Published on May 10th, 2019 📆 | 3816 Views ⚑
0Gwinnett judge at center of hacking saga gets 60-day recusal
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Gwinnett County Superior Court Judge Kathryn Schrader is barred for the next two months from handling any case prosecuted by the local district attorneyâs office.
The ruling, handed down Thursday by a visiting judge, is the latest development in a complicated saga involving hacking allegations, an infamous sex offender and an ongoing GBI investigation. It came in response to an unusual motion in which Gwinnett District Attorney Danny Porter â the subject of the hacking accusations made by Schrader â questioned the judgeâs ability to be impartial while presiding over her share of the thousands of criminal cases brought by his office.
Visiting Senior Judge John Goger, a longtime Fulton County judge, agreed that Schrader should step aside, for at least the next 60 days.
âI canât stress this enough, this is just an appearance issue,â said Goger, who was brought in after Gwinnettâs judges recused themselves from a case that has gripped the countyâs legal community. âThis is no finding of fact that the judge has done anything wrong.â
That part will emerge from an inquiry by the GBI, which is investigating Schrader and the men she reportedly hired to look into fears that her computer was being hacked. Those men, who Porter fears were given illegal access to Gwinnett Countyâs computer network, include Ed Kramer â the exiled co-founder of Atlanta sci-fi convention Dragon Con who is also a convicted child molester and a longtime nemesis of Porter.
Goger said the issue of Schraderâs recusal will be addressed again at the end of the 60-day period he imposed Thursday. He expressed hope that there would be more answers regarding the GBIâs investigation at that time.
The state agency has released little information on its probe, which started March 11.
Gwinnett Assistant District Attorney Sam dâEntremont, who represented Porterâs interests in Thursdayâs brief hearing, didnât seem especially optimistic about the time frame imposed.
âThe GBI said that there is a lot of computer forensic analysis that has to happen,â he said. âThatâs going to take some time.â
Porter, who has vehemently denied ever having tried to access Schraderâs computer, declined to comment following the hearing. Schrader, who was first elected to the Superior Court bench in 2012, did not attend.
The judgeâs attorney, BJ Bernstein, declined to speak to reporters.
Prior to Thursdayâs ruling, Schrader had informally stepped aside from handling cases prosecuted by Porterâs office and asked colleagues to fill her seat when necessary. Sheâll now have to step aside based Gogerâs order; Schrader can still hear civil cases, which rarely if ever involve the DAâs office, but Thursdayâs order bars her from carrying out a significant portion of the judicial responsibilities for which sheâs paid an annual salary of nearly $179,000.
It has remained unclear why Schrader believed Porter was trying to access her computer. But it was the arrest of one of the district attorneyâs most infamous enemies that started the saga thatâs now playing out in court.
Kramer, the Dragon Con co-founder first accused of inappropriately touching young boys in 2000, was arrested on Feb. 26 after allegedly taking a photo of a 7-year-old boy at a Lawrenceville doctorâs office. In addition to new charges, he was accused of violating the probation still in place following the long-delayed child molestation conviction that came down in 2013.
After Kramer was arrested, a search of his computers found a folder with Schraderâs name on it. According to court documents, subsequent investigation found that Schrader had hired private investigator T.J. Ward to look into her concerns that someone, possibly Porter, was trying to access her work computer.
Ward had another man install a monitoring device on Schraderâs county-issued computer â and then tasked Kramer, whom he has previously employed as a computer forensic analyst, with keeping track of the activity.
After learning that Kramer may have been given access to the countyâs computer network, Porter referred the matter to the GBI in early March. The District Attorneyâs Office is no longer directly involved in the investigation. Porter has asked the Prosecuting Attorneysâ Council of Georgia to assign a outside prosecutor to review the GBIâs investigation when itâs completed and determine if a criminal case is warranted.
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