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Fork of Unknown Origins
Oct 21, 2005
Gotta Herd On?

Mercury_Storm posted:

Loving the responses from the freep/adjacent people:

"That Dem judge is throwing the case for Trump!!"

"Actually he's a Republican."

"Well I doubt it matters much these days!!!" (Whatever that's supposed to mean now)

Something something uniparty something

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Failed Imagineer
Sep 22, 2018

Nissin Cup Nudist posted:

If Trump has a heart attack or something and dies during a civil appeal, is he back to legally "not guilty" like in a criminal case? Would the government still start selling off assets for Caroll and NYS to collect?

One weird trick

Nervous
Jan 25, 2005

Why, hello, my little slice of pecan pie.

Failed Imagineer posted:

One weird trick

I think I'm ok with this trick for Trump.

Fork of Unknown Origins
Oct 21, 2005
Gotta Herd On?

Nervous posted:

I think I'm ok with this trick for Trump.

It’d be a hell of a plea bargain.

DarkHorse
Dec 13, 2006

Vroom vroom, BEEP BEEP!
Nap Ghost
Cadaver synod when

Tesseraction
Apr 5, 2009

Checking in on Scott McAfee's Wikipedia page I learned that he previously worked under Fani Willis back in the late 2010s. This makes the whole scenario as played out rather bizarre in retrospect, having to air your previous boss's dirty laundry out in public.

OJ MIST 2 THE DICK
Sep 11, 2008

Anytime I need to see your face I just close my eyes
And I am taken to a place
Where your crystal minds and magenta feelings
Take up shelter in the base of my spine
Sweet like a chica cherry cola

-Cheap Trick

Nap Ghost

zoux posted:

The "personal chemistry" should've instantly negated it. You don't hire a person with whom you have a personal romantic relationship.

She didn't. Well technically she renewed his contract at a point during the relationship, but they didnt start a romantic relationship until after she hired him.

They had been friends of some sort before then though and Wade had done work for her prior as part of her transition team.

Caros
May 14, 2008

OJ MIST 2 THE DICK posted:

She didn't. Well technically she renewed his contract at a point during the relationship, but they didnt start a romantic relationship until after she hired him.

They had been friends of some sort before then though and Wade had done work for her prior as part of her transition team.

Assuming you believe her.

Like, let's be real here, they absolutely lied about some of this. Wade's answers that 'I didn't sleep with anyone during the marriage because I considered the marriage to be over' were absolute horseshit, and the cash paybacks without an ounce of paper trail are hilariously convenient.

If she's willing to sleep with him during the case, she's willing to have done it before, and they were close enough that it wouldn't have been remotely shocking.

It just shouldn't matter. He wasn't doing this for the money, she didn't make bank on his mid-af income from the job and it doesn't prejudice Trump et all. This was just a hail Mary 'one weird trick to avoid Rico charges'.

Edit: also, Wade resigned

https://twitter.com/gringsam/status/1768719792402248188?t=IQQYyUxrkr1rd53uuu78xg&s=19

Caros fucked around with this message at 20:54 on Mar 15, 2024

InsertPotPun
Apr 16, 2018

Pissy Bitch stan

Tesseraction posted:

Checking in on Scott McAfee's Wikipedia page I learned that he previously worked under Fani Willis back in the late 2010s. This makes the whole scenario as played out rather bizarre in retrospect, having to air your previous boss's dirty laundry out in public.
i mean part of the problem with the justice system in the country is that there aren't enough judges and the community as a whole is insular and incestuous. it's only a problem because states are cheap.
it's like none of you have ever had coworkers before
as a whole the closeness of the public defenders to the cops they're supposed to protect us from is far FAR more of a problem because that effects people's lives. this was coworkers loving and...knowing...each other?
but public prosecutors letting cops off because they know each other is never going to be a "problem" because the defendants they're, figuratively, screwing are poor.
then a rich person pointed to a problem they helped perpetuate and...wow it's a huge problem!! how can you trust these people to police themselves?? next we'll have cops that investigate themselves!!
*wank*. it's a problem that's only a "problem" because it's effecting rich people.

Tesseraction
Apr 5, 2009

I mean I'm not surprised that the legal community is small enough for this to happen but it's still a bizarre state of affairs when years later you're asking your former boss to lean into the mic and exhaustively enumerate their sex life.

DarkHorse
Dec 13, 2006

Vroom vroom, BEEP BEEP!
Nap Ghost
https://thehill.com/regulation/court-battles/4535432-navarro-emergency-appeal-supreme-court-contempt-of-congress-prison-reporting-deadline/

quote:

Former Trump economic adviser Peter Navarro filed an emergency appeal with the Supreme Court on Friday, a last-ditch effort to avoid reporting for his prison term as he appeals his conviction for contempt of Congress.

Navarro has been ordered to report to a Miami prison on Tuesday to serve a four-month sentence in connection with refusing to comply with a congressional subpoena related to the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol.

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit on Thursday largely affirmed the trial judge’s ruling last month that Navarro’s appeal does not raise a “substantial question of law” and therefore doesn’t warrant his release.

The federal appeals court also found that for Navarro’s arguments on executive privilege to raise substantial questions, it would have required former President Trump to have invoked said privilege — which the court said “did not happen here.”
In his Friday appeal to the high court, Navarro’s attorneys argue he should be allowed to remain free while he pursues his appeal as he poses no public safety or flight risk.

They also claim he stands to raise important issues before the court.

“For the first time in our nation’s history, a senior presidential advisor has been convicted of contempt of congress after asserting executive privilege over a congressional subpoena,” Navarro’s attorneys wrote.

“Dr. Navarro has appealed and will raise a number of issues on appeal that he contends are likely to result in the reversal of his conviction, or a new trial. Chief among them are whether an ‘affirmative’ invocation of executive privilege was required to preclude a prosecution for contempt of congress; what was required of former President Trump for a ‘proper’ invocation of privilege.”

Accipiter
Jan 24, 2004

SINATRA.
Ready to do the crime, crying like a baby faced with doing the time.

dr_rat
Jun 4, 2001

News just in, finding out phase reportedly not nearly as fun as the loving are phases. I'm sure there is a few people who put themselves out for trump watching this case closely, and probably not very happily.

PainterofCrap
Oct 17, 2002

hey bebe



InsertPotPun posted:

i mean part of the problem with the justice system in the country is that there aren't enough judges and the community as a whole is insular and incestuous. it's only a problem because states are cheap.
it's like none of you have ever had coworkers before
as a whole the closeness of the public defenders to the cops they're supposed to protect us from is far FAR more of a problem because that effects people's lives. this was coworkers loving and...knowing...each other?
but public prosecutors letting cops off because they know each other is never going to be a "problem" because the defendants they're, figuratively, screwing are poor.
then a rich person pointed to a problem they helped perpetuate and...wow it's a huge problem!! how can you trust these people to police themselves?? next we'll have cops that investigate themselves!!
*wank*. it's a problem that's only a "problem" because it's effecting rich people.

The defense has been spending a lot of time & treasure trying to either derail or delay this case.

Methinks their defense may be a tad lacking.

OgNar
Oct 26, 2002

They tapdance not, neither do they fart
The tension is rising, walls closing in.
Pants being shat.
https://twitter.com/kyledcheney/status/1768749836440871010


e: useless whining

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aRGszO-Z1W8

OgNar fucked around with this message at 02:58 on Mar 16, 2024

ZeeToo
Feb 20, 2008

I'm a kitty!

haveblue posted:

Anyone who is not full-throatedly praising Trump at this exact moment is anti-Trump. Even if they just stopped or intend to start soon

Well, there's two additional qualifications you have to include:

1. You must not only be praising him, but you must be taking the action that I, an ignorant observer, think is the best plan.
AND
2. It must also be working, with no caveats or difficulties.

Given how poorly these two go together, there's a whole lot of anti-Trump efforts going on by people who are, in fact, trying to stick their necks out for Trump.

Murgos
Oct 21, 2010

PainterofCrap posted:

The defense has been spending a lot of time & treasure trying to either derail or delay this case.

Methinks their defense may be a tad lacking.

Well, yeah. If they thought they clearly had facts and law on their side they would just do that and it would be pretty obvious even to casual observers like us that they were right.

Remember that a lot of what Trump is charged with in NY, DC, Fl and GA is well documented and pretty clearly in violation of black letter law. Which is part of why Trump is spending so much effort on novel immunity petitions.

If his defense is, “I didn’t do it” then the prosecutors can just point to all the evidence that yes, he did.

If his defense is, “it wasn’t illegal” then that is easily argued with the text of the law and the history of its application.

So, he’s stuck with, “I did it but it wasn’t illegal for me because I’m special.”

Murgos fucked around with this message at 13:48 on Mar 16, 2024

PC LOAD LETTER
May 23, 2005
WTF?!

OgNar posted:

The tension is rising, walls closing in.
Pants being shat.

And over only 4mo in prison.

If he was a wage earner who might lose his house over being imprisoned and out of work for that long, or perhaps was looking at dying in prison, I could understand but none of that is true for him at all. making GBS threads his pants over a glorified wrist slap for blatantly ignoring subpoenas while making up stuff is ridiculous.

The Islamic Shock
Apr 8, 2021

Murgos posted:

Well, yeah. If they thought they clearly had facts and law on their side they would just do that and it would be pretty obvious even to casual observers like us that they were right.

Remember that a lot of what Trump is charged with in NY, DC, Fl and GA is well documented and pretty clearly in violation of black letter law. Which is part of why Trump is spending so much effort on novel immunity petitions.

If his defense is, “I didn’t do it” then the prosecutors can just point to all the evidence that yes, he did.

If his defense is, “it wasn’t illegal” then that is easily argued with the text of the law and the history of its application.

So, he’s stuck with, “I did it but it wasn’t illegal for me because I’m special.”
I've found going the angle of concern-trolling with "you're absolutely right, total witch hunt, let's take a good deep dive at the specific charges and evidence to determine on merit the exact nature of why they're bullshit" works pretty well because they don't really get to give the honest response of we can't do that because he's loving obviously guilty as you say. I find doing poo poo like this useful because it's like the world's worst gatcha where they randomly pull from whatever logical fallacies they've been trained to have not to think about it that hard for as long as they're willing to talk to you.

Edit: Christian concern trolling (convenient for me, actually being a Christian) is pretty fun too. Their leader is the antithesis of their claimed religion and the only answer they seem to have to that is Biden's worse in increasingly insane ways if pressed

The Islamic Shock fucked around with this message at 16:22 on Mar 16, 2024

Raenir Salazar
Nov 5, 2010

College Slice

Murgos posted:

Well, yeah. If they thought they clearly had facts and law on their side they would just do that and it would be pretty obvious even to casual observers like us that they were right.

Remember that a lot of what Trump is charged with in NY, DC, Fl and GA is well documented and pretty clearly in violation of black letter law. Which is part of why Trump is spending so much effort on novel immunity petitions.

If his defense is, “I didn’t do it” then the prosecutors can just point to all the evidence that yes, he did.

If his defense is, “it wasn’t illegal” then that is easily argued with the text of the law and the history of its application.

So, he’s stuck with, “I did it but it wasn’t illegal for me because I’m special.”

Isn't this literally the quote of "If you have the facts on your side pound the facts, if you have the law pound the law, if you don't have either pound the table."?

Caros
May 14, 2008

Raenir Salazar posted:

Isn't this literally the quote of "If you have the facts on your side pound the facts, if you have the law pound the law, if you don't have either pound the table."?

Except that in this context the 'table' is the us supreme court losing its mind and/or regaining the presidency to throw out the cases against him.

Tesseraction
Apr 5, 2009

If you don't have either pound the entire country, leaving grease stains.

Karma Comedian
Feb 2, 2012

Trump Legal Troubles: Just Start Pounding

Arsenic Lupin
Apr 12, 2012

This particularly rapid💨 unintelligible 😖patter💁 isn't generally heard🧏‍♂️, and if it is🤔, it doesn't matter💁.


The Islamic Shock posted:


Edit: Christian concern trolling (convenient for me, actually being a Christian) is pretty fun too. Their leader is the antithesis of their claimed religion and the only answer they seem to have to that is Biden's worse in increasingly insane ways if pressed
The official response is now "David did a lot of hosed up things, but he was God's chosen leader, so you have to give Trump a pass.". Seriously. Trump is antithetical to everything they claim to believe, but that's okay because God.

Deteriorata
Feb 6, 2005

Arsenic Lupin posted:

The official response is now "David did a lot of hosed up things, but he was God's chosen leader, so you have to give Trump a pass.". Seriously. Trump is antithetical to everything they claim to believe, but that's okay because God.

And the obvious rejoinder is "Why wouldn't God use Joe Biden?"

Arsenic Lupin
Apr 12, 2012

This particularly rapid💨 unintelligible 😖patter💁 isn't generally heard🧏‍♂️, and if it is🤔, it doesn't matter💁.


His ways are mysterious and also never involve Democrats.

Hillary Clinton is genuinely devout, teaches Methodist Sunday School, attends Church regularly. She's anathema. Trump can't name a single Bible verse. Not even Jesus Wept.

I am an unsatisfactory Christian. I am not going to sell all I have and give it to the poor. Ask me about my favorite books of the Bible? I have a stack. (Ecclesiastes, if you're curious.)

Trump couldn't answer that. Not as a direct question. It's not a hard question. All you have to say is any of the Gospels. Trump couldn't manage that.

Arsenic Lupin fucked around with this message at 06:26 on Mar 17, 2024

Bar Ran Dun
Jan 22, 2006




Arsenic Lupin posted:

His ways are mysterious and also never involve Democrats.

Hillary Clinton is genuinely devout, teaches Methodist Sunday School, attends Church regularly. She's anathema. Trump can't name a single Bible verse. Not even Jesus Wept.

There are several lines of important religious thought, and these were public theology, big in the politics of the 40s-70s that are now seen as communism by the right. Even as late as 2008 all the major candidates (in both parties even!) had view points shaped by Christian Realism (and at least one explicitly sono it’s all three Clinton, Obama and McCain).

Bar Ran Dun fucked around with this message at 06:44 on Mar 17, 2024

Arsenic Lupin
Apr 12, 2012

This particularly rapid💨 unintelligible 😖patter💁 isn't generally heard🧏‍♂️, and if it is🤔, it doesn't matter💁.


Also evangelicals don't approve of charity because reasons.

gregday
May 23, 2003

In a way I’m sort of grateful that Trump laid bare the absolute hypocritical farce that western evangelicalism really is for all to see.

Bar Ran Dun
Jan 22, 2006




Huh I did not know I share a favorite sermon with Hillary Clinton. Number 19 “You are Accepted.”

http://media.sabda.org/alkitab-2/Religion-Online.org%20Books/Tillich,%20Paul%20-%20The%20Shaking%20of%20the%20Foundations.pdf#page114

SpelledBackwards
Jan 7, 2001

I found this image on the Internet, perhaps you've heard of it? It's been around for a while I hear.

Arsenic Lupin posted:

Trump can't name a single Bible verse. Not even Jesus Wept.

I'm voting for the Dean next election.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z4FGzE4endQ

alf_pogs
Feb 15, 2012



Peltons campaign is just a Trojan horse for Subway to sweep into power

Name Change
Oct 9, 2005


Interesting story on the Willis case in WaPo today. In case you are not well-read on it, there was a "there" there, although McAfee didn't see anything worth getting the entire thing thrown out. Willis hiring Wade smelled to the defense attorneys from the get-go because Wade was clearly inexperienced, and this is how this all got rolling.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/2024/03/16/fani-willis-misconduct-accusations-ashleigh-merchant/

quote:

How a sleuth defense attorney and a disgruntled law partner damaged the Trump Georgia case
By Amy Gardner and Holly Bailey


In early September, a lawyer for one of former president Donald Trump’s co-defendants in the Georgia election interference case scheduled a call with the other defense attorneys to share what he thought could be a game-changing allegation.

Nathan Wade, the lead prosecutor on the case, did not seem qualified for a job that was paying him hundreds of thousands of dollars, Manny Arora told his colleagues. And he’d heard that Wade was in a romantic relationship with Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis (D), potential grounds for Willis’s disqualification from the case.

The reaction was muted. Some of the lawyers didn’t even participate in the call. It was just three weeks after their clients had been indicted, and they were busy preparing their cases.

“Truthfully, I thought it was too salacious, and I thought it would irritate the judge,” said one defense lawyer, who like several other individuals spoke to The Washington Post on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly about the case. “Everybody had just been arraigned. We were working on discovery and getting our defense together.”

Arora, who represented lawyer Kenneth Chesebro, told the group that he didn’t have the bandwidth to investigate the romance claims, he later recounted to The Post.

But one lawyer on the call was interested. Ashleigh Merchant, who represents former Trump campaign aide Mike Roman, filed open-records requests for Wade’s contracts and billing invoices. She obtained a trove of financial records from his pending divorce case. And crucially, she leaned on a long-standing friendship with Wade’s former law partner, who claimed knowledge of all of it in hundreds of now-public text messages.

That effort culminated in a blockbuster pleading that Merchant filed in January accusing Willis of improperly hiring Wade while they were dating and then profiting by allowing him to take her on lavish vacations. The unusual pleading, which cited unnamed individuals and provided no evidence, called for Willis’s disqualification from the case and for the charges to be dismissed. In the weeks that followed, Merchant frantically rushed to try to find proof for her claims.

Ultimately, the gambit fell short when Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee ruled Friday that Merchant and other defense attorneys had failed to prove Willis and Wade were in a relationship when she appointed him or other disqualifying conduct. But the ruling sharply criticized Willis and Wade, and demanded that one of them step away from the case.

And damage was done along the way. The matter dragged on for more than two months, delaying proceedings and making it less likely that the complicated conspiracy case will go to trial before the presidential election. It deeply embarrassed Willis and Wade, who were forced to testify about their relationship and answer profoundly personal questions from defense attorneys whose clients they had charged, all of which undermined public credibility of their prosecution of Trump and his allies. Wade resigned from the case a few hours after McAfee’s order dropped.

The accusations aren’t going away, as some of the defendants are expecting to appeal the decision — and the judge has suggested they can revisit the issue closer to a trial date. State lawmakers are investigating, and the headlines are unlikely to slow down.

Trump, meanwhile, has gleefully cheered on the drama and used it to undermine the legitimacy of the charges against him not only in Georgia, but in all four criminal cases against him, including two federal cases brought by special counsel Jack Smith.

“The Fani Willis lover, Mr. Nathan Wade Esq., has just resigned in disgrace,” Trump posted on his social media platform, Truth Social.

“This is the equivalent of Deranged Jack Smith getting ‘canned,’ BIG STUFF, something which should happen in the not too distant future!!!”

Who is Nathan Wade?
Two days after Trump and his allies were charged in connection with their attempt to overthrow the 2020 presidential election in Georgia, Willis asked the judge to set a March trial date. Soon after, Wade filed a notice of appearance as the case’s lead prosecutor.

Many of the defense attorneys had never heard of him — and they were increasingly convinced the general practitioner from the Atlanta suburbs, whose webpage advertises criminal defense, personal injury and family law, wasn’t qualified for the job. Arora, Chesebro’s lawyer, wanted to know how much Fulton County was paying Wade.

“We did open-records requests on all of it,” he told The Post. “I was just curious to see if all the I’s had been dotted and the T’s crossed.”

Arora discovered that Wade had never filed a signed oath of office after Willis hired him in November 2021, which Arora believed was a requirement under Georgia law. He began preparing a motion to dismiss the charges.

Around the same time, defendant David Shafer, the former state GOP chairman and one of three Trump electors charged in the case, received a brochure in the mail from Wade & Campbell, Wade’s law firm. The brochure was generated automatically following Shafer’s indictment, but his lawyer thought it was wildly inappropriate for a private firm to solicit a client that one of its partners was prosecuting, even in error. That lawyer, Craig Gillen, filed a motion of his own.

McAfee — 34 years old and in his first year on the bench — quickly ruled against Shafer on Sept. 14 with what would become his familiarly sharp tone.

“Nothing indicates that Special Prosecutor Wade knowingly sent the mailer or specifically targeted the Defendants,” the judge wrote. “ … The Court feels comfortable inferring a lack of knowledge without the need for a protracted evidentiary hearing and briefing schedule.”

McAfee’s ruling against Chesebro on the oath of office several weeks later was even tougher, calling Arora’s filing a “parrot of a motion” and “blithely” written.

The rest of the defense team took note. Most of them remained wary of pursuing the potential impropriety of a romance between Willis and Wade. Now, they had reason to suspect McAfee would be skeptical, too, and they didn’t want to anger him with frivolous filings.

A defense attorney who loves digging
Merchant, a well-known Atlanta-area criminal defense attorney, took pride in being a vigorous investigator, a necessary skill when she was a public defender and had no budget. She quickly picked up where Arora had left off, firing off open-records requests seeking Wade’s contract as she sought to understand how he came to be appointed to the job.

Merchant and her husband and law partner, John, had been hired to represent Roman, a former campaign aide who was charged in part for his role in assembling presidential electors to sign documents falsely claiming Trump had won the election in Georgia. Roman spent much of his career as a Republican opposition researcher, digging up dirt on political rivals.

Unlike the other defense attorneys, Merchant had known Wade for years, professionally and socially. He was active in the legal and political scene in Cobb County, north of Atlanta, where Merchant lives and works. A former municipal judge, Wade had unsuccessfully run for elected judge positions over the years. Merchant had endorsed his 2016 campaign against a Cobb County Superior Court judge, praising his “robust legal background.”

But Merchant didn’t understand how Wade had come to lead what could be the biggest criminal case in Georgia history. A former Fulton County public defender, Merchant was well-acquainted with Willis and many other prosecutors in her office because she’d tried cases against them for years. She wasn’t sure Wade had ever prosecuted a felony case, much less a complicated, multi-defendant proceeding brought under the state’s racketeering statute, as this one was.

A glance at a Fulton County budget website with some basic numbers showed that Wade had already been paid nearly $550,000. His law partners, Christopher Campbell and Terrence Bradley, who were also under contract with the office, had been paid close to $200,000 combined. She filed a request seeking those billing statements.

Wade’s earnings seemed excessive to Merchant, who claimed in recent public testimony that most lawyers appointed to handle public cases are paid far less — closer to $60 an hour, in her experience — or work on a pro-bono basis. Prosecutors later argued that Wade’s $250 an hour billing rate was below market and less than he’d charged on other cases.

By then, chatter about Wade’s legal credentials and earnings was spreading among local attorneys unaffiliated with the case.

“She’s spent almost a million taxpayer dollars on RICO advice from Nathan Wade, a dude who has never tried a RICO case,” Andrew Fleischmann, an Atlanta criminal defense attorney, posted on X on Sept. 2.

When someone responded asking if they should be familiar with Wade, Fleishmann replied: “Not really.”

On Sept. 11, the conservative Washington Examiner published a story about how much money the district attorney’s office had paid Wade and his two law partners, describing the arrangement as “unorthodox.”

“Willis chose Wade over career prosecutors who work on salaries,” it read, quoting an Atlanta attorney who described it as a “cash cow.”

The article served to jump-start Merchant’s research project by prompting a phone call from Bradley, an old friend who was concerned by the attention and wondered if he needed a lawyer.

Bradley told Merchant that Willis had called him to say various people were looking into the contracts.

“He called me because he was worried about it. And so we had a conversation, and he actually asked me, ‘Do I need a lawyer?’ … ‘What’s going on? What are you investigating?’” Merchant later recalled.

Willis later testified that she could “not recall” texting or talking on the phone with Bradley but said she could have. She was not specifically asked about the alleged September call.
Merchant said she told Bradley that she couldn’t represent him because she was representing Roman. He asked if her husband was available. “That’s a conflict, too,” Merchant said she told Bradley.

But she could still talk to him — and talk they did.

A single ‘star’ witness
A few days later, Merchant ran into Bradley at the Cobb County courthouse. They joined two other attorneys in a conference room as they waited for plea hearings to begin in their respective cases.

Bradley told the group everything he knew about Willis and Wade, Merchant recalled.

The two had met at a judicial conference in October 2019 and quickly struck up a romantic relationship, Merchant says Bradley told the group — well before she was elected district attorney.

“I had a notepad,” Merchant said, “and I took notes on all the things to ask for open records.”

Merchant said she did not know at the time that Bradley was no longer Wade’s law partner. She also did not know that Bradley had served as Wade’s divorce attorney — or that he left the firm after being accused of sexually assaulting an employee and a client, allegations he denies.

Merchant said she believed Bradley was angry about how Wade had treated his estranged wife.

From that point, Merchant grew to rely heavily on Bradley’s recollections to build her case. On Sept. 14, she texted Bradley with the first of more than 300 text messages between mid-September and early February as she sought to confirm the details Bradley had shared. A copy of the texts, obtained by The Post, were introduced as evidence in the disqualification proceedings.

In late September, prosecutors offered a plea deal to Roman, who was charged with seven counts including racketeering. He could plead guilty to a single misdemeanor charge and a $5,000 fine in exchange for his cooperation, Merchant said.

Soon four other defendants took plea deals in rapid succession. But Roman declined. Behind the scenes, his lawyer was working to confirm Bradley’s claims, relentlessly pumping him for more leads to chase. She was running out of time. If Merchant was going to raise these accusations, she had to do so before Jan. 8, the motions deadline that McAfee had set.

Three weeks later, on Jan. 5, Merchant texted Bradley again, indicating she had gotten “stuff from the divorce lawyer. … I got a ton of stuff.” It was an apparent reference to the lawyer for Wade’s estranged wife, Joycelyn Wade, who later denied claims from Willis and others that she coordinated or colluded with Merchant.id for a Royal Caribbean

Merchant was building out her motion to disqualify Willis. She told Bradley that she now had records showing Wade paid for trips with Willis, including a Royal Caribbean cruise in November 2022 and a trip to Napa Valley in April 2023.

“You won’t be involved at all,” Merchant wrote. The next day, Bradley asked to see a “rough draft” of the motion.

Within an hour, Bradley responded by asking Merchant to include how much he had been paid for his work for Willis’s office. He was worried that the omission could suggest he was a source. Merchant replied she had taken out his name.

“Add it back,” Bradley replied.

She asked him what he thought of the overall motion, which accused Willis and Wade of being in an “ongoing personal relationship” even while Wade was married and before Willis hired him. It described how the two were “believed to have cohabited in some form or fashion at a location owned by neither of them.”

It accused Willis of improperly benefiting financially from the hire, claiming that Wade had financed lavish vacations. And it said she had misused county funds by paying Wade as much as she had.

He replied: “Looks good.”

What Bradley never provided in all those text messages was actual evidence that the relationship had begun before Willis hired Wade. And Merchant had no other witnesses lined up yet, despite her plural description of “sources” in her motion.

The two mused that day about how Willis and Wade would react to the filing.

Bradley wrote: “They’re going to deny it.”

Merchant responded, “OMG! There have to be so many witnesses. If they deny it, they will become public liars. So many folks have seen them. Like most of the office staff!”

Bradley made suggestions on whom Merchant should subpoena: Willis’s security detail, members of her executive staff, her administrative assistant and members of the election case prosecution team.

“Subpoena them all,” he wrote.

On Jan. 8, hours before she would file the motion, Merchant texted Bradley.

She filed the motion that Monday afternoon. And all hell broke loose.

Waiting for Willis to respond
As the sensational accusations dominated local and national media for days, Willis and Wade kept quiet. Months earlier, when Trump had falsely accused Willis of having “an affair” with a “gang member,” she sent an email to staff strongly denying it and the message quickly leaked. This time, Willis would respond “appropriately in court filings,” her spokesman said.

As the days passed without a denial, even those close to Willis who initially assumed the accusations were false suddenly wondered if they could be true. The district attorney had campaigned on a platform of professional integrity and had publicly condemned anyone who would sleep with a subordinate.

One person thought Merchant’s filing was fabulous: Trump.

Through an aide, Trump relayed to his lawyer, Sadow, that he wanted him to call Merchant to congratulate her, according to two people familiar with the conversations. Sadow did.

But Sadow was still skeptical of the motion, which had not offered evidence of its central claims, so he didn’t immediately join it.

Six days after the bombshell had dropped, Willis finally broke her silence in a widely viewed speech before a historic Black church in Atlanta, where she accused her critics of playing “the race card” by questioning her right to appoint Wade, the only Black lawyer among the three special prosecutors she had hired.

Willis described herself as flawed and lonely — words quickly interpreted to mean the central allegation of a romance was true.

Without naming Wade, Willis strongly defended him, describing him as a lawyer of “impeccable credentials” with decades of experience.

The speech did not settle anything.

Merchant, meanwhile, was still on the hunt for corroboration. She pressed Bradley for any details about an Atlanta-area home and supposed rendezvous point for Willis and Wade. Bradley had told her the house was linked to “a girlfriend” of Willis’s, “like a bestie,” who had worked for the district attorney’s office. But Merchant still did not have a name as she sought to back up her allegations.

On Jan. 14, the same day as the church speech, Merchant texted Bradley a name.

Merchant also chased random leads. She asked Bradley if he knew the names of Willis’s college-age daughters, recounting an anonymous tip that Willis was renting a house for her and Wade in one of their names.

The shocking allegations had ground the election case to a halt — and created a media circus. Wade was photographed outside his private law office carrying a gun. He and other prosecutors took back hallways at the courthouse to avoid reporters.

On. Jan. 19, an attorney for Joycelyn Wade filed a pleading in the divorce case with credit card statements potentially corroborating the allegation that Wade had paid for Willis’s travel. The statements showed that he had purchased airline and cruise tickets for himself and Willis on two occasions. Willis still declined to comment.

On Jan. 22, local and national news outlets descended on a hearing over the Wade divorce case at the Cobb County Courthouse. The judge agreed to Merchant’s request to unseal records in the case. She had suggested they would prove her allegations, but they did not.

Eight days later, Nathan Wade temporarily settled the bitter divorce case with his wife, avoiding having to testify.

But the crisis was not over. By now, Sadow, Trump’s lawyer, and several others had joined the motion to disqualify Willis — prompted in part what they claimed was Willis’s improper speech at the church, which they said would taint any future jury pool.

On Jan. 31, Merchant issued more than a dozen subpoenas including to Willis, Wade, Bradley, and several prosecutors and key members of Willis’s staff she wanted to question in an evidentiary hearing. Many were people Bradley had suggested.

Willis asked McAfee to cancel the evidentiary hearing. He didn’t. It was set for Feb. 15.

In a response, Merchant suggested Willis and Wade had lied. She said Wade and Willis “began more than just a friendship” when they met at the 2019 conference. She also texted Bradley that she would be sending him a subpoena for the hearing, writing that she hoped not to use it but that “it would look fishy” if she didn’t.

“I’m okay with it,” Bradley replied.

The effort falls short
In the meantime, Bradley appeared to be growing increasingly nervous that he would be publicly identified as Merchant’s source.

He began replying less and less to Merchant’s texts.

On Feb. 3, he texted Merchant that he’d gotten a voice mail from Gabe Banks, a former prosecutor Willis had unsuccessfully asked to lead the case. Bradley told Merchant that Banks thought he was Merchant’s source.

“Fishing,” she replied.

She later testified to a Georgia Senate committee that Bradley was “upset” by the message.

“They were trying to figure out if it was him, and they were trying to silence him,” Merchant claimed.

The next day, Merchant said Bradley told her that he had gotten a call from his best friend, also an Atlanta lawyer, who said Wade had asked him to relay a message.

“Remind him of his privilege,” Wade allegedly said, referring to Bradley’s one-time role as his divorce lawyer.

A few days after that, Bradley stopped communicating with Merchant altogether. And Merchant finally outed her source in a motion filed Feb. 9, saying Bradley would “refute” claims by Willis and Wade that their romantic relationship began after he was named to the election case.

The filing prompted McAfee to refer to Bradley as Merchant’s “star witness.”

But on the witness stand, he was anything but. Called as the first witness on that Thursday morning, Bradley’s appearance was interrupted when Wade’s personal attorney asserted privilege.

It was actually Robin Bryant-Yeartie, Willis’s former colleague and estranged friend, who delivered what some defense attorneys initially thought would be the nail in the coffin for Willis’s attempts to maintain the case. Appearing on a large TV screen from her home, Bryant-Yeartie said there was “no doubt” in her mind that Willis and Wade were involved in a romantic relationship beginning in late 2019. She testified that she had talked to Willis about Wade and had personally seen them “hugging, kissing” before Nov. 1, 2021 — the date Wade joined the Trump case.

Seated in the gallery, a defense attorney turned to a colleague and silently pumped his first in celebration.

That same day, Wade and Willis also took the stand, as defense lawyer after defense lawyer questioned each of them about their sex lives and personal finances. Wade said Willis had repaid him for the travel in cash, a statement that prompted Shafer, sitting at the defense table, to chortle aloud. “Mr. Shafer, you’ll step out if you do that again,” McAfee interjected.

For her turn, Willis accused Merchant of being “dishonest” and of making “highly offensive” claims about her and Wade. At one point, she waved copies of Roman’s filings in the case, describing them as full of “lies, lies, lies.”

“You’ve been intrusive into people’s personal lives,” Willis told Merchant. “You’re confused. You think I’m on trial. These people are on trial for trying to steal an election in 2020. I’m not on trial. No matter how hard you try to put me on trial.”

It became so heated that McAfee called a brief recess. He would later describe Willis’s testimony that day as “unprofessional.”

When Bradley returned to the witness stand Friday, he initially denied having communicated with Merchant about Wade and Willis, suggesting he had spoken to her through a third party. When presented with a copy of the texts, he acknowledged he had sent the messages and then tried to claim privilege to avoid answering questions.

More than a week later, Bradley was forced to return to the stand a third time after McAfee ruled that privilege didn’t prevent it. The defense table was abuzz with anticipation. But Bradley did not deliver what they had been hoping for. He said he had no “personal” knowledge of when the relationship between Wade and Willis began. And he said much of what he shared with Merchant was nothing more than speculation.

It was the undoing of Merchant’s months-long quest.

Bradley’s text messages never established “the basis for which he claimed such sweeping knowledge” of Wade’s private life, McAfee wrote Friday in his order denying Merchant’s motion.

“The Court finds itself unable to place any stock in the testimony of [Terrence] Bradley,” McAfee wrote. “His inconsistencies, demeanor, and generally non-responsive answers left far too brittle a foundation upon which to build any conclusions.”

McAfee didn’t stop there. He harshly criticized Willis and Wade, calling the church speech “legally improper” and Wade’s explanation for why he did not admit the relationship in his divorce proceedings “patently unpersuasive.” He characterized the claim of cash payments “not so incredible as to be inherently unbelievable” — yet described an “odor of mendacity” over the whole affair.

A few hours later, Wade offered a letter of resignation to “the Honorable Fani T. Willis.” She accepted it.

Merchant issued a statement saying McAfee should have disqualified Willis’s office. But she also called the opinion “a vindication that everything put forth by the defense was true, accurate and relevant to the issues surrounding our client’s right to a fair trial.”

Accipiter
Jan 24, 2004

SINATRA.

Arsenic Lupin posted:

rump can't name a single Bible verse. Not even Jesus Wept.

"2 Corinthians walk into a bar..."

BiggerBoat
Sep 26, 2007

Don't you tell me my business again.
I hate to say it but I really think this "run out the clock by delaying things until the election" is going to work. If I were to bet right now, I honestly think Trump is going to win 6 months from now. And after that? Then we're in totally uncharted territory and god only knows from there but all signs point to another attempt at full fascism and I'm having a hard time seeing viable ways to really stop it. Donald has said as much and the country seems ripe for it.

I really hope I'm wrong.

Uglycat
Dec 4, 2000
MORE INDISPUTABLE PROOF I AM BAD AT POSTING
---------------->
He's going to run out the clock, lose, and trump will be convicted during biden's second term.

ElegantFugue
Jun 5, 2012

BiggerBoat posted:

I hate to say it but I really think this "run out the clock by delaying things until the election" is going to work. If I were to bet right now, I honestly think Trump is going to win 6 months from now. And after that? Then we're in totally uncharted territory and god only knows from there but all signs point to another attempt at full fascism and I'm having a hard time seeing viable ways to really stop it. Donald has said as much and the country seems ripe for it.

I really hope I'm wrong.

You've been saying this kind of stuff a lot, but I'm increasingly starting to feel like he's not really delaying enough things quickly enough. It's just moving things closer to the actual election itself. And he's already lost some cases, like the Jean Carrol and NY stuff. It just seems to be frantically shuffling the trial deck around near-randomly and praying that he draws 16 Kings in a row or something.

duodenum
Sep 18, 2005

Uglycat posted:

He's going to run out the clock, lose, and trump will be convicted during biden's second term.

I bet he'll say it's all an unfair stolen witch hunt hoax and bolt to Russia or Saudi Arabia.

Hieronymous Alloy
Jan 30, 2009


Why! Why!! Why must you refuse to accept that Dr. Hieronymous Alloy's Genetically Enhanced Cream Corn Is Superior to the Leading Brand on the Market!?!




Morbid Hound

ElegantFugue posted:

You've been saying this kind of stuff a lot, but I'm increasingly starting to feel like he's not really delaying enough things quickly enough. It's just moving things closer to the actual election itself. And he's already lost some cases, like the Jean Carrol and NY stuff. It just seems to be frantically shuffling the trial deck around near-randomly and praying that he draws 16 Kings in a row or something.

Yeah we're on track for maximum comedy scenario where his day to day trial news is happening in September and October.

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Nitrousoxide
May 30, 2011

do not buy a oneplus phone



Trump's gonna get imprisoned, win the election, and walk out because he'll pardon himself for any federal crimes and a state can't imprison the sitting president under the supremacy clause.

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