Marilyn Mosby's defense team asks to withdraw from case
BALTIMORE — All six defense attorneys for former City State's Attorney Marylin Mosby have asked to withdraw from her perjury and mortgage fraud case, and for a public defender to take over for them, according to a motion filed in the District Court of Maryland.
The motion — filed on behalf of her six private lawyers — came after a series of rulings earlier this week created significant hurdles for them, including the possibility of criminal contempt charges against her lead attorney, A. Scott Bolden.
Four of the lawyers, who work at Bolden's law firm, said they could no longer represent Mosby because of a conflict, while the remaining two said they don't have the time and resources to take over the defense alone.
In order for their request to be approved, the court will have to find that there is a conflict of interest, Baltimore attorney Jeremy Elderidge told WJZ's Kelsey Kushner.
"Something troubling—reading the tea leaves—is going on behind closed doors," Elderidge said.
Mosby recently left office after serving two high-profile terms as Baltimore state's attorney. She was defeated in a Democratic primary last year after federal prosecutors accused her of lying about experiencing pandemic-related financial hardship in order to make early withdrawals from her retirement account. She used the money to buy two Florida vacation properties.
Mosby faces two counts each of perjury and mortgage fraud. Her trial is scheduled to begin on March 27 in Baltimore.
During a pretrial hearing Tuesday, U.S. District Court Judge Lydia Kay Griggsby said Bolden has violated several court rules in recent months. The missteps — which included using profanity on the courthouse steps, disclosing confidential juror responses and filing a motion without a Maryland law license — could warrant criminal contempt sanctions, Griggsby said. She gave Bolden a Jan. 31 deadline to argue why he shouldn't be sanctioned.
In their motion to withdraw, the attorneys said they recently discussed the matter with the Office of the Federal Public Defender for Maryland, which could represent Mosby moving forward.
"There might be an argument that there's a fractured relationship or irreparable harm in that relationship that creates attorney-client conflict but it's hard to imagine because they seem to run parallel the entire time," Eldridge said.
He speculated that Bolden's behavior is driving the motion.
"Sometimes a coincidence is too coincidental to be a coincidence, and here, when you have the judge chastising A Scott Bolden so publicly, and then you see the attorneys try to withdraw from the case, those two things have to be connected," Eldridge said.
In 2020, Mosby submitted requests for one-time withdrawals of $40,000 and $50,000, respectively, from Baltimore's deferred compensation plans, according to her indictment. Prosecutors allege Mosby falsely certified that she experienced financial hardship because of the coronavirus, but she actually received her nearly $250,000 salary in 2020.
Her attorneys have argued that COVID-19 had an impact on both financial markets and Mosby's personal travel and consulting businesses. They've accused prosecutors of having racial or political motives for pursuing the case, though Griggsby previously rejected their assertion of vindictive prosecution.
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Kelsey Kushner contributed to this story.