Kamis, 29 Februari 2024

Dem DA in charge of Laken Riley murder stands down from case, promises it won't be 'used for political gain' - New York Post

The Democrat District Attorney in charge of prosecuting the Venezuelan migrant accused of brutally murdering Laken Riley has removed herself from the case — amid criticisms that she has failed to secure a single guilty verdict the entire time she has been in office.

Athens-Clarke District Attorney Deborah Gonzalez appointed veteran attorney Sheila Ross to serve as a special prosecutor to instead handle the case against Jose Ibarra for murdering the 22-year-old nursing student who was innocently out for a run.

“We will not allow this or any other case to be used for political gain,” Gonzalez said in a statement.

“Our top priority is the safety of every citizen, and we are fully committed to ensuring that justice is served for the loss of every life.”

She stepped down after Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp publicly expressed his concerns that she would not be able to handle the high-profile case.

Deborah Gonzalez stepped back from the murder case. Joshua L. Jones / USA TODAY NETWORK

Critics have also accused her of failing throughout her time at the top.

“Ms. Gonzalez has failed to achieve one guilty verdict in a jury trial involving any type of criminal case,” attorney Kevin Epps, who is suing Gonzalez on behalf of an Athens bar owner, told WSB-TV.

He said he does not believe Gonzalez’s office is properly equipped to prosecute Ibarra.

Laken Hope Riley was found dead on University of Georgia’s campus. Facebook / Allyson Phillips

“We currently have a district attorney that has a complete inability to prosecute this case appropriately,” he said.

State Rep. Houston Gaines, whose district borders the area where Riley’s body was found, also said he has “a real concern about her ability to handle this case,” according to the Athens Banner-Herald.

“She’s not ready to handle this case,” he said.

Jose Antonio Ibarra seen being taken away by police. Atlanta News First

And when asked Monday whether he felt confident in Gonzalez’s ability to “bring this case, this suspect, to justice,” Gov. Kemp simply replied, “Well, she best do that,” the Banner-Herald reports.

Of all the cases the DA’s office closed in 2023, it chose not to prosecute 46%, 11Alive found.

Of the felonies charged, 130, were pleaded down to misdemeanors — giving most defendants probation, the news channel reported in January.

At other times, cases were dismissed or reduced because prosecutors did not feel they had sufficient evidence or because witnesses no longer wanted to testify.

Follow along with The Post's coverage of Laken Riley's murder

Still, Gonzalez seemed to defend her record in her statement on Monday.

“From day one, our office has worked diligently to keep this community safe from anyone who seeks to do it harm. This includes those who believe that violence is the answer,” she said.

“We will ensure that such individuals are brought to justice.”

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Senate Republican blocks bill to protect IVF after Alabama ruling - The Washington Post

A Republican senator has blocked legislation that would protect in vitro fertilization and other assisted reproductive technologies in the wake of an Alabama Supreme Court ruling that frozen embryos are children under state law.

Prominent Republican officials and candidates have voiced support for IVF since the Alabama ruling, though Democrats have responded with skepticism, arguing that the GOP paved the way for the ruling with antiabortion policies. The effort by Sen. Tammy Duckworth (D-Ill.) to pass the measure using unanimous consent, which allows the Senate to bypass a rule of procedure to expedite the process and is generally used for routine, noncontroversial measures, tested their stance.

Sen. Cindy Hyde-Smith (R-Miss.) objected to Duckworth’s move for a vote, calling the bill a “vast overreach” that goes “way too far.” She said she is in favor of “total access” to IVF but downplayed the consequences of the Feb. 16 Alabama decision, saying it “did not ban IVF.”

On Wednesday, several Democrats said the block shows that some GOP senators’ public support for IVF is unsubstantiated.

At least three in vitro fertilization clinics in Alabama halted treatment following the court’s decision, which drew strong criticism from medical organizations. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists said it puts in vitro fertilization, which makes use of lab-fertilized embryos, in peril and “sets an incredibly concerning precedent for IVF access across the United States.”

IVF involves fertilizing eggs in a lab setting. Some of the resulting embryos may be frozen for later use, disposed of or used for research. If health-care providers find themselves at risk of civil or criminal charges for disposing of or damaging frozen embryos, they will not be willing to provide IVF, medical organizations said in response to the ruling.

The treatment may be recommended to patients struggling with conditions such as blocked fallopian tubes, severe male infertility, endometriosis or multiple miscarriages — or for whom artificial insemination did not work.

“For all their talk about supporting IVF, when it came down to it, Republicans blocked IVF protections,” Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) said in a statement that connected the Alabama ruling to Republican-backed bans and severe restrictions on abortion across the country. “This has always been about conservative politicians controlling women’s bodies,” she said.

Duckworth said in the Senate on Wednesday that she struggled with infertility for a decade after serving in Iraq, and that she was able to have children only as a result of IVF. “IVF made my heart whole and full, but for countless women in Alabama, that desperately sought-after dream of becoming a mom just became so much harder.”

White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre called access to IVF a “basic issue of reproductive freedom” in a statement on Wednesday. “Every woman in this country should have the freedom to make the decision to have a child,” she said.

About 1 in 5 women in the United States struggle with infertility, according to Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data, and hundreds of thousands of American patients rely on IVF and similar treatments each year.

Patrick Svitek contributed to this report.

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Rabu, 28 Februari 2024

Mitch McConnell to step down from Republican Senate leadership - The Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — Mitch McConnell, the longest-serving Senate leader in history who maintained his power in the face of dramatic convulsions in the Republican Party for almost two decades, will step down from that position in November.

McConnell, who turned 82 last week, announced his decision Wednesday in the well of the Senate, the chamber where he looked in awe from its back benches in 1985 when he arrived and where he grew increasingly comfortable in the front row seat afforded the party leaders.

“One of life’s most underappreciated talents is to know when it’s time to move on to life’s next chapter,” he said. “So I stand before you today ... to say that this will be my last term as Republican leader of the Senate.”

AP Washington correspondent Sagar Meghani reports Mitch McConnell has told Senate colleagues this will be his last term as leader.

His decision punctuates a powerful ideological transition underway in the Republican Party, from Ronald Reagan’s brand of traditional conservatism and strong international alliances, to the fiery, often isolationist populism of former President Donald Trump.

McConnell said he plans to serve out his Senate term, which ends in January 2027, “albeit from a different seat in the chamber.”

He spoke at times haltingly, his emotions evident, as he looked back on his career. Dozens of members of his staff lined up behind him on the back wall of the chamber, some wiping away tears, as family and friends looked down from the gallery above. Senators from both parties — most of them taken by surprise by the announcement — trickled into the chamber and exchanged hugs and handshakes.

President Joe Biden, who has had a productive working relationship with McConnell, said he was sorry to hear the news.

“I’ve trusted him and we have a great relationship,” the Democratic president said. “We fight like hell. But he has never, never, never misrepresented anything.”

Aides said McConnell’s announcement was unrelated to his health. The Kentucky senator had a concussion from a fall last year and two public episodes where his face briefly froze while he was speaking.

“As I have been thinking about when I would deliver some news to the Senate, I always imagined a moment when I had total clarity and peace about the sunset of my work,” McConnell said. “A moment when I am certain I have helped preserve the ideals I so strongly believe. It arrived today.”

The senator had been under increasing pressure from the restive, and at times hostile wing of his party that has aligned firmly with Trump. The two have been estranged since December 2020, when McConnell refused to abide Trump’s lie that the election of Democrat Biden as president was the product of fraud.

But while McConnell’s critics within the GOP conference had grown louder, their numbers had not grown appreciably larger, a marker of McConnell’s strategic and tactical skill and his ability to understand the needs of his fellow Republican senators.

McConnell gave no specific reason for the timing of his decision, which he has been contemplating for months, but he cited the recent death of his wife’s youngest sister as a moment that prompted introspection. “The end of my contributions are closer than I’d prefer,” McConnell said.

But his remarks were also light at times as he talked about the arc of his Senate career.

He noted that when he arrived in the Senate, “I was just happy if anybody remembered my name.” During his campaign in 1984, when Reagan was visiting Kentucky, the president called him “Mitch O’Donnell.”

McConnell endorsed Reagan’s view of America’s role in the world and the senator has persisted in face of opposition, including from Trump, that Congress should include a foreign assistance package that includes $60 billion for Ukraine.

“I am unconflicted about the good within our country and the irreplaceable role we play as the leader of the free world,” McConnell said.

Against long odds he managed to secure 22 Republican votes for the package now being considered by the House.

“Believe me, I know the politics within my party at this particular moment in time. I have many faults. Misunderstanding politics is not one of them,” McConnell said. “That said, I believe more strongly than ever that America’s global leadership is essential to preserving the shining city on a hill that Ronald Reagan discussed. For as long as I am drawing breath on this earth I will defend American exceptionalism.”

After his speech, Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine, congratulated him in brief remarks, saying that she admired him “for stepping forward when it wasn’t popular to do the right thing for our country and our world.”

Trump has pulled the party hard to the ideological right, questioning longtime military alliances such as NATO, international trade agreements and pushing for a severe crackdown on immigration, all the while clinging to the falsehood that the election was stolen from him in 2020.

McConnell and Trump had worked together during Trump’s time in the White House, remaking the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary in a far more conservative image, and on tax legislation. But there was also friction from the start, with Trump frequently sniping at the senator.

Their relationship has essentially been over since Trump refused to accept the results of the Electoral College. But the rupture deepened dramatically after the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol. McConnell assigned blame and responsibility to Trump and said that he should be held to account through the criminal justice system for his actions.

McConnell’s critics insist he could have done more, including voting to convict Trump during his second impeachment trial. McConnell did not, arguing that since Trump was no longer in office, he could not be subject to impeachment.

Rather than fade from prominence after the Capitol riot, Trump continued to assert his control over the party, and finds himself on a clear glidepath to the Republican nomination. Other members of the Republican Senate leadership have endorsed Trump. McConnell has not, and that has drawn criticism from other Republican senators.

McConnell’s path to power was hardly linear, but from the day he walked onto the Senate floor in 1985 and took his seat as the most junior Republican senator, he set his sights on being the party leader. What set him apart was that so many other Senate leaders wanted to run for president. McConnell wanted to run the Senate. He lost races for lower party positions before steadily ascending, and finally became party leader in 2006 and has won nine straight elections.

He most recently beat back a challenge led by Sen. Rick Scott of Florida last November.

McConnell built his power base by a combination of care and nurturing of his members, including understanding their political imperatives. After seeing the potential peril of a rising Tea Party, he also established a super political action committee, The Senate Leadership Fund, which has provided more than a billion dollars in support of Republican candidates.

He is not a popular figure nationally, even among Republicans. According to a new poll from The Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, 45% of Republicans have an unfavorable view of McConnell. But he has reigned in the Senate.

“I love the Senate,” he said. “It has been my life. There may be more distinguished members of this body throughout our history, but I doubt there are any with more admiration for it.”

But, he added, “Father Time remains undefeated. I am no longer the young man sitting in the back, hoping colleagues would remember my name. It is time for the next generation of leadership.”

There would be a time to reminisce, he said, but not today.

“I still have enough gas in the tank to thoroughly disappoint my critics and I intend to do so with all the enthusiasm which they have become accustomed.”

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‘Star witness’ can’t remember details at Fani Willis hearing in Trump case - The Washington Post

ATLANTA — A lawyer billed as the “star witness” in the case to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis (D) testified Tuesday that it was mere “speculation” when he told a defense attorney that Willis began a romantic relationship in 2019 with the outside lawyer she appointed to lead the case against Donald Trump, years earlier than Willis has publicly acknowledged.

Terrence Bradley, a former law partner of special prosecutor Nathan Wade, repeatedly testified under oath that he did not know when the relationship between Willis and Wade started and could not remember the date of when he learned about it from Wade, frustrating defense attorneys who had claimed his testimony would “refute” claims by Willis and Wade that their romantic relationship began months after Wade was appointed to manage the Trump case.

I do not have knowledge of it starting or when it started,” Bradley testified Tuesday. “I never witnessed anything. So, you know, it was speculation.”

Bradley’s claims potentially undercut a defense effort to remove Willis and her office from the election interference case by using allegations of an improper personal relationship between Willis and Wade. But Bradley’s testimony also appeared to contradict numerous statements he had made about Willis and Wade in text messages to Ashleigh Merchant, an attorney for Trump co-defendant Mike Roman, who first accused the prosecutors of misconduct and relied on Bradley as a key source.

As Merchant and others pointed back to those messages, Bradley repeatedly sought to distance himself from the claims he made to Merchant — either saying he did not remember the text exchanges or that his statements were based on speculation. That led Merchant and other defense attorneys to complain that Bradley was being deliberately evasive or outright dishonest in his testimony.

At one point, Steve Sadow, an attorney for Trump, pointed to a January 2024 text exchange between Bradley and Merchant in which Bradley claimed Willis and Wade had been dating since they met at a judicial conference in late 2019. When Bradley again claimed it was speculation, Sadow accused Bradley of lying on the witness stand.

“Why in the heck would you speculate?” Sadow demanded.

“I have no answer for that,” Bradley replied.

“Except for the fact that you do, in fact, know when it started, and you don’t want to testify to that in court. That’s the best explanation,” Sadow shot back. “That’s the true explanation. Because you don’t want to admit it in court, correct?”

Bradley’s testimony Tuesday came after Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee, who is overseeing the election interference case, ordered him back on the witness stand to continue testimony that began nearly two weeks ago as part of an evidentiary hearing on the motion to disqualify Willis and her office from the case.

McAfee will ultimately have to decide if the prosecutors’ relationship created a conflict of interest or the appearance of one — and if Willis and her office should be removed from the case, or if any of the charges should be dropped against Trump or his allies, who are accused of criminally conspiring to try to overturn the 2020 presidential election in Georgia. It is one of four criminal cases facing Trump as he once again runs for president.

In his first round of testimony, Bradley repeatedly refused to answer questions about what he knew about Willis and Wade’s romantic relationship, including when it began. Bradley previously served as Wade’s divorce attorney and cited concerns that he might violate attorney-client privilege. McAfee met with Bradley and his attorney behind closed doors for nearly 90 minutes on Monday — over objections from Wade’s attorney — and decided that some of Bradley’s communications with Wade were not subject to privilege, leading to Bradley’s return to the witness stand Tuesday.

Bradley continued to be a reluctant witness. He testified Tuesday that he could only recall “one conversation” in which Wade told him that he and Willis were dating. Bradley said he could not remember the date of the conversation, including whether it was before or after Wade was appointed to the Trump case.

That reluctance to answer questions led Merchant to present text messages and an email showing she had been communicating with Bradley since September, when she began investigating allegations of an improper romantic relationship between Willis and Wade. She read off numerous claims Bradley made to her — including details of an alleged tryst at Willis’s private law office and information about trips that he claimed Willis and Wade had taken.

Bradley repeatedly said he did not recall the exchanges and dodged questions about the information. “I don’t recall that,” he testified.

Merchant also read an excerpt from an email and text exchange in which Bradley had asked her to include details about payments he had made as an outside attorney consulting for the district attorney’s office in her motion to disqualify Willis. Merchant suggested Bradley had asked her to include that detail to help him elude suspicion that he was her source — a claim Bradley denied, saying he was merely helping Merchant be “accurate” about the payments Wade and his law partners had received for this work with the district attorney’s office.

Bradley’s maneuvering Tuesday echoed his posture from his Feb. 16 testimony, when he initially claimed he did not recall conversations with Merchant, testifying that he had communicated with her through “a third party.” But he later acknowledged under oath that he had talked to Merchant via phone and later exchanged text messages with her as she sought to confirm Willis and Wade were a couple.

In one message presented in court, Merchant had asked Bradley if he knew of anyone who would give her “an affidavit … about the affair.”

Examining his own phone, Bradley confirmed that he responded, “No one would freely burn that bridge.”

Bradley also confirmed that he texted with Merchant about trips Willis and Wade took together and how Wade had used his corporate card to pay for them. Bradley confirmed Merchant had sent him a copy of the Jan. 8 motion she filed that first detailed allegations of an “improper, clandestine personal relationship” between Willis and Wade, as Merchant claimed he fact-checked her allegations about the prosecutors.

“Looks good,” Bradley texted Merchant in response to her filing — a message he confirmed under oath.

Pressed on that exchange Tuesday, Bradley said the “looks good” comment was not a statement about the accuracy of Merchant’s claims against Willis and Wade but rather of the details about money he had earned from the district attorney’s office. One by one, defense attorneys sought to discredit Bradley, with Merchant at one point accusing Bradley of looking at Wade, who sat at the prosecution table, and seeking cues on how he should answer — a claim Bradley strongly denied.

Richard Rice, an attorney for co-defendant Bob Cheeley, repeatedly pressed Bradley if he had been dishonest with Merchant.

“Mr. Bradley, you’re a lawyer. Did you lie to Ms. Merchant when you told her facts about Mr. Wade and Ms. Willis’s relationship?” Rice asked.

“Not that I recall,” Bradley replied. “I mentioned earlier that I speculated on some things.”

“Speculation is kind of a weaselly lawyer word,” Rice said. “Let’s speak truth here, and you’re under oath.”

The exchange quickly drew a prosecution objection, which McAfee granted.

At the previous hearing, McAfee abruptly ended Bradley’s questioning after a prosecutor claimed during cross-examination that Bradley and Wade ended their legal partnership after Bradley was accused of sexually assaulting an employee and a client. Prosecutors implied it raised questions about Bradley’s credibility as a witness and whether he had ill will toward Wade.

Bradley strongly denied he had sexually assaulted anyone but admitted that the employee’s claims led him to sever his partnership with Wade.

At a hearing scheduled for Friday, attorneys will make their closing arguments on whether Willis and her office should be disqualified from the case. McAfee has suggested that he does not plan to rule from the bench, and he has not provided a timeline for his decision.

Gardner reported from Washington. Amy B Wang in Washington and Yvonne Wingett Sanchez in Phoenix contributed to this report.

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Selasa, 27 Februari 2024

In Chicago, It's Summer in February - The New York Times

February is usually frigid perfection for the ice rink at Millennium Park in downtown Chicago, a favorite winter stop for tourists and local families that stands in the shadow of the reflective sculpture known as the Bean.

On Tuesday morning, the rink was melting.

Under an intense sun and 70-degree air temperatures, water slowly trickled out of the empty rink, flooding the surrounding concrete. Baby birds splashed happily in the pools of water. The ticket counter was abandoned, apparently closed for the day.

Winter in Chicago — or the lack of it — reached an unnerving peak on Tuesday, when the city came close to breaking a 48-year-old high-temperature record.

But forecasters said that the balmy spell was not going to last. They pointed out that the mild conditions in Chicago and around the Midwest this week were extreme, not just for the warmth but also for what would follow.

That was likely to include plunging temperatures dropping into the 20s, blustery northwest winds gusting up to 40 miles an hour and potentially dangerous storms, including tornadoes.

Still, for most of Tuesday, Chicago looked and felt like summer: Apartment windows were pushed open to catch the warm breeze. Restaurants set up tables and chairs on sidewalks for al fresco lunch service, a rare sight in a Chicago February.

The lakefront was teeming with runners, cyclists and couples strolling hand in hand.

“We expected it would be very cold,” said Ana Marchal, 41, a doctor from Cádiz, Spain, who arrived in Chicago on Monday for a vacation with her husband, Rolf Hartmann.

They had figured on spending their holiday indoors, by shopping, visiting museums or attending Blackhawks and Bulls games.

Instead, they found themselves walking on the beach, looking delighted and a little perplexed. They stopped to take a selfie by Lake Michigan, which is usually icy and forbidding this time of year.

“How beautiful,” Mr. Hartmann said. “It looks like the sea.”

“It’s colder in Spain than here,” Dr. Marchal said.

Others found the weather ominous.

Shailaja Chandrashekararao, a social worker who moved from India to Chicago last year, had just finished a 10-kilometer jog downtown. She said she would have liked to keep running.

“It was too hot,” Ms. Chandrashekararao said, tugging at the sleeve of her neon-orange workout top.

Climate change has made summers in India unbearably, dangerously brutal, she said, making Chicago something of a weather haven. But the city’s mild winter, on the heels of the warmest year on record in 2023, felt eerie and unpredictable.

“I’m not enjoying this,” she said. “It’s quite crazy, actually.”

Temperatures are also rising across the Midwest, in part because of human-caused climate change, according to the 2023 National Climate Assessment, the government’s premier compilation of scientific knowledge on the effect of human-caused warming. The report also noted that the warming posed significant economic risk to the region.

The June-like temperatures will be one factor in producing severe thunderstorms in the Chicago area Tuesday evening and overnight. Some of the storms could spawn tornadoes, forecasters said, with the most likely area stretching from Missouri across southern Illinois and northern Indiana to Michigan. Tornadoes that occur after dark can be more dangerous because so many people are asleep.

The main threat from the storm system, though, will be hail, possibly including hailstones as large or larger than hen’s eggs.

Unseasonably high temperatures across the Great Plains, along with high winds, were propelling wildfires in Nebraska and Kansas, which were still a threat on Tuesday after forcing evacuations this week. Wildfires were also raging across the Texas Panhandle.

And from Tuesday to Wednesday in Chicago, the temperature could drop by nearly 60 degrees, according to David King, a meteorologist for the National Weather Service.

“It’s remarkable,” he said, noting that the last time the city saw such a rapid temperature drop was in the 1990s. “It’s just a wild time for weather here in Chicago.”

A normal daytime high in Chicago at this time of year is about 40 degrees. According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, only 4.3 percent of the Great Lakes’ surface is ice-covered, well below the average.

The unseasonably warm and dry winter has affected tourism in the region, especially in Michigan, Wisconsin and Minnesota, where industries that depend on snow have suffered. Gov. Tony Evers of Wisconsin announced last week that many businesses in northern Wisconsin — ski slopes, restaurants and snowmobiling tours, for example — may be eligible for a federal disaster loan program if they have incurred losses from the mild winter.

The mild day on Tuesday was already feeling familiar, said Charles Jones, who manages maintenance work for a residential building in downtown Chicago.

Mr. Jones spent his break standing outside in short sleeves, as people walked their dogs in the sunshine. He has lived in Chicago his whole life, he said, and was used to the harsh winters that the city is known for. But it was hard to remember the last winter where the cold had felt truly brutal — “a few years ago, maybe,” he shrugged.

This winter has been a lot like the one before, Mr. Jones said, without very much snow or many cold, icy days. In the last few months, he said, he has only had to salt the sidewalk twice.

“I don't trust this weather, though,” he said. “You know we’re going to get a little snow before winter is done. It’s Chicago. It can be 70 and then jump down to 30.”

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Michigan primary live updates: What to expect as Democrats, Republicans head to polls - The Washington Post

Democrats and Republicans are competing in Tuesday’s presidential primaries in Michigan. On the Democratic side, President Biden is expected to prevail but is facing pushback from Arab and Muslim groups urging votes for “uncommitted” rather than Biden. On the Republican side, former president Donald Trump is expected to win over his last major remaining challenger, former U.N. ambassador Nikki Haley.

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Judge determines Fulton County prosecutor’s divorce attorney must return to witness stand in Trump case challenge - CNN

CNN  — 

A judge has determined that Nathan Wade’s former law partner and divorce attorney must return to the witness stand to testify about the relationship between Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and Wade, the top prosecutor on the election subversion case involving former President Donald Trump and others.

Attorney Terrence Bradley had previously attempted to shield what he knew from the court by claiming attorney-client privilege. An emergency hearing in the effort to disqualify Willis from the 2020 Georgia election subversion case could be held as early as Tuesday afternoon.

“Based on the in camera hearing with Bradley, the Court believes that the interested parties did not meet their burden of establishing that the communication(s) are covered by attorney-client privilege and therefore the hearing can resume as to Mr. Bradley’s examination,” an email from Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee obtained by CNN said.

McAfee noted there is “a very short window” to make the appearance happen, given “Bradley’s medical emergency brought to the Court’s attention.” The clients and their attorneys, the judge wrote, “may appear virtually via Zoom.” The judge asked that the attorneys confirm their availability with the court.

Live Updates
ATLANTA, GEORGIA - AUGUST 14: Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis arrives to speak at a news conference at the Fulton County Government building on August 14, 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia. A grand jury today handed up an indictment naming former President Donald Trump and his Republican allies over an alleged attempt to overturn the 2020 election results in the state. (Photo by Joe Raedle/Getty Images)

Fulton County prosecutor's divorce attorney testifies in Fani Willis case

Bradley had been billed as “star witness” for defense attorneys seeking to disqualify Willis’ office and get the case dismissed, but he declined to answer certain questions, citing privilege concerns, during the court hearings two weeks ago. Earlier Monday, McAfee met with Bradley behind closed doors to sort out the privilege issues.

Trump co-defendant Mike Roman’s attorney, who initially surfaced the allegations against Wade, wants to hear more from Bradley to refute the claim from Willis and Wade that their personal relationship began after she appointed him as special prosecutor in late 2021 to lead the case against Trump and his allies.

“Bradley has non-privileged, personal knowledge that the romantic relationship between Wade and Willis began prior to Willis being sworn as the district attorney for Fulton County, Georgia in January 2021,” according to a previous court filing from Ashleigh Merchant, Roman’s defense attorney.

“Thus, Bradley can confirm that Willis contracted with Wade after Wade and Willis began a romantic relationship, thus rebutting Wade’s claim in his affidavit that they did not start dating until 2022,” the filing said.

Roman first raised the allegations that Willis benefited financially when Wade took her on trips with money earned on the case. For instance, court filings have included receipts for a cruise taken by Willis and Wade in 2022, after he was hired as the special prosecutor.

A hearing in which attorneys will address cell phone records and other exhibits remains scheduled for Friday, according to the email.

CNN’s Katelyn Polantz contributed to this report.

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Teen Who Ate Spicy 'One Chip Challenge' Product Died of Cardiopulmonary Arrest - The New York Times

A 14-year-old whose family said he had eaten a chip made with two of the hottest peppers in the world died of cardiopulmonary arrest, accor...