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Georgia court sets October date for Trump challenge to Fani Willis, likely delaying trial past election

An appeals court in Georgia has scheduled a hearing on Donald Trump’s renewed push to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from trying the former president and his allies in a wide-ranging election interference case.

A panel of appellate court judges will hear their appeal on October 4 – one month and one day before the presidential election.

The judge overseeing the election interference case against the former president and his co-defendants has allowed Willis to stay on, following lengthy court hearings in March to determine whether she financially benefited from hiring a special prosecutor with whom she was once romantically involved.

Trump and his co-defendants then appealed that decision, and it has landed on the court calendar on October 4.

Judges Trent Brown, Todd Markle and Benjamin Land are expected to hear the case, but they also could decide against holding oral arguments and rule on the matter based on briefs filed to the court. Those briefs are due later this month.

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee hasn’t paused pretrial proceedings in the initial case, but the case will not be going to trial until this issue is resolved – meaning, it is unlikely that the trial to determine if Trump interfered in the 2020 election will reach a verdict before the next one.

Willis and now-former special prosecutor Nathan Wade acknowledged their prior relationship but repeatedly testified that they started dating after he was hired, split their expenses, and that the relationship ended last summer before an indictment.

Judge McAfee’s decision offered her a choice: she can remove herself from the case, along with her entire office, or Wade can step aside. Hours later, Wade submitted his letter

Read more on independent.co.uk