned that over to new prosecutor because she had conducted or participated
in a fundraiser for Burt Jones' opponent, he said, what were you thinking?
Appearance of impropriety?
I don't like the way it looks.
It doesn't need to be hanging over a prosecution.
And I said, that is the way McAfee could go.
And citing a long line of Georgia cases, the judge says, I don't like the way this looks
with Nathan Wade still involved. Some of the facts I don't love, but the other side, the
Trump side and the defense side have not carried their burden of demonstrating either actual
conflict, what they call forensic misconduct, which
is not really an issue in the case. But I'm going to focus now on appearance of impropriety.
And this is my Solomonic, this is my word, Solomonic result, which is get Nathan Wade
off the case, or you got to get off the case, but that's the choice you're going to have
to make. And look, the defense is not gonna be happy about this.
He got into the love life,
he got into the people that testified,
he got into some bad decision making
that he believed Fonny Willis committed,
and he obviously has very little respect for Nathan Wade
and some of the positions Nathan Wade has taken,
for instance, in his divorce proceeding,
but this case has saved the day for the prosecution
and for Fonny Willis coming a day after the judge basically kept intact the indictment itself against Donald Trump and the others.
Turning it over now to my illustrious colleague, who's going to give us that prosecutorial bent as being a former federal prosecutor about how Scott McAfee handled this case and the way,
having now read his decision, the way he came out. Do you think it was fair? I want to hear from
Karen Friedman, The Fellow. So a couple of things, Popak. Bottom line is he dropped this early in the
morning on the East Coast. So it's good to see you first thing in the morning to break this news with you.
A lot of people were wondering what was Scott McAfee doing dismissing six of the counts yesterday
when he dismissed six of the counts of the indictment saying they weren't legally sufficient.
And I think it makes sense that he did that first because I think he wanted to establish he's fair, he's impartial because he wasn't
going, he knew when he dropped that, that he wasn't going to disqualify Fonny Willis
from this case.
And so I think this was his attempt to put the defendants on their heels and say, okay,
I'm going to give you something because this is what I believe the law says and what I'm
required to do.
And since I'm going to rule that way, I'm going to put that out first.
And then I'm going to drop the news that I've also already decided, which that the defendant
did not meet his burden of proof to disqualify Fonny Willis from the case.
So I think it was a very well reasoned decision.
He pointed out a few things that I really
wanted to highlight this morning.
I agree with you.
The quote that everyone's going to pick up on
is when he said there was the odor of mendacity hanging
over this head.
And I think that Judge McAfee did a really nice job,
though, of going through not only the legal standard,
but also the evidence of what was brought out at the hearing and what the burden that the defense
did not meet. Also interestingly, several people after the hearing when Fonny Willis literally
called herself to the witness stand and testified. The judge actually credited
her testimony and cited to it several times saying that apparently he said, although unprofessional
at times, he thought that she was a little emotional perhaps, that he credited her testimony
and it was evidence that she brought out through her testimony
where he found there was no actual conflict
or appearance of impropriety.
So to the extent that people didn't think
that she should have testified,
I think that was significant for the judge
and it was important for the judge to establish
what the truth is and what
did happen and what didn't happen.
He also called out that, look, there was sloppy record keeping, that she basically paid in
cash so they can't verify whether or not she paid him back or not.
But he credited her testimony that she did and said that at most there's a couple hundred
bucks here and there that maybe it was an exact half and half and so they didn't meet their burden or the standard. He called
her out though for making the comments in the church and he said he reminded everybody that
prosecutors and it's a good reminder you know people often think it's prosecution versus defense and somehow there's an equivalency,
right?
There really isn't.
Prosecutors have a much, much higher burden of doing the right thing, of making sure that
it's not just about getting a conviction.
It's about justice, fairness, and defense attorneys can be very eccentric.
They can make arguments.
They have to zealously advocate for their client, but prosecutors have to be above all
of that.
They're almost like the judge in that way, that they have to be above all reproach, actual
and appearance.
That's where he said she fell short.
He reminded her of this higher burden and this higher ethical standard
that all prosecutors must meet so that so that there's confidence
in the justice system and there's confidence in in any sort of conviction.
And he said that's where she fell, fell short.
And the forensic misconduct that they were referring to,
I was confused by that because it's not what we would call forensic misconduct. I think they were referring to her comments at the
church that were broadcast on television. And he definitely commented that that was
not appropriate. She shouldn't have done it, but certainly not enough to get her off
the case. So this is he's chalking this up to bad judgment and shouldn't have done it and do better next time,
but it's definitely that that's not enough to be a disqualifying conflict of interest.
She will definitely take Wade off the case. And Bonnie Willis is one of Georgia's leading
Rico experts. She doesn't need Nathan Wade on the case. And so this isn't going to have any impact. Oh, one other thing that I like that he called out was was he said one of the things
that would be a financial conflict of interest
in these hours is because he's being paid hourly, which which the judge said
in the Atlanta Fulton County metro area is a low wage for a competent attorney.
So he put that issue to bed.
But he also said in hourly
cases, it's always been, and but this happens all the time, there's always this incentive to
bill more hours to make more money. And but courts have reconciled that and said, just because
that exists doesn't necessarily mean that's going to be a problem. But he said here, there was absolutely no evidence that Fonny
Willis or Nathan Wade wanted this case to go on longer so that
they could bill more hours and make more money.
In fact, quite the contrary, Fonny Willis has answered ready for
trial and has been asking for a speedy trial date, which flies
in the face of this argument that somehow there's this financial
interest for him to bill more hours and make more money
So I thought it was a really well reasoned good fair
Fair decision without even
Coordinating you and I because we've been friends and colleagues and podcast hosts for four years now
We ended up wearing almost the identical outfit
That are watching us. Let me turn to actual to kind of
for this particular, those that are watching us. Let me turn to actual, to kind of amplify things, Karen,
that you just said, let me read from the actual order
in some places I think are important,
including with the church comment and the church speech.
When we saw that, I kind of, my nose automatically
sort of scrunched up like, hmm, what is she doing?
I know why she's doing it, but should she be doing it,
given how she was already reprimanded by Chief Justice,
Chief Judge McEarney earlier in the case, somebody who's singed once in the fire doesn't normally
put their hand back in. But you know, there's many things we love about Fonny Willis and her
tenacity is one of them. For those speaking of tenacity, let's talk about mendacity. That's not
a good thing for those that are fumbling around trying to look it up
Mendacity means when they say an odor of mendacity hangs over the case
We have a definition up there that means an odor of lying and
Deceit hangs over the case and that was the judge's sort of pithy way of
Summarizing what he saw as two and a half days of testimony about trips.
Now, another takeaway, he did not find that Fonny Willis lied to him, committed perjury,
in the words of the defense, about the timing of the relationship between her and Nathan
Wade. It's not even really mentioned at all in the order. And so that's a good thing because we
were afraid that that is what the focus was on
at some point.
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Miracle Made, for sponsoring this episode. Turning to page, for instance, turning to page
eight of the order itself, it says at the top, simply put, the defendants have not presented sufficient evidence indicating
that the expenses were not roughly divided evenly between Fonny Willis on all of these trips. He
calculated it at $12,000 to $15,000 at best. He thought it was odd that she paid in cash. He
thought it was odd that she didn't keep a better ledger or record of it, but didn't find it to be
a disqualifying event.
In fact, he says, in addition, on the same page,
and much more important, the court finds
based largely on the district attorney's testimony,
that's Fonny Willis, that the evidence demonstrated
that the financial gain flowing from her relationship
with Wade was not a motivating factor
on the part of the district attorney
to indict and prosecute this case.
And that goes to Karen's point about the power of her testimony.
Now we all were sort of armchair quarterbacks criticizing, and
I certainly was a little bit critical of certain aspects of her testimony.
But not the fact that she barged into the back of the courtroom,
took the stand, couldn't wait.
Although the fighting with Ashley Merchant, I didn't think actually covered her
in glory, but the judge did find compelling and credited her testimony related to that.
And as Karen said, there's nothing to indicate that the district attorney was interested
in prolonging the case quite the opposite.
So he kind of dispatched the whole personal stake in the prosecution angle in it.
And on page nine, he says at the bottom last paragraph, without sufficient evidence that the district attorney
acquired a personal stake in the prosecution
or that her financial arrangements had any impact
on the case, the defendant's claims of an actual conflict
must be denied.
Later he says, rather it is the undersigned's opinion,
the judge's
opinion, that Georgia law does not permit the finding of an actual conflict for
simply making bad choices, even repeatedly. That's his criticism of some
of the evidence that he observed, some of the behavior he observed in the courtroom
related to Nathan Wade and Phony Willis, and he said it's the trial court's duty
to confine itself to the relevant issues and applicable law properly before it.
Now having done that, he says on page 10 that our inquiry is not over because of the actual
conflict.
And this is where Norm Eisen of Just Security, I did a hot take similarly, that he was probably
going to go down the route of appearance of impropriety at some point, which gave us pause because there was a lot of smoke
and noise around and we were like, wow,
if a young judge who's fresh on the bench handling
these issues, because he's never been a judge before
and he's like 30 something,
they probably didn't handle it in his private practice
as a lawyer or even when he was working
under Fonny Willis, for those that don't know or don't remember, he was working under Fonny Willis
in the Fulton County DA's office at some point, Jr. in his career. If he hadn't handled these
issues, we're like, uh-oh, in the wrong hands, some of this case law could come out the wrong way
for Fonny Willis. But I agree with you, Karen. I think he picked through the case law well,
including some older Georgia case law dating back to 1916
about the appearance of impropriety and why a prosecution,
as you know well as a former prosecutor,
shouldn't be burdened, can't be burdened
with the public perception of an appearance of impropriety.
Now, when he turned to the church, yeah, he didn't like that. And he basically invited the defense to
file a motion to limit the prosecutor's continued public comments. He said, I'm not going to do it now, but the time might have arrived for us to
have a formal order in place. Now, some people in our audience might be saying, oh, sure, he,
Donald Trump gets barely gagged. Now the prosecutor's going to get back, get gagged.
But look, I think it goes to Karen's point, your point, Karen, that prosecutors are held to a higher standard because they represent the state and
justice in their role as public officers, as opposed to defense lawyers like McMe,
that have to throw everything against the wall to hope to put on a proper case and save my client
from going to jail in that regard. On the relationship, he did have negative comments
about Nathan Wade.
Let's look on page 15 and at some of the witnesses
that went up on the stand.
He said, at the bottom of 15 over to 16,
most importantly, were the case allowed to proceed unchanged,
meaning with Nathan Wade still in place or Fonny Willis still in place,
the prima facie concerns raised by the defendants
would persist.
As the district attorney testified,
her relationship with Wade was only cemented after these,
that's her words, after these motions
and is stronger than ever.
Wade's patently unpersuasive explanation,
this is an attack on Nathan Wade,
for the inaccurate
interrogatories he submitted in his pending divorce about his money
indicates a willingness on his part to wrongly conceal his relationship with the
district attorney. This is not a great ruling for Nathan Wade. There's no other
way to put this. As the case moves forward, the judge says, reasonable members
of the public could easily be left
to wonder whether the financial exchanges
have continued resulting in some sort of benefit
to the district attorney.
In other words, it would have been better
if that relationship ended, the opposite happened.
It looks like they got stronger as a result of it.
And so at the end, the judge said the testimony about it
doesn't help.
Now on Terrence Bradley, we spent a lot of time
and the Midas Touch Network of course broadcasted all of the testimony, riveting testimony in this
case, including of Terrence Bradley on page 16, as we predicted the judge did not find credible
anything that Terrence Bradley said about text message exchange with Ashley Merchant, a lawyer
from Michael Roman,
in which he tried to suggest that the relationship between Fonny Willis and Nathan Wade started a
long time ago, much earlier even before the indictment. In fact, the court says on page 16,
on that front, the court makes a few observations. First, the court finds itself unable to place any stock in the testimony
of Terrence Bradley. His inconsistencies, demeanor, and generally non-responsive answers
left far too brittle a foundation upon which to build any conclusions. While prior and
consistent statements can be considered as substantive evidence under Georgia law, Bradley's
impeachment by text message did not establish the basis for which he claims
such sweeping knowledge of Wade's personal affairs.
That is a criticism of Ashley Merchant
and how she handled the quote unquote
impeachment issue in court.
In addition, while the testimony of Robin Yerty,
who was, who used to be a friend of Fonny Willis,
raised doubts about the state's assertions,
it ultimately lacked context and detail.
Even after considering the proffered cell phone testimony from defendant Trump, along with the
entirety of the other evidence, so that is now crediting Steve Sada, the lawyer for Donald Trump,
neither side was able to conclusively establish by a preponderance of an evidence when the
relationship evolved into a romantic one. So there goes the perjury charge,
yet the very next sentence tells you where the judge is left in his mind. This is where, however,
an odor of mendacity that's lying, not telling the truth, remains. And the judge says,
I'm not going to ferret out every instance of it, but I'm troubled by it. Now, at the end, he says the dismissal of the indictment is not appropriate. We knew that was
coming, that he wasn't going to dismiss the indictment because he wouldn't have gotten rid
of six counts of it if he was going to dismiss the next day the entire indictment. So, he took some
cold comfort from how he did that. And at the end, the judge says, as Karen, you said on page 19 about the prepared speech
that she gave to the Bethel Church,
historic church in Georgia, he did not like that speech.
He did not like that she's doing that.
And at the very end, he said about public comments
on page 20 over to 21, but it was still legally improper providing this type of public comment creates dangerous waters for the district attorney to wade further
into.
The time may well have arrived for an order preventing the state from mentioning the case in
any public forum to prevent prejudicial pretrial publicity. But that is not the motion presently
before the court. That's the invitation by the court for the defense to file the motion, which
he's going to grant to sort of gag Fonny Willis going forward. But the conclusion is all we needed.
The conclusion is she has one of two choices, Karen.
I want to hear your view of what she does.
She either disqualifies herself and takes the entire Fulton County office with her,
or she fires Nathan Wade.
What happens next?
I suspect Nathan Wade is going to do the right thing and voluntarily resign so that she does
not have to fire him and
she's not going to get off the case.
I do have two more things I just want to mention.
Number one, this invitation to gag Fonny Willis better be a gag on both because it really
is not a situation that any prosecutor should ever be in where they can't respond if there are
lies or comments made by a defendant in a case. And so we understand that Donald
Trump is going to continue to speak about this case as are his co-defendants
and she has to be able to respond if they mislead the public or say anything
that could be prejudicial to the case.
So I do think any order should be carefully crafted when when he does grant it, because,
as you said, Popak, that was an invitation for for such emotion.
So it'll be there as a matter of time.
And the only other thing I wanted to mention is Joyce Vance, who's a brilliant lawyer,
just tweeted out that under Georgia law, the
defense has to apply for a certificate of immediate appeal ability.
There's no automatic appeal.
So unlike the motions to dismiss earlier this week where judge McAfee
indicated he would grant one his order today is silent.
So I thought that was very interesting about the
very good observation headline headline is the Trump prosecution.
With, with some indictment, uh, uh, changes that may be coming with a, with a
superseding indictment in the future that the judge invited is on solid footing.
It goes forward.
The prosecutor will not be removed by judge order nor by her own
decision-making. I agree with you that Nathan Wade will step aside. It could happen as early
as today. We'll do another set of hot takes on that and pick it up on the weekend edition of
Legal AF. But the Georgia prosecution remains on foot along with the indictment. Right now,
Fonny Willis kind of reinvigorated the old line,
what doesn't kill you makes you stronger. I don't think she could be any stronger.
She'll now restaff the case. She's got Rico experts, one in particular on her staff that
she's used in the past. He'll take the front and center with her. She'll try this case and she will
move forward, I am sure, with trying to get another indictment against Donald
Trump to clean up a couple of the counts if she feels she needs it or unless she goes
the whole racketeering, influence, and corrupt organization act route to get a quick trial.
I think it's going to depend on when she gets a trial and if she wants to delay it by another
period of time to impanel a grand jury again to issue
a new indictment, or she's just going to live or die on the sword of her own indictment
that's present now as whittled down by the judge, that'll be another prosecutorial decision
that will follow closely.
I think it's going to be tied to when the judge is going to get around to setting trial.
Hopefully now he's busy with all this other sideshow stuff set the trial of Donald Trump
For some reasonable time and let the prosecutor prepare the case that that's where we are
We'll continue to follow this on legal af we do it karen freeman and I do our show on wednesdays
On 8 p.m
Eastern time on this youtube channel and then ben myself and I pick it up on saturdays
And then the leaders of legal af karen ben and, we do hot takes like this one on cutting edge issues
about every hour right here one place, the Legal AF and the Midas Touch YouTube channel.
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So until our Karen and my next hot takes until our next legal AF says Michael
Popock and Karen Friedman,
Nick Nifilo signing off. Hey Midas Mighty. Love this report.
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