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Kaelan Deese, Supreme Court Reporter


NextImg:Judge denies Trump co-defendants' bids to delay arrest and move to federal court

A federal judge in Atlanta denied two separate requests by former officials in the Trump administration seeking to remove their criminal case in Georgia state court to federal court.

Former Trump administration officials, Mark Meadows and Jeffrey Clark, had both asked U.S. District Judge Steve Jones to block District Attorney Fani Willis from arresting them by a Friday at noon deadline for the 19 defendants in the sweeping racketeering case to turn themselves in. Both former officials say their case should be handled in federal courts because they were working under the Executive Branch at the time of their alleged crimes.

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President Donald Trump talks to White House Chief of Staff Mark Meadows, right, as they walk from the Oval Office at the White House, Saturday, Sept. 12, 2020, in Washington. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)

In two separate orders, Jones sided with Willis, holding that Clark's request to remove his case to federal court was "premature" and similarly denying Meadows' request. Both defendants will have to surrender to authorities by noon on Friday or risk Willis filing an arrest warrant.

Willis argued there is no basis for both defendants' request to delay their arrest and their bid to remove their case from state court, telling Meadows, Trump's former chief of staff, that his former boss "voluntarily agreed to surrender himself to state authorities, while other defendants have already surrendered," according to a 13-page response to Meadows' effort.

“Federal courts have repeatedly denied requests to interfere in state criminal prosecutions,” Willis’s team wrote. “Generally, only in cases of proven harassment or prosecutions taken in bad faith without hope of obtaining a valid conviction is federal intervention against pending state prosecutions appropriate.”

FILE - Jeffrey Clark, then-Assistant Attorney General for the Environment and Natural Resources Division, speaks during a news conference at the Justice Department in Washington, on Sept. 14, 2020. Federal agents have searched the Virginia home of the Trump-era Justice Department official who championed efforts by President Donald Trump to overturn the results of the 2020 election. (AP Photo/Susan Walsh, Pool, File)

Willis also told former Justice Department official Clark in a separate filing that he "seeks to avoid the inconvenience and unpleasantness of being arrested...but provides this Court with no legal basis to justify those ends."

The response to Meadows and Clark marks the most Willis has said since indicting the former president and 18 others last week on charges that they schemed to subvert the 2020 election in the Peach State.

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Willis would like the trial to begin on March 4, she told Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee last week. Also on Wednesday, defendant Kenneth Chesebro, a close associate in Trump's alleged bit to subvert the election, made a "speedy trial" to start the trial even earlier than Willis' springtime preference. McAfee has not yet responded to this motion.

Nearly all 19 defendants have been heard from by Wednesday afternoon, while a handful including Harrison Floyd and Trevian Kutti, two defendants alleged of pressuring local election officials to alter the results of the 2020 election, have yet to sign a bond order.