Fulton County District Legal professional Fani Willis on Thursday rebuffed the most recent request from Home Judiciary Chairman Jim Jordan searching for info associated to her Georgia election interference investigation into President-elect Donald Trump, in keeping with a letter obtained by ABC Information.
Willis, who indicted Trump and 18 others in 2023, referred to the investigation as “ongoing” and rejected claims that the investigation was political.
“This case was not introduced for political causes,” Willis wrote within the letter to the Republican congressman. “It additionally is not going to be dismissed for political causes.”
Trump, in a submitting final week, requested an appeals courtroom to have the case dismissed as a result of sitting presidents are immune from prison prosecution.
The Georgia racketeering case has been stalled for months on enchantment over a disqualification effort towards Willis — however the letter is the most recent back-and-forth between Willis and Jordan, who earlier this 12 months threatened to carry Willis in contempt if she did not adjust to a request in a separate congressional probe.
Willis’ letter on Thursday was in response to a letter from Jordan final week during which he demanded she flip over paperwork by Dec. 9.
Jordan, in his request, stated the Home Judiciary Committee “continues to conduct oversight of politically motivated prosecutions,” and was searching for any paperwork and communications between the Fulton County DA’s workplace and the Justice Division, the workplace of particular counsel Jack Smith, and Home choose committee that investigated the Jan. 6 assault on the Capitol.
Trump and 18 others pleaded not responsible final 12 months to all expenses in a sweeping racketeering indictment for alleged efforts to overturn the outcomes of the 2020 presidential election within the state of Georgia. 4 defendants subsequently took plea offers in alternate for agreeing to testify towards different defendants.
The DA’s workplace has declined to touch upon the way forward for the case following Trump’s reelection as president.