Big Fani Part 2 is officially underway, folks. Just when everyone thought the saga wrapped up with last week’s total case collapse, a brand-new Georgia law has cracked the door wide open for President Trump to walk right back in with a sledge hammer, and start swinging away.
A judge in Georgia has dismissed a sprawling 2020 election interference case against Donald Trump, ending the last effort to prosecute the president for allegedly attempting to overturn his loss to Joe Biden.
Peter Skandalakis, who took over the case after the initial prosecutor’s removal, asked Judge Scott McAfee to dismiss the charges on Wednesday.
Trump’s lawyer Steve Sadow praised the decision to end the “political persecution” against the president.
The dismissal concludes the last of four criminal cases levelled against Trump since he first left the White House, only one of which saw trial and resulted in a conviction.
And according to Attorney Phil Holloway, that hammer is about to go mighty hard.
Holloway isn’t being overly dramatic here. He’s spelling out a consequence the fake news media conveniently forgot to mention. See, every former defendant in Fani’s circus indictment now has the right to go after her office for compensation. Translation: the people she tried to put in prison can now make her cut a nice big, fat Fani check.
Look:
I bet y’all thought the Fani Willis fiasco was over, didn’t you?
Well, it is not
Get ready for the epilogue
Under a GA law passed specifically for this case, all the former defendants now get to go after her to recoup costs and legal fees https://t.co/NY5Q1RBEv4
— Phil Holloway ✈️ (@PhilHollowayEsq) December 4, 2025
Now that President Trump has won his GA case, we will be moving for attorney’s fees and costs under GA Code §17-11-6. This Code section applies because the original Fulton County prosecutor Fani Willis was disqualified for improper conduct and the trial court subsequently… pic.twitter.com/GvukcBcgYw
— Steve Sadow (@stevesadow) November 27, 2025
With the case tossed and Trump’s team demanding full repayment, Fani Willis is now cornered as Georgia law forces her office to cover massive attorney fees. pic.twitter.com/s1c3zAzrLN
— Robert Gouveia Esq. (@RobGouveiaEsq) December 2, 2025
