Disgraced Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is attempting to restart her RICO prosecution of President Donald J. Trump over allegations he and his campaign interfered in Georgia’s 2020 presidential election. In two rulings earlier this year, Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee dismissed nine of the 41 charges filed by Willis against Trump and his codefendants. However, Willis is now asking a Georgia appellate court to reinstate six counts.
Judge McAfree tossed out the six charges in question in a March ruling. According to the judge, Willis and her prosecutors had failed to provide specificity regarding the six counts, effectively denying Trump and his codefendants the right to prepare an adequate defense.
However, Willis contends in her filing with the appellate court that her office “more than sufficiently placed (Trump and his five codefendants) on notice of the conduct at issue and allowed them to prepare an intelligent defense to the charges.”
“The indictment included an abundance of context and factual allegations about the solicitations at issue, including when the requests were made, to whom the requests were made and the manner in which the requests were made,” Willis continued in her filing.
Willis is not challenging the additional charges thrown out by McAfee in September. In that ruling, the judge determined that three of the charges—two of which applied to Trump—were outside the District Attorney’s jurisdiction and needed to be removed from the indictment.
Meanwhile, Willis herself continues to battle for control of the case. Currently, a Georgia appeals court is considering whether the Democrat District Attorney should be disqualified from the RICO prosecution following revelations she engaged in and attempted to cover up a romantic relationship with one of her appointed prosecutors, Nathan Wade.