Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis announces charges related to Donald Trump and his allies on Monday, August 14, 2023 inside the Fulton County Government Center in Atlanta. Itoro N. Umontuen/The Atlanta Voice

ATLANTA (AP) โ€” A Georgia judge who is deciding whether to toss Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis off of the stateโ€™sย election interference caseย against former Presidentย Donald Trumpย has set a hearing for Thursday that is expected to focus on details of Willisโ€™ย personal relationshipย with a special prosecutor she hired.

As soon as allegations of an inappropriate romantic relationship between Willis andย attorney Nathan Wadeย surfaced last month, speculation about the future of the case began to swirl. Even if the prosecution isnโ€™t derailed, the upheaval has certainly created an unwanted distraction for Willis and her team and could undermine public confidence in the case.

The defense attorney who first exposed the relationship says it creates a conflict of interest and is asking the judge to dismiss the indictment and to prohibit Willis, Wade and their offices from further involvement in the case. In a response filed earlier this month, Willis acknowledged a โ€œpersonal relationshipโ€ but said it has no bearing on the serious criminal charges sheโ€™s pursuing and asked the judge to dismiss the motions seeking her disqualification without a hearing.

The law says โ€œdisqualification can occur if evidence is produced demonstrating an actual conflict or the appearance of one,โ€ Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said during a hearing Monday. Because he believes โ€œitโ€™s possible that the facts alleged by the defendant could result in a disqualification, I think an evidentiary hearing must occur to establish the record on those core allegations.โ€

The highly anticipated hearing, like all courtroom proceedings in the case, will be streamed live on the judgeโ€™s YouTube channel, as well as by news outlets. McAfee has said it could continue into Friday.

As he makes another run for the White House andย faces three other criminal prosecutions, the former president has exploited the revelation of the relationship, repeatedly referring to Wade as Willisโ€™ย โ€œloverโ€ or โ€œboyfriendโ€ย to try to cast doubt on Willisโ€™ motivations and the legitimacy of the case. Other Republicans have piled on, using the claims to justifyย calls for investigationsย into or sanctions against Willis, an elected Democrat whoโ€™s up for reelection this year.

The original motion was filed by former Trump campaign staffer and onetime White House aide Michael Roman, butย Trump and several other co-defendantsย have joined with motions of their own.

Romanโ€™s motion says Willis and Wade were romantically involved when she hired him in November 2021 to manage an investigation into whether Trump and others committed any crimes as they tried to overturn his 2020 election loss in Georgia. That investigation led to the indictment in August of Trump and 18 others who are accused of participating in a sprawling illegal scheme to keep Trump in office.

Four of the people charged have already pleaded guilty after reaching deals with prosecutors. Trump and the remaining 14 have all pleaded not guilty.

Willis has paid Wade more than $650,000 for his work and then, Roman alleges, profited personally when Wade used that money to take her on expensive vacations, including cruises in the Bahamas and trips to Aruba, Belize and Napa Valley. His filing also questions Wadeโ€™s qualifications for the job, saying thereโ€™s no evidence he had ever prosecuted a felony or handled a racketeering case.

Just under a week after Romanโ€™s motion was filed, Willis used a speech at a historic Black church in Atlanta toย forcefully defend Wadeโ€™s qualificationsย and her own decision to hire him. She didnโ€™t address the allegations of a relationship in that speech, waiting nearly three more weeks to acknowledge a โ€œpersonal relationshipโ€ in a court filing.

Attached to that filing was a sworn statement from Wade saying that the pair began a personal relationship in 2022, after he was hired as a special prosecutor. His statement also said travel expenses for him and Willis were โ€œroughly divided equally between usโ€ and that Willis โ€œreceived no funds or personal financial gainโ€ from his position as a special prosecutor.

McAfee said Thursdayโ€™s hearing needs to explore โ€œwhether a relationship existed, whether that relationship was romantic or non-romantic in nature, when it formed and whether it continues.โ€ Those questions are only relevant, he said, โ€œin combination with the question of the existence and extent of any personal benefit conveyed as a result of the relationship.โ€

Romanโ€™s attorney, Ashleigh Merchant,ย has subpoenaed Willis, Wade, seven other employees of the district attorneyโ€™s office and others, including Wadeโ€™s former business partner, Terrence Bradley. Merchant told McAfee on Monday that Bradley would testify that Willis and Wadeโ€™s romantic relationship began before Wade was hired as special counsel and that they had stayed together in homes where the county was paying for Willis to stay.

Willis sought to quash those subpoenas. She argued Romanโ€™s attempts to subpoena people in her office โ€œsuggests an eye toward public narrative as opposed to legal remedyโ€ and that anything Bradley knows is protected by attorney-client privilege as he once served as Wadeโ€™s divorce attorney. McAfee declined on Monday to quash those subpoenas, but agreed to revisit that after Bradley testifies.

Aware of the personal nature of some of the details that could arise in Thursdayโ€™s hearing, the judge said that if thereโ€™s anything that amounts to โ€œharassment or undue embarrassment,โ€ he is โ€œnot going to feel inhibited from stepping in, even without an objection from counsel, to move this along and keep it focused on the issues at hand.โ€

McAfee also made clear that he does not believe arguments over Wadeโ€™s qualifications are relevant, saying that as long as an attorney โ€œhas a heartbeat and a bar card,โ€ it is within the district attorneyโ€™s discretion to hire him.