‘What you’re doing is in bad faith’: Judge’s frustration palpable as Donald Johnson’s trial moves closer to reality

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Donald Johnson’s securities fraud trial is going forward Nov. 13 — period.

That was Porter Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Clymer’s oft-repeated phrase during a Friday hearing on a slew of motions filed by Johnson, for a bench trial, for Clymer to reconsider another interlocutory appeal with the state appellate court, for funding to assist with his defense In a case that’s dragged on in court for almost a decade, Clymer’s answers came as an easy no, even as Johnson faces the difficult task, since his attorneys quit several weeks ago, of now representing himself.

“Has the state ever heard of any of these people?” And so the hearing, which stretched for an hour and a half and at times sounded like an introduction to trial law class, went, with prosecutors frustrated by what they hadn’t been provided by Johnson. When Johnson claimed the same, they said all of their discovery and other material had been provided to his previous attorneys — six in total, as Clymer noted — and offered to him.

 

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