sports
Jan 22, 2026

President Donald Trump Trump Finally Gets SWEET Revenge On Georgia DA Fani Willis - Court Hands Down BIG Ruling

ATLANTA, GA — Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has been dealt another humiliating legal blow. On Friday, a judge ordered her office to pay over $54,000 in attorney fees for violating Georgia’s Open Records Act, ruling that her team was "openly hostile" toward defense attorneys seeking the truth.

   

The ruling is the latest disaster for Willis, whose prosecution of President Donald Trump has been plagued by scandal, disqualifications, and accusations of misconduct.

"LACK OF GOOD FAITH"

     

The court order stems from a lawsuit filed by Ashleigh Merchant, the defense attorney for Trump co-defendant Michael Roman. Merchant had requested records related to Willis' relationship with former special prosecutor Nathan Wade and the allocation of public funds.

In a scathing decision, the judge found that the DA’s office had "completely stonewalled" the defense.

     

"The DA’s office had been ‘openly hostile’ to Merchant’s requests for documents," the judge wrote, noting that the requests were "handled differently than other requests." The order concluded that this behavior indicated a "lack of good faith" from the District Attorney's office.

Willis now has 30 days to provide all the requested records and pay $54,264 to Merchant, a sum covering nearly 80 hours of legal work required to force the DA to comply with the law.

   

 

A CRUMBLING CASE

This fine is just the latest setback in a case that appears to be falling apart. In December, the Georgia Court of Appeals disqualified Willis from prosecuting Trump and 18 other co-defendants due to the "appearance of impropriety" stemming from her romantic relationship with Wade.

While Willis has appealed that decision to the Georgia Supreme Court, her authority over the case is currently nonexistent.

     

"Proud that we have judges willing to hold people in power accountable when they ignore the law!!!" Merchant posted on X following the ruling.

TRUMP COULD GET PAID

As Willis faces fines, Trump and his co-defendants could soon see a payday of their own. The Georgia Senate recently passed a bill unanimously that would allow counties to cover legal expenses for defendants in cases where a District Attorney is disqualified for misconduct.

     

If the case against Trump is ultimately dismissed—a scenario looking more likely by the day—Fulton County taxpayers could be on the hook for millions in legal fees, all thanks to the conduct of Fani Willis.

Obama Judge Says 3 Trump Prosecutors Are in Unlawful Roles

An Obama-appointed federal judge ruled that a three-person leadership team of the New Jersey federal prosecutor’s office was unlawful and said President Donald Trump’s insistence on handpicking U.S. attorneys showed that the White House cared more about personal control than public safety.

Matthew W. Brann, the judge, was making a decision regarding the legality of the three prosecutors who have been in charge of the New Jersey office since December. The New York Times reported that he also discussed the widespread practice of the Justice Department dismissing judicially appointed prosecutors immediately upon their appointment.

The judge outrageously claimed that the Trump administration cared more about who ran the U.S. attorney’s office in New Jersey than whether it was running at all, using italics to highlight the elevated tone of his decision.

Judge Brann stated that “scores of dangerous criminals could have their cases dismissed or convictions eventually reversed” as a result of the president’s ongoing reliance on illegal procedures to appoint top federal prosecutors.

He expressed his frustration by saying that judges would have to dismiss pending cases if there were any more attempts “to unlawfully” control the office’s leadership. To give the government time to file an appeal, Judge Brann said he would postpone his own ruling.

Usually nominated by the president and confirmed by the U.S. Senate, U.S. attorneys oversee prosecutors’ offices in more than 90 districts. However, senators in their states have blocked several of Trump’s preferred nominees, such as Alina Habba, his choice to head the New Jersey office. Consequently, the law has compelled judges to select their own candidates to fill vacancies.

The Justice Department has dismissed judges who appointed U.S. attorneys during Mr. Trump’s second term. Todd Blanche, the deputy attorney general, posted on social media following the appointment of an interim U.S. attorney in upstate New York: “Judges don’t pick U.S. Attorneys, @POTUS does.” Refer to our Constitution’s Article II.

Judge Brann, a federal judge who typically sits in Pennsylvania but was designated to handle the matter in New Jersey, referred to that statement and others like it as “combative (and legally incomplete).”

He said that such assertions clearly indicated that “the Department of Justice would not permit anyone to hold any United States attorney’s office if that person was not handpicked by the president.”

Habba, a former personal lawyer to Trump who now works at the Justice Department in Washington, responded on social media to Judge Brann on Monday, calling his ruling “ridiculous.”

“Judges may continue to try and stop President Trump from carrying out what the American people voted for, but we will not be deterred,” she wrote. “The unconstitutionality of this complete overreach into the Executive Branch, time and time again, will not succeed.”

Judge Brann came to the conclusion in August that Habba had broken the law by continuing to hold office. Three prosecutors, Philip Lamparello, Jordan Fox, and Ari Fontecchio, took Habba’s place after he left the office in December after an appeals court ruled in his favor.

They have been sharing the duties of the U.S. attorney ever since.

However, Judge Brann declared the arrangement to be unworkable from a legal standpoint.

On Monday, he wrote that the Trump administration had again overstepped its authority, as it claimed to have discovered “enormous grants of executive power hidden in the vagaries and silences of the code.”

“Why does the fate of thousands of criminal prosecutions in this district potentially rest on the legitimacy of an unprecedented and byzantine leadership structure?” he asked. “The government tells us: The president doesn’t like that he cannot simply appoint whomever he wants.”

After two defendants accused of crimes in the District of New Jersey contested Habba’s jurisdiction and attempted to have the charges against them dropped, Judge Brann was given the case over the summer.

More challenges were filed following Habba’s resignation and Attorney General Pam Bondi’s appointment of the three prosecutors to jointly head the Newark office, which resulted in Monday’s ruling.

Democrats DEFY Hakeem Jeffries

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The standoff paralyzing the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) just took a dramatic turn on the House floor. In a highly polarized 221–207 vote, the House of Representatives successfully passed a bill to fund DHS through the end of the fiscal year.

While the vote fell largely along party lines, four moderate Democrats openly defied Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries and crossed the aisle to side with the Republican majority.

THE FOUR DEFECTORS

The Democrats who broke ranks to support restoring full funding for border security, cybersecurity operations, and emergency preparedness programs were:

  • Rep. Henry Cuellar (Texas)

  • Rep. Don Davis (North Carolina)

  • Rep. Jared Golden (Maine)

  • Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez (Washington)

Despite the House victory, the legislative triumph was short-lived. Over in the upper chamber, Senate Democrats successfully blocked a similar measure in a 51-45 procedural vote, falling well short of the 60 votes required to overcome a filibuster. Senator John Fetterman (D-PA) was the only Senate Democrat to join Republicans in attempting to end the shutdown.

THE HUMAN COST OF THE STANDOFF

DHS has been partially shut down since its temporary funding expired on February 14. While agencies like the TSA, FEMA, and the Coast Guard are considered essential—meaning their personnel are forced to work without pay—other crucial divisions, such as the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA), have already begun furloughing employees.

House Appropriations Chairman Tom Cole (R-Okla.) took to the floor to deliver a blistering rebuke of the Democrats' strategy, accusing them of using federal workers as political pawns to punish the Trump administration.

“They are punishing the TSA agents who are working hard to keep their community safe, they’re punishing FEMA employees who are trying to help Americans fighting through these winter storms, they are punishing the cybersecurity analysts at CISA who are combating constant threats to our infrastructure,” Cole argued. “Shutting down the Department of Homeland Security over a partisan fight hasn’t changed the stakes.”

THE DEMOCRATIC RESISTANCE

The core of the dispute revolves around fierce Democratic opposition to the Trump administration's immigration enforcement policies.

Rep. Rosa DeLauro (D-Conn.), the top Democratic appropriator, dismissed the GOP's funding bill as pure "political theater." She made it abundantly clear that her caucus will continue to hold the DHS budget hostage until Republicans agree to massive operational reforms regarding U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).

“I will not vote for another dime for these agencies until we get the reforms that the American people want and stopping these agencies for terrorizing these communities,” DeLauro declared.

Speaker of the House Mike Johnson (R-La.) was utterly disgusted by the Democrats' refusal to fund national security, issuing a harsh warning to the American public.

May you like

“Anybody who votes to block funding for the homeland, it is shameful,” Johnson told reporters. “It speaks to a long record of Democrats’ deliberate efforts to undermine America’s safety and the essential operations of DHS.”

With neither side willing to blink, the men and women tasked with defending America's borders, waters, and skies remain caught in the crossfire of Washington's most brutal political fight.

Other posts