Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has submitted an appeal to the Georgia Supreme Court, seeking to overturn her recent disqualification from her prosecution of President-elect Donald J. Trump. Willis alleges Trump and his co-defendants interfered with and attempted to overturn Georgia’s 2020 U.S. presidential election results.
Last month, the Georgia Court of Appeals removed Willis from the case, citing a “significant appearance of impropriety” attributed to her relationship with former special prosecutor Nathan Wade, whom she appointed to the case. In her appeal, filed late Wednesday, Willis argues that the appeals court committed an error in disqualifying her solely based on the appearance of a conflict of interest without substantiating an actual conflict.
She contended that no previous Georgia court has disqualified a district attorney under such circumstances. Willis further criticized the ruling, describing it as an “overreach” and asserting that it improperly instituted a new standard for disqualification.
The case, presently paused as Trump and his co-defendants contest Willis’s involvement, remains unresolved regarding who will assume her role as prosecutor. The decision about the future course of the prosecution rests with the Prosecuting Attorneys Council of Georgia.
The National Pulse reported earlier on Thursday that Willis has been ordered to pay $21,578 in attorney’s fees following her office’s noncompliance with Georgia’s Open Records Act (ORA). The legal watchdog group, Judicial Watch, had sought documents pertaining to Willis’s communications with Representative Bennie Thompson (D-MS) when the latter chaired the January 6 Select Committee in the U.S. House of Representatives.
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