The judge’s order landed like a hammer. Fulton County DA Fani Willis, already stripped from the Trump election case, has now been ordered to pay tens of thousands for breaking Georgia’s Open Records law. Behind closed doors, accusations of secrecy, favoritism, and political revenge have exploded into the open. As her case against Trump staggers, a new legal twist threat… Continues…
Fani Willis now faces a dual crisis: a crumbling high-profile prosecution and a court-sanctioned rebuke of her own conduct. Being ordered to pay over $54,000 in attorney fees is more than a financial penalty; it is a formal declaration that her office violated the very transparency laws meant to restrain government power. The judge’s finding of “open hostility” and “lack of good faith” toward defense attorney Ashleigh Merchant cuts directly against Willis’ public image as a crusader for accountability.
At the same time, her disqualification from the Trump election case over the “appearance of impropriety” tied to former special prosecutor Nathan Wade has left the prosecution adrift and politically radioactive. With the Georgia Senate preparing a path for Trump’s team to seek reimbursement if the case collapses, the narrative has flipped: the prosecutor who set out to put powerful people on trial is now fighting to defend her own integrity, her office’s judgment, and the future of a case that once dominated the nation’s attention.