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Judge recused in Young Thug, YSL trial, documents show

Attorneys for Young Thug had argued Judge Glanville should no longer oversee the case because of a June 10 proceeding known as an ex parte meeting.

ATLANTA — According to court documents on Monday, Judge Ural Glanville has officially been recused from the Young Thug, YSL trial.

Essentially, this means Glanville will be removed from the trial. Court documents obtained by 11Alive now list Judge Shukura L. Ingram as the judicial officer in the case. 

RELATED: Young Thug's attorney will no longer have to serve jail time, Georgia Supreme Court says

The decision by Judge Rachel Krause came after she denied another motion seeking her own recusal, from the recusal matter, because Judge Glanville had made a $2,000 donation to her recent reelection campaign. 

In her order, Judge Krause stated, "This Court has no doubt that Judge Glanville can and would continue presiding fairly over this matter if the recusal motions were denied, but the 'necessity of preserving the public's confidence in the judicial system' weighs in favor of excusing Judge Glanville from further handling of this case."

Attorneys for Young Thug had argued Judge Glanville should no longer oversee the case because of a June 10 proceeding known as an ex parte meeting that became the subject of deep contention in the trial.

The controversial private meeting, at which Judge Glanville, prosecutors and a witness were present without defense attorneys involved, led to Young Thug's attorney Brian Steel being held in contempt and sentenced to a 20-day jail sentence, which has been reversed after the state Supreme Court granted him bond. 

Steel had been held in contempt for refusing to reveal his source for how he heard about the ex parte meeting.

Judge Glanville later released the transcript of the meeting with the witness, Kenneth Copeland a.k.a. "Lil Woody."

Copeland was arrested on June 7 and held in contempt after refusing to testify on the stand as part of an immunity agreement. A few days later, in the judge's chambers, prosecutors shared an email sent to them by Copeland's attorney accusing them of making him a target by forcing him to testify. They also said his attorney was threatening to pull out of the case. 

Prosecutors later told Copeland that if he still refused to take the stand, he could be in jail until every defendant had their cases decided. He did eventually testify. 

Copeland had an attorney present for the meeting, but she was a stand-in for his usual lawyer, who was out of town. Steel insinuated that the court was committing "coercion" as no representation for his client was invited to the meeting. 

The extraordinary turn in the case has captivated legal observers.

Glanville previously denied three motions for his recusal or disqualification from the case.

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