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The Georgia Supreme Court has rejected a lower court’s ruling that Georgia’s restrictive “heartbeat” abortion law was invalid, leaving limited access to abortions unchanged for now.
Fulton County Superior Court Judge Robert McBurney said last November that Georgia’s ban, which prohibits abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected, usually at about six weeks, was “unequivocally unconstitutional” because it was enacted in 2019, when Roe v. Wade allowed abortions well beyond six weeks.
The Georgia Supreme Court in a 6-1 decision said McBurney was wrong.
“When the United States Supreme Court overrules its own precedent interpreting the United States Constitution, we are then obligated to apply the Court’s new interpretation of the Constitution’s meaning on matters of federal constitutional law,” Justice Verda Colvin wrote for the majority.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Georgia said the opinion disregards “long-standing precedent that a law violating either the state or federal Constitution at the time of its enactment is void from the start under the Georgia Constitution.”
The ACLU represented doctors and advocacy groups that had asked McBurney to throw out the law.
The ruling does not change abortion access in Georgia, but it won’t be the last word on the ban.
The state Supreme Court had previously allowed enforcement of the ban to resume while it considered an appeal of the lower court decision. The lower court judge has also not ruled on the merits of other arguments in a lawsuit challenging the ban, including that it violates Georgia residents’ rights to privacy.
In its ruling on Tuesday, the state Supreme Court sent the case back to McBurney to consider those arguments.
McBurney had said the law was void from the start, and therefore, the measure did not become law when it was enacted and could not become law even after the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year.
State officials challenging that decision noted the Supreme Court’s finding that Roe v. Wade was an incorrect interpretation of the U.S. Constitution. Because the Constitution remained the same, Georgia’s ban was valid when it was enacted, they argued.
Georgia’s law bans most abortions once a “detectable human heartbeat” is present. Cardiac activity can be detected by ultrasound in cells within an embryo that will eventually become the heart as early as six weeks into a pregnancy. That means most abortions in Georgia are effectively banned at a point before many women know they are pregnant.
In a statement Tuesday evening, White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said the Georgia Supreme Court “upheld a devastating abortion ban that has stripped away the reproductive freedom of millions of women in Georgia and threatened physicians with jail time for providing care.”
“Republican elected officials are doubling down and calling for a national abortion ban that would criminalize reproductive health care in every state,” Jean-Pierre said.
The law includes exceptions for rape and incest, as long as a police report is filed, and allows for later abortions when the mother’s life is at risk or a serious medical condition renders a fetus unviable.
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Former campaign lawyer Jenna Ellis Tuesday pleaded guilty and flipped on former President Donald Trump in the Georgia election conspiracy case.
In a major blow to Trump, Ellis tearfully admitted her role in the alleged sprawling effort to steal the 2020 election.
“If I knew then what I knew now I would have declined to represent Donald Trump,” Ellis said in an emotional mea culpa.
Ellis suggested that she was led astray by more senior lawyers on Team Trump. Among them was Rudy Giuliani, one of Trump’s co-defendants.
“I failed to do my due diligence,” she said.
This booking photo provided by the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office shows Jenna Ellis on Wednesday, Aug. 23, 2023, in Atlanta, after she surrendered and was booked. (Fulton County Sheriff’s Office via AP)
Ellis joins two other onetime Trump lawyers, Sidney Powell and Kenneth Chesebro, in pleading guilty and agreeing to testify against Trump and his co-defendants.
The Ellis plea deal means four out of Trump’s 18 co-defendants in the racketeering conspiracy case have pleaded guilty, a grim sign for Trump and his acolytes.

Ellis pleaded guilty to making false statements in Georgia during the Trump campaign’s effort to overturn his narrow loss to President Biden in the battleground Peach State.
The bogus claims of widespread voter fraud amounted to a key prong of Trump’s alleged sweeping plot to stay in power after losing the election.
Significantly, Ellis was accused of participating alongside Giuliani in amplifying the false claims, some of which they spewed at a legislative hearing in December 2020.
That would potentially make her cooperation a particularly dire sign for the ex-New York City mayor. Giuliani, who has already been found liable of defaming two Atlanta election workers, worked with Ellis and Powell in what they boasted was an “elite legal strike force” to overturn Biden’s win in court.
The legal effort failed dismally as scores of courts rejected Trump’s election appeals. The former president allegedly incited a violent crowd of his extremist supporters to physically prevent Congress from certifying Biden’s win on Jan. 6.
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Dave Goldiner
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Attorney Neal Katyal explained on Saturday that the “most significant” fact about Donald Trump‘s ex-attorneys Kenneth Chesebro and Sidney Powell, who recently both pleaded guilty in the Georgia election interference case, is that they were both handed no jail deals.
Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis‘ investigation into the former president’s alleged attempts to overturn the results of the 2020 presidential election in Georgia continued on Friday with Chesebro, one of the 19 defendants named in the case, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit filing false documents. This comes after Powell, who frequently repeated unfounded claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen via widespread voter fraud, pleaded guilty to reduced charges on Thursday. Trump, meanwhile, maintains his innocence in the case.
While appearing on MSNBC‘s The Saturday Show with Jonathan Capehart, the legal analyst shared his reaction to Trump’s former lawyers pleading guilty, while adding what he thought was the most significant fact about their respective deals.
“To me, what’s most significant about both of these deals is that they are no jail deals. So one, Sidney Powell pleads guilty to some misdemeanors and Chesebro to a felony, but neither of them are serving jail. The only reason you would ever agree to that as a prosecutor is if they are providing evidence against higher ups,” Katyal, the former acting solicitor general of the United States during the Obama administration, said.
Katyal continued to explain that with these no jail deals, Trump is on the receiving end of “incredibly bad news” as these were his handpicked lawyers who have now seemingly been flipped and will testify against him.
“This is incredibly bad news for Donald Trump and not news, Jonathan, that he can spin…these are his handpicked MAGA [Make America Great Again], Kraken, whackjob lawyers,” he added.
Both Powell and Chesebro will also have to testify truthfully against their co-defendants—including Trump—as part of the plea deal. In addition, not only does Chesebro have to testify, he will also be required to provide documents and evidence—including text messages and emails—to state prosecutors to be used in their case.
Katyal is not the only legal expert who weighed in on what these plea deals could mean for Trump as former federal prosecutor Gene Rossi previously told Newsweek that the plea deal marks “another bad day” for the former president.
“Whenever two attorneys that are part of your legal team have pleaded guilty to criminal charges, that is never a good day. The two attorneys who have pleaded guilty could be very powerful witnesses against Donald Trump, Rudy Giuliani and the others charged,” he said in a Friday phone interview.
Newsweek has reached out to Trump’s campaign for comment via email.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
Newsweek is committed to challenging conventional wisdom and finding connections in the search for common ground.
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Former Trump attorney Kenneth Chesebro has reached a plea deal with Georgia prosecutors and will testify against Trump.
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported:
Attorney Kenneth Chesebro – one of the authors of a plan to use Republican presidential electors to overturn Democrat Joe Biden’s victory in Georgia – pleaded guilty to one felony count of conspiracy to commit filing false documents. He was originally charged with seven felony counts in the case.
Chesebro will serve five years of probation, pay $5,000 in restitution to the state and serve 100 hours of community service. He also must write an apology letter to the citizens of Georgia and testify truthfully as the case proceeds.
This is Trump’s worst nightmare come to life. Two of his lawyers who worked closely with him on the coup plot have now taken plea deals and agreed to testify against him. Sidney Powell and Kenneth Chesebro’s decisions to take deals immediately put pressure on the next person up on the coup plot food chain which would be Rudy Giuliani.
Given the amount of legal and financial trouble that Giuliani is facing, he should take a plea deal and testify against Trump, but the odds are that he won’t.
The information provided by Powell and Chesebro should be damning for Trump. They knew about the plot to overturn the Georgia election results and helped to strategize it.
For his adult life, Donald Trump has gotten away with potentially breaking the law because the people around him stayed silent. That wall of silence has been torn down. Powell and Chesebro don’t want to go to jail, so they are going to be talking to prosecutors, and that is the worst news possible for the failed former one-term president.
Jason is the managing editor. He is also a White House Press Pool and a Congressional correspondent for PoliticusUSA. Jason has a Bachelor’s Degree in Political Science. His graduate work focused on public policy, with a specialization in social reform movements.
Awards and Professional Memberships
Member of the Society of Professional Journalists and The American Political Science Association
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Jason Easley
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Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis once again shot down House Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) on Wednesday, calling his ongoing attempts to wade into the prosecution of former President Donald Trump “ignorant,” “troubling” and an abuse of power.
“A charitable explanation of your correspondence is that you are ignorant of the United States and Georgia Constitutions and codes,” Willis wrote in a letter to the lawmaker. “A more troubling explanation is that you are abusing your authority as Chairman of the Committee on the Judiciary to attempt to obstruct and interfere with a Georgia criminal prosecution.”
“We have already written a letter — which I have attached again for your reference — explaining why the legal positions you advance are meritless,” she continued. “Nothing you’ve said in your latest letter changes that fact.”
Willis and Jordan have exchanged barbs for months after the district attorney indicted Trump and 18 others as part of a vast racketeering investigation, alleging that the former president and his allies engaged in a sweeping conspiracy to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia.
Jordan, who chairs the powerful Judiciary Committee and remains a devout Trump supporter, demanded Willis turn over a range of documents in the case, to which she responded by accusing the lawmaker of attempting to “intrude” and “interfere” with an active criminal probe.
“Your letter makes clear that you lack a basic understanding of the law, its practice and the ethical obligations of attorneys generally and prosecutors specifically,” she wrote last month.
Yet Jordan again asked for documents again a few weeks later, saying the House panel was concerned Willis’ “prosecutorial conduct is geared more toward advancing a political cause and your own notoriety than toward promoting the fair and just administration of the law.”
The district attorney wasn’t having it.
“While you may enjoy immunity under the United States Constitution’s Speech or Debate Clause, that does not make your behavior any less offensive to the rule of law,” she wrote Wednesday, pointing to a list of other efforts Jordan could pursue that would better serve the public. “I would encourage you to focus your attention on those issues, which would make life better for the American people.”
Read Willis’ full letter below.
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CNN
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The use of force against a protester killed at the future site of the Atlanta public safety center was reasonable, and no charges will be filed against the officers involved, a special prosecutor assigned to investigate the case said Friday.
Manual Paez Teran, who was camping in the woods in protest at the site dubbed “Cop City,” was shot and killed by state troopers conducting a clearing operation on January 18. The environmental activist was part of a group who believed the planned public safety facility would cause irreversible damage to forest land.
The case was investigated by special prosecutor George R. Christian, the district attorney pro tempore of the Mountain Circuit District Attorney’s Office.
Teran “refused to comply with the lawful commands of the Troopers” before the shooting took place, the special prosecutor said in a written statement Friday. Troopers “used a ‘less lethal’ device known as a pepperball launcher” to try to get Teran to leave a tent, Christian wrote.
Teran responded by shooting four times using a “9 mm pistol through the tent striking and seriously injuring a Georgia State Trooper,” Christian said. “Six Troopers returned fire resulting in the death of Teran.”
“The use of lethal (deadly) force by the Georgia State Patrol was objectively reasonable under the circumstances of the case,” the special prosecutor said. “No criminal charges will be brought against the Georgia State Patrol Troopers involved in the shooting of Manual Paez Teran.”
Teran family attorney Jeff Flipovits told CNN “the DA is not the final arbiter.”
“It’s disturbing that they won’t release the underlying material for the investigation. It’s an abuse of the open records act as far as I’m concerned,” the attorney said.
Flipovits said the family would be releasing a longer statement later Friday.
CNN has reached out to the Atlanta Police Department for comment.
The Georgia State Patrol declined to comment, referring questions to the district attorney’s office.
The planned 85-acre, $90 million training center has been the subject of debate for years.
Though the site is just outside Atlanta city limits, the plot of land is owned by the city, meaning residents around the site don’t have voting power for the leaders who approved it.
The Atlanta Police Foundation, which is helping to fund the project, has said it’s needed to help boost recruitment and morale among police and firefighters who have been using substandard or borrowed facilities.
Protesters have decried its potential environmental impact and possible role in the further militarization of police. Some demonstrators camped out at the site for months, clashing with police.
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Republican poll watcher Scott Hall is shown in a police booking mugshot released by the Fulton County Sheriff’s Office, after a grand jury brought back indictments against former U.S. President Donald Trump and 18 of his allies in their attempt to overturn the state’s 2020 election results in Atlanta, Georgia, August 22, 2023.
Fulton County Sheriff’s Office | via Reuters
Scott Hall, one of the 18 co-defendants of former President Donald Trump in his Georgia election interference case, pleaded guilty Friday in Atlanta to five misdemeanor conspiracy charges.
Hall is the first person charged with Trump to plead guilty in the case, which alleges a widespread racketeering conspiracy to overturn Trump’s 2020 electoral loss to President Joe Biden.
At a hearing in Fulton County Superior Court, Hall confirmed to Judge Scott McAfee that his plea deal requires him to testify in future proceedings in the case, including trials of his co-defendants, including Trump.
The 59-year-old bail bondsman will serve five years of probation, pay a $5,000 fine, and perform 200 hours of community service as part of that deal.
McAfee also ordered Hall to write a letter of apology to the state of Georgia for his crimes and to have no involvement in the administration of elections.
Hall was accused in the indictment issued last month of willfully tampering with electronic voting machines in Coffee County, Georgia, and of working with several other co-defendants, including the pro-Trump lawyer Sidney Powell, in that effort.
He originally was charged with seven criminal counts.
But that was reduced Friday to the five misdemeanor counts of conspiracy to commit intentional interference with the performance of an election that he pleaded guilty to.
A spokesman for Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who is prosecuting the Trump defendants, did not immediately respond to a request for comment about Hall’s plea.
The guilty pleas came as a federal court judge in Georgia denied efforts by several co-defendants in the case, Jeffrey Clark, Cathy Latham, David Shafer and Shawn Still to remove their cases from Fulton County court to federal court.
Trump’s attorneys previously indicated they planned to seek to have his trial moved to federal court.
But in a surprise court filing Thursday, Trump’s lawyers told Judge McAfee that they would not do so.
“This decision is based on his well-founded confidence that this honorable court intends to fully and completely protect his constitutional right to a fair trial, and guarantee him due process of law throughout the prosecution of his case,” Trump’s lawyer Steven Sadow told McAfee in that filing.
Trump’s decision not to see a federal trial in the case could reflect the recent lack of success his White House chief of staff, Mark Meadows, had in requesting a transfer of his trial there in the same case.
Meadows is appealing a federal district judge’s denial of his transfer bid.
Powell and another co-defendant, Kenneth Chesebro, are set to begin their trial on Oct. 23. Both of those defendants, who are attorneys, had requested speedy trials for their cases.
Judge Scott McAfee on Friday denied a motion by Chesebro to dismiss the charges against him.
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Authorities in North Carolina have made a breakthrough in a decades-old cold case involving a woman found by road crews on a highway near Jacksonville in 1990. After 33 years, the woman’s remains were identified recently using updated DNA technologies and forensic genealogy tests, the Orange County Sheriff’s Office, which is handling the case, wrote on Facebook.
The remains were identified as Lisa Coburn Kesler, who was 20 at the time of her death and previously spent most of her life in Jackson County, Georgia, Orange County Sheriff Charles Blackwood announced.
“Our vision statement talks about the ability to be able to visit and travel through our community safely,” said Blackwood in a video message shared on Wednesday morning. “It took a long time to be able to solve this case. But the work, the diligence and not giving up, shows that we’re staying true to our mission.”
Kesler’s body was originally discovered along the side of I-40 East near New Hope Church Road, about 50 miles west of Jacksonville in southeastern North Carolina. Officials have said they believe that someone strangled her about one week before the discovery in 1990, and dumped her body on the roadside.
The woman’s identity was unknown for years, despite investigators’ efforts to learn more about her through potential witness interviews, missing persons reports and facial reconstruction techniques that allowed them to create a bust of the victim and model of her skull. They generated digital illustrations and approximate images of her that were then sent out online, hoping someone would recognize her, and pursued “hundreds of leads” overall, the sheriff said.
Orange County Sheriff’s Office via Facebook
But the identity remained a mystery until a new investigator, Dylan Hendricks, took over the case in 2020 and collaborated with the State Bureau of Investigation in North Carolina. They collected a hair fragment from the remains and sent it to a forensics laboratory for DNA profiling. A forensic genealogist, Leslie Kaufman, who specializes in homicide cases involving unidentified human remains, used databases to link the resulting DNA profile to people whom she believed to be the victim’s paternal cousins.
Subsequent interviews with those family members by investigators, plus additional tests cross-referencing the victim’s DNA and a DNA sample taken from a maternal relative, eventually led them to confirm Kesler’s identity.
“Essentially, there was a Lisa-shaped hole on a branch of the family tree right where the DNA told us Lisa should be, and no one knew where she was,” Hendricks said in a statement. Clyde Gibbs, a medical examiner specialist with the office of the chief medical examiner, has since updated the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System to reflect the new development in Kesler’s case. The chief medical examiner will also amend Kesler’s death certificate to include her name and other details about her, according to the Orange County sheriff.
“Throughout the decades, some of our finest investigators kept plugging away. When you can’t close a case, it gets under your skin. You might set the file aside for a while, but you keep coming back to it, looking to see something you didn’t notice before, or hoping information gathered in ensuing cases has relevance to your cold case,” Blackwood said in a separate statement.
The sheriff also detailed his office’s work on Kesler’s case, and what work still needs to be done to find her killer, in an editorial for The News of Orange County newspaper.
“I am very happy we solved the decades-old mystery of this young woman’s identity, and I hope it provides solace to her remaining family members,” Blackwood wrote, adding, “Our work on this case is not finished.”
“Although we collectively demonstrated the value of dogged determination, we still need to identify Lisa’s killer,” the sheriff continued. “There is no statute of limitations on murder, and the investigation remains open.”
Anyone with information potentially related to the case has been asked to report what they know to Hendricks by calling 919-245-2951. Tips can also be submitted anonymously on the Orange County Sheriff’s Office website.
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Flathead catfish are invading another Georgia river, state officials warn, a predator that would threaten native fish including the prized redbreast sunfish.
The Georgia Department of Natural Resources said that systematic sampling in August found more than a dozen flathead catfish in a stretch of the Ogeechee River just upstream from Interstate 95.
Wildlife officials are urging anglers to catch as many flathead as they can and report them to the state Wildlife Resources Division, but not to release them back into the Ogeechee.
/ AP
“They are going to be one of the apex predators around every system once they establish those populations,” Wildlife Resources biologist Joel Fleming told The Telegraph of Macon. “If they can fit it in their mouth, they’re going to eat it.”
A commercial fisherman had caught one flathead in the river in December 2021, but none of the fish had been found since then, despite extensive sampling.
“Staff have monitored the river and hoped it was a lone occurrence,” the Georgia Department of Natural Resources said. “Unfortunately, in August 2023, flathead catfish were captured during sampling efforts. Since then, over a dozen have been removed from the Ogeechee.”
The flathead catfish is native to many rivers that drain to the Gulf of Mexico, including the Coosa River drainage in northwest Georgia. But the fish has become established in multiple Georgia rivers that drain to the Atlantic Ocean, including the Satilla, Altamaha, and Savannah rivers.
“Flatheads can pose a significant ecological risk when introduced into new waterbodies, primarily through predation on native species,” the Georgia Department of Natural Resources says.
Georgia officials have waged a long-running war against the flathead in the Satilla River, which drains parts of southeast Georgia before discharging into the Atlantic north of Brunswick, removing 64,000 flathead catfish from the river between 2007 and 2016. Wildlife biologists believe predatory flatheads, which can grow to more than 100 pounds, have suppressed populations of native fish in the Satilla basin.
In 1998, a man in Kansas caught a record-breaking 121-pound flathead catfish. And just three months ago, a man caught a 66-pound flathead in Pennsylvania, breaking the state record.
Fleming said that about 20 flatheads had been pulled from the Ogeechee as of Monday. The average size of the flatheads pulled was about 17 inches at the end of August, Fleming said, but one flathead removed by a two-person crew Monday was longer than 38 inches.
Fleming said biologists believe the flatheads caught in the Ogeechee may have “wandered in” from the Savannah River through coastal waterways when the rivers were high.
About six or seven people are using electrical current to stun fish on the Ogeechee and count different catfish species. Sampling crews can’t tell for sure how far upstream flathead catfish have spread because they’re removing the fish and killing them, instead of tagging them and releasing them.
Tim Barrett, coastal region fisheries supervisor for the Department of Natural Resources, said crews can only hope to hold down the population of flathead catfish in the Ogeechee.
“It’s just physically impossible to take them all out,” Barrett said.
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A 20-year-old Georgia woman was fatally shot inside a Walmart on Wednesday by her ex-boyfriend, who then shot himself, police said.
Zoey Nicole Messenger was taken to the hospital in critical condition along with James Wyatt Nicholas Norton, 26, after the shooting at the Walmart where he worked, the Hiram Police Department said in a statement. They both died of their gunshot wounds.
According to police, Norton approached Messenger for a brief conversation that “did not appear to be angry or animated” before pulling out a handgun to shoot her. It’s not clear if he was working at the time of the shooting.
Police said that they responded to a report of shots being fired at the store at about 7:22 p.m. and that when officers arrived, people were running out of the building.
Devani Lopez, who was inside the store at the time, told Atlanta station WAGA-TV that he ran to the exit as soon as he heard the second gunshot.
“I ran straight for the car,” Lopez said. “I could see everyone running for their lives. Everyone was just so panicked and scared.”
According Messenger’s social media pages, she had been in a relationship with Norton since 2022. In a Facebook post last week, though, she announced she’d entered a new relationship.
On Facebook, friends and family shared their shock over the shooting as they remembered Messenger as fun and loving.
In a statement to HuffPost, a spokesperson for Walmart confirmed that Norton was an associate and added that the company is doing everything it can to support employees, including on-site counseling services.
“We’re thankful for the local first responders and will continue to work with law enforcement during their investigation.”
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L. Lin Wood, a disgraced pro-Trump lawyer who spread lies about the 2020 election, has flipped and will appear as a witness for the prosecution in the Georgia racketeering case against former President Donald Trump.
Wood is named as a cooperating witness in unrelated filing by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis.
The court papers do not reveal any details about Wood’s involvement in the case or what he might testify about.
Jose Luis Magana/AP
Former President Donald Trump
Some legal pundits believed Wood had flipped on Trump when he was not charged in the Georgia case and did not appear to be an unindicted co-conspirator.
The special grand jury that heard evidence in the case recommended Wood be charged alongside Trump and the others but he was not indicted, a move that hinted he could be cooperating.
Wood was once a celebrated Georgia lawyer who helped exonerate accused Atlanta Olympics bomber Richard Jewell and the parents of slain child beauty queen JonBenet Ramsey.
But he dove deep into the weeds of Trump’s 2020 election lies.
Wood filed an ill-fated federal lawsuit claiming the presidential election was rigged in Georgia and also joined several pro-Trump suits in other states that were all tossed out by judges for lack of evidence among other issues.
He briefly mounted a bid to lead South Carolina’s Republican Party but dropped out of the race.
The Georgia state bar association opened an investigation into Wood over his actions, which were considered potentially improper. He tried to block the probe, which included efforts to obtain a mental health exam over his erratic behavior.
Wood eventually retired from legal practice in exchange for the disciplinary charges being dropped.
He proclaimed himself “the second most-persecuted person in America,” adding that Trump tops the list.
Wood has offered no public hint that he had turned on Trump.
The reference to Wood came in court papers filed by Willis that asked Judge Scott McAfee to determine whether lawyers for several of Trump’s co-defendants face potential conflicts of interest.
Willis notes that some of the defense lawyers have ties or have previously represented potential witnesses in the case, including Georgia Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger.
The judge could order hearings into the claims or could order the lawyers removed from the case.
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A Georgia couple who said their baby boy was decapitated during his birth have filed a lawsuit against the independent pathologist who performed the baby’s autopsy, accusing him of posting the procedure on Instagram without their permission.
Jessica Ross and her boyfriend, Treveon Isaiah Taylor, had already filed a lawsuit in August against the OB-GYN who conducted their baby’s delivery. They accused the OB-GYN of failing to follow emergency protocols when the baby’s shoulder became stuck and of applying excessive force that severed their son’s head and killed him.
The lawsuit also accuses the hospital and staff of attempting to cover up what happened. (The hospital denied the allegations of wrongdoing in a previous statement to HuffPost, and the OB-GYN has not responded to repeated requests for comment.)
The Clayton County Police Department has confirmed on social media that it has opened an investigation into the hospital’s alleged failure to report on the nature of the newborn’s death.
In the more recent lawsuit, filed on Sept. 1, attorneys for Ross and Taylor accused Dr. Jackson Gates, the pathologist the couple hired to conduct an autopsy after their child’s death, of taking advantage of the tragedy by posting videos of the procedure to his 11,000 followers on Instagram without their permission. The complaint accuses Gates of invasion of privacy and fraud.
“After suffering one of the most heartbreaking losses any family could ever endure, Jessica Ross and Treveon Isaiah Taylor, Jr. had salt poured into their unfathomable emotional wounds when they discovered that video of their baby’s very graphic medical examination had been made public by the very doctor they entrusted to conduct the autopsy,” attorneys representing the couple said in a joint statement.
Gates, who regularly posts videos of his work for educational and public health purposes, didn’t respond to HuffPost’s request for comment. In a statement on Instagram, he said he would never share the identity of any of his patients. The videos have been taken down, and HuffPost could not immediately verify what Gates had shared.
Jessica Ross via Family Handout and Dr. Jackson Gates via Instagram
Ross and Taylor had been eagerly looking forward to the birth of their baby boy, whom they were going to name after his father.
On July 9, Ross was admitted to the emergency room of Southern Regional Medical Center in Riverdale, Georgia, after her water broke. The doctor she’d been seeing throughout her pregnancy, Dr. Tracey St. Julian of Premier Woman OB-GYN, delivered the baby on July 10.
But according to the lawsuit, the baby became stuck in Ross’ vaginal canal, forcing her to push for three hours. It wasn’t until after the baby’s head was severed that Ross received a C-section, when the rest of the baby’s body was delivered, the lawsuit states.
Ross and Taylor’s suit alleges that they only found out their baby had been decapitated after the funeral home informed them on July 13, because the doctor, hospital and staff had hidden the cause of death from them.
The couple then decided to have an independent autopsy conducted and paid Gates $2,500.
According to the lawsuit, Gates recorded videos of the baby’s autopsy without their knowledge and then posted them on his public Instagram account on July 14 without permission.
“This video showed in graphic and grisly detail a postmortem examination of the
decapitated, severed head of Baby Isaiah,” the lawsuit states.
After that video was removed, the lawsuit alleges, Gates posted two more videos of the baby’s autopsy on July 21 that graphically depicted the baby’s head, body, brain and organs.
The couple felt “shock, anger, humiliation and outrage” after learning about the videos and sent Gates a cease and desist letter on Aug. 10 demanding he take them down, the lawsuit says.
“This is one of the most egregious and outrageous cases of ‘clout chasing’ we have ever encountered,” the couple’s attorneys said. “Dr. Jackson Gates attempted to exploit our clients’ horrific loss to boost his own social media profile, without permission of the family.”
The federal patient privacy law, HIPPA, prohibits medical practitioners from releasing certain identifying information about patients, including names and full-face photographic images. Social media guidelines for pathologists encourage using common sense when they post photos or videos of their work and suggest altering any case details that could inadvertently identify someone.
“None of these alterations are legally required, but, from an ethics perspective, they could help allay anxiety about potential privacy violations while preserving educational value,” a 2016 article in the American Medical Association Journal of Ethics said.
The article notes that pathologists have not routinely sought patient consent when they share educational images in textbooks, lectures and case reports.
“This is a widely accepted long-standing practice in pathology, and, provided that privacy is protected, the authors find no major ethical problems with this practice,” the article said.
In Gates’ posts, he often shows internal organs as he advocates for people to learn the warning signs of disease, get regular cancer screenings or seek a second medical opinion if they have concerns. He’s also spoken out about the health disparities experienced by Black patients, including infant mortality rates.
In one video since the lawsuit was filed, Gates said he prides himself on keeping his practice transparent in order to educate and counsel patients.
“I will never divulge the identity or disclose the identity of any live patient or even deceased patients that come to my care,” Gates said.
In the statement posted on Instagram, he added that the case is now in the hands of law enforcement and various attorneys, as well as the Georgia Composite Medical Board, which he said asked for his photos and videos of the autopsy.
He added he had not expected to find the baby’s head severed when he arrived for the autopsy and described his immediate response.
“I cried and I prayed and then I cried and I prayed because I had NEVER SEEN ANYTHING LIKE THIS — so I completed the autopsy!” he wrote.
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