A federal judge disciplined after investigators found she had sex with a police officer in her chambers has stepped aside from a Georgia election records case after the Justice Department questioned whether she could appear impartial.

Judge's Sex Scandal Haunts Georgia Election Records Fight
XOOMAR Intelligence
Analyst Take
Eleanor Ross, a US district judge, filed an order recusing herself Tuesday from the federal dispute, citing “out of an abundance of caution for the potential perception of bias,” according to Guardian World. The move does not decide the records fight. It removes Ross from overseeing it.
Judge Eleanor Ross exits Georgia election records case after DOJ challenge
The Justice Department had sued Georgia secretary of state Brad Raffensperger seeking an unredacted statewide voter list. Ross had been presiding over that case before the department moved to have her removed.
DOJ’s challenge centered on Ross’s reported attendance at an event connected to Fani Willis, the Fulton county district attorney who prosecuted Donald Trump between his two presidencies. Willis obtained an indictment in August 2023 against Trump and 18 others, accusing them of participating in a wide-ranging scheme to overturn Georgia’s 2020 election results. That case was ultimately dismissed in November.
Ross’s order framed the issue as perception, not a concession that she had acted with bias in the Georgia election records case.
“Both the Trump administration’s present and Willis’s past efforts have become heavily polarized,” Ross wrote.
She added that she “cannot discount” that an objective observer could view her attendance at an event sponsored by Willis’s campaign as support for Willis’s position, even if Ross says she attended only to see former colleagues.
That distinction matters. Recusal here is a procedural move meant to protect confidence in the case, not a finding on whether the Justice Department should get the unredacted voter list.
Ross previously worked in the Fulton county district attorney’s office and overlapped there with Willis before Willis became district attorney. The recusal order shows how that past connection, paired with the campaign event issue, became too politically charged to leave unresolved.
Separate from this Georgia docket, XOOMAR has tracked other Trump-related pressure points, including Scrapped US-Iran Talks Trap Trump Between Iran, Israel and Trump Meloni G7 Photo Claim Erupts Into Alliance Fight. Those are separate stories, but they underscore how quickly disputes involving Trump can pull legal and political institutions into the same frame.
Chambers sex findings and false statements put Ross’s conduct under sharper scrutiny
The recusal did not come in a vacuum. Ross had received a “private reprimand” after a court investigation found that she had sex in the courthouse with a high-ranking uniformed police officer within earshot of staff.
The investigation also found that Ross attended a partisan event and initially lied when confronted with the allegations. That disciplinary backdrop turned the Justice Department’s recusal request into more than a narrow fight over one event.
The report said Ross went to an event hosted by a district attorney’s campaign. Ross said the district attorney had been a friend since 1999 and acknowledged attending a private mixer on the sidelines of the event to visit with former colleagues in the district attorney’s office.
The ethics issue is not only the sex allegation. It is the combination: conduct inside the courthouse, attendance at a partisan event, and false statements when challenged.
Analysis: That combination gave DOJ a cleaner argument about public confidence than a simple political-association claim would have. A judge can have a prior career and old colleagues. But when a judge has already been disciplined for conduct tied to truthfulness and political boundaries, even an appearance issue becomes harder for the court to brush aside.
Ross’s own language shows that the recusal turned on how an outside observer might read the facts. She did not need to find actual bias to decide that continued involvement could damage the case.
Key facts now shaping the dispute:
- Case at issue: DOJ’s lawsuit against Raffensperger seeking an unredacted statewide voter list.
- Judge removed: Ross recused herself after DOJ sought her removal.
- Political link: DOJ cited Ross’s reported attendance at an event for Willis.
- Disciplinary backdrop: Ross received a “private reprimand” after findings involving sex in the courthouse, a partisan event, and initial false denials.
- Merits unchanged: The recusal does not resolve whether DOJ gets the records it wants.
Georgia election records fight now moves forward without Ross
The Justice Department got the immediate procedural outcome it sought: Ross is no longer presiding over the Georgia election records case. That does not mean DOJ has won access to the unredacted voter list.
The records dispute remains live. The next judge will inherit a case already carrying unusual political weight because it involves Georgia election data, Raffensperger, DOJ, Willis’s orbit, and Trump’s 2020 election fight.
No source material provided identifies a merits ruling from Ross on the voter list demand tied to this recusal. The practical effect is narrower but still important: one major source of potential challenge to the court’s neutrality has been removed before the case advances further.
For Raffensperger, the recusal does not settle the government’s request. For DOJ, it clears a judge-specific objection that could have shadowed every major ruling if Ross stayed on the case.
Analysis: The court’s next steps will matter less for the scandal and more for the docket. Watch for the replacement judge, any revised schedule, and whether either side reframes pending motions now that Ross is off the case.
The unresolved tension is simple: the recusal may quiet the ethics fight, but it doesn’t answer the core question in the Georgia election records case, whether the federal government can obtain the unredacted statewide voter list it sued to get.
Impact Analysis
- The recusal shifts oversight of a federal case seeking Georgia’s unredacted statewide voter list.
- The move highlights how perceived judicial bias can affect politically sensitive election-related litigation.
- The underlying dispute remains unresolved, with the Justice Department still pursuing access to the voter records.
Sources
- [1] Guardian World
- [2] Judge who had sex in courthouse and attended political event agrees to exit Georgia election case
- [3] Judge Who Had Sex in Courthouse and Attended Political Event Agrees to Exit Georgia Election Case
- [4] Federal judge ensnared in sex scandal recuses herself from Georgia elections case
Written by
XOOMAR Insights Team
Research and Editorial Desk
The XOOMAR Insights Team pairs automated research with human editorial judgment. We track hundreds of sources across technology, fintech, trading, SaaS, and cybersecurity, cross-check the facts, and explain what happened, why it matters, and what to watch next. We do not just rewrite headlines. Every article is fact-checked and scored for reliability before it goes live, and we link back to the original sources so you can verify anything yourself.
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