Fulton County DA Seeks March 4 Trial in Trump Case

The district attorney’s office is requesting arraignments to take place the week of Sept. 5, followed by 10 days for discovery and materials sent by Sept. 29.
Fulton County DA Seeks March 4 Trial in Trump Case
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis speaks during a news conference at the Fulton County Government building in Atlanta on Aug. 14, 2023. Joe Raedle/Getty Images
Catherine Yang
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Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis is requesting a March 4, 2024, trial date for former President Donald Trump and his 18 co-defendants in the Georgia general elections case, a proposal that would put the Republican presidential candidate on trial a day before he competes in the “Super Tuesday” primary contests.

Ms. Willis says she plans to try all 19 defendants together.

“In light of Defendant Donald John Trump’s other criminal and civil matters pending in the courts of our sister sovereigns, the State of Georgia proposes certain deadlines that do not conflict with these other courts’ already-scheduled hearings and trial dates,” the Aug. 16 filing, which was first reported by CNN, reads.

By March 4, the traditionally early states, including Iowa and New Hampshire, will already have held their primaries. Super Tuesday, which is set for March 5, is the busiest day of the presidential primary calendar; a handful of primaries will be held across the country, from California and Texas to Massachusetts and Maine.

Georgia’s March 12 primary date was set by Georgia’s Republican secretary of state, Brad Raffensperger, who said in May that Democrats had pushed for an earlier date. President Trump is also facing a Jan. 2, 2024, trial in Washington, another March trial date in New York, and a May trial in Florida.

“The proposed dates are requested so as to allow the Defendants’ needs to review discovery and prepare for trial but also to protect the State of Georgia’s and the public’s interest in a prompt in a prompt resolution.” A judge will set the final date.

Lawyers for President Trump didn’t respond by press time to a request by The Epoch Times for comment.

The district attorney’s office is requesting arraignments to take place the week of Sept. 5, followed by 10 days for discovery and materials sent by Sept. 29. It proposes that all motions and notices be filed by Oct. 31, and that hearings for these begin on Dec. 11.

The proposed final pretrial conference date is Feb. 20, 2024, with a trial start date of March 4.

On Aug. 14, a grand jury handed up a 98-page indictment with a total of 41 counts for the 19 defendants. All were charged with acts of racketeering, and President Trump was charged with 13 counts, the most of any of the defendants.

19 Defendants Named

Besides President Trump, the defendants are his former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows; his former attorneys Rudy Giuliani and Jenna Ellis; attorneys Sidney Powell, John Eastman, Kenneth Chesebro, Ray Smith III, and Robert Cheeley; former Justice Department attorney Jeffrey Clark; GOP strategist Michael Roman; Georgia alternate electors Shawn Still, Cathleen Latham, and former head of the Georgia Republican Party David Shafer; Illinois pastor Stephen Lee; Harrison Floyd, vice president for the Black Conservative Federation, who is also involved in Black Voices for Trump; Trevian Kutti, former publicist for Kanye West; Scott Hall, a Georgia bail bondsman and Fulton County Republican poll watcher; and Misty Hampton, also known as Misty Emily Hayes, former Coffee County elections supervisor.

Arrest warrants have been issued and defendants have until noon on Aug. 25 to voluntarily surrender, Ms. Willis said at a press conference.

Mr. Meadows asked on Aug. 15 for his case to be removed to federal court, and Mr. Giuliani has said he will do the same. Others are expected to do the same, as they were acting in their official capacities as staff and counsel for the president regarding federal matters.

Mr. Giuliani said in an Aug. 15 radio appearance that the district attorney’s projected six-month timeline to try 19 defendants together is laughable, as racketeering cases he tried with more than 20 defendants took more than two years.

Legal experts have pointed out that the case is novel and unlikely to hold.
Attorney Curt Levey of the Committee for Justice said the indictment “certainly does not seem strong” and that he is “struggling to understand” what exactly the underlying crime was.
Harvard law professor Alan Dershowitz said that this and other indictments against President Trump are designed to get quick convictions that will fall apart on appeal.
Correction: An earlier version of this article misstated the Florida trial schedule. The Epoch Times regrets the error.