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Judge denies Young Thug attorney's move to disqualify prosecutor

Attorney Brian Steel had argued the lead prosecutor had "injected" herself with her questioning as an "unsworn witness."

ATLANTA — The judge overseeing the YSL trial involving rapper Young Thug denied a move Thursday by his attorney to have the lead prosecutor disqualified.

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RELATED: Attorney for Young Thug files motion to disqualify Fulton County prosecutor

Young Thug's attorney, Brian Steel, had filed the motion to disqualify this week alleging that Love "has become a witness in this case" because she has "voluntarily and continuously injected herself as an unsworn witness in this case" in the way she phrased questions with a witness.

"Mr. Williams asserts that he is entitled to cross-examination of the prosecutor," Steel said in court Friday. "If not, I am moving for a mistrial because I cannot cross-examine an unsworn witness."

The witness was on the stand last week testifying about a break-in incident at her apartment in 2013 that prosecutors allege Young Thug was tied to.

More on the Young Thug, YSL trial

Back on May 9, 2022, the hip-hop world was jolted with the news that rapper Young Thug - a Grammy winner, trendsetter and Atlanta icon - had been arrested.

It's been nearly two years now that the artist, whose legal name is Jeffery Williams, has remained behind bars. The central charge against him is that three letters with which his name has become synonymous because of his artistic success in launching the "Young Stoner Life" label, YSL, actually signalize a violent gang: Young Slime Life.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis named Williams, among other metro Atlanta rappers and those with ties to the alleged gang, to bring charges against a total of 28 people in a sweeping 88-page indictment. The case alleges that not only is Young Thug among the gang's members, but he is also its kingpin.

"He is the one they're all afraid of," a prosecutor said at a June 2022 hearing. "He's the one that's King Slime."

A long pretrial process passed to an even longer jury selection process, and across this time, the co-defendant list dwindled with plea deals and other circumstances, keeping some of the individuals charged from remaining on the case. 

The trial finally began in earnest in November 2023, already considered the longest in Georgia's history.

Now that it is in full swing, 11Alive is keeping track of key developments in the case and highlighting moments in the courtroom. Follow along in the timeline below.

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