Jozsef Papp,

Jozsef Papp is a crime and public safety reporter for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, having joined the paper in May 2022. He graduated from Georgia Southern University in 2018 and previously worked as a criminal justice reporter with The Augusta Chronicle. Born and raised in Ecuador, Jozsef is fluent in English and Spanish. He covers crime and public safety for The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, focusing primarily on topics related to these subjects.

79%

The Daily's Verdict

This author has a mixed reputation for journalistic standards. It is advisable to fact-check, scrutinize for bias, and check for conflicts of interest before relying on the author's reporting.

Bias

85%

Examples:

  • Accusations of improper meetings between the judge and prosecutors with a key witness.
  • Allegations that the judge tried to send the lawyer who caught him in recusal attempts to jail.

Conflicts of Interest

100%

Examples:

  • Attorneys accused the judge of coercing the reluctant Copeland into testifying by threatening him with indefinite jail time if he refused.

Contradictions

98%

Examples:

  • The motions allege that Judge Ural Glanville and prosecutors held an improper meeting with a key witness, Kenneth Copeland.
  • The trial was halted pending a ruling on the judge's recusal.

Deceptions

45%

Examples:

  • Some of the deceptions include: Grubman's claim that Glanville should be recused from the case, a mistrial should be granted, and defendants who aren't already serving prison sentences should be released from jail until District Attorney Fani Willis decides whether to retry them.
  • The article's title may be misleading to readers who are not familiar with the details of the case.

Recent Articles

Judge's Secret Meeting with Prosecutors and Witness Puts Young Thug's Trial on Indefinite Hold

Judge's Secret Meeting with Prosecutors and Witness Puts Young Thug's Trial on Indefinite Hold

Broke On: Monday, 01 July 2024 Judge Ural Glanville's impartiality in Young Thug's gang and racketeering trial was questioned on July 1, 2024, after an out-of-court meeting with prosecutors and a key witness without defendants or their lawyers. The defense argued the meeting pressured the witness to testify, leading to an indefinite delay in the proceedings. Young Thug, charged with conspiring to violate Georgia's anti-racketeering law, faces allegations of violent crimes and gang affiliation.