Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis (left) and District Attorney Nathan Wade in Atlanta, Georgia in August 2023 (Photo: Reuters).
After nearly three years of pursuing the election overturning case against Donald Trump and his allies, Attorney General Willis may have to give up everything after rumors that she had feelings for Nathan Wade, who was hired by Willis as an assistant prosecutor in the case since 2021.
The news came to light in early January, when Michael Roman, a co-defendant with Trump in the Fulton County case, filed a motion to disqualify Willis and Wade because of their intimate relationship.
According to the lawsuit, Mr. Wade used some of the $650,000 he was paid while working for Ms. Willis to “pay” for her vacations. Bank records show that Mr. Wade paid for tickets for himself and Ms. Willis to California in 2023 and Miami in 2022.
Neither has confirmed or denied the relationship. Willis said she will respond to the request on February 2, and said all special prosecutors she hires are paid equally.
The possibility of Ms. Willis being removed from office risks causing significant delays in the prosecution of Mr. Trump because it is unclear how long it would take to appoint a replacement.
“It could completely derail this whole process,” Anthony Michael Kreis, a law professor at Georgia State University, told the Guardian .
Mr. Nathan Wade during a hearing at Fulton County Court in Atlanta, Georgia in October 2023 (Photo: Getty).
Trusted person
Before being hired to work on Mr. Trump’s case, Mr. Wade was a prominent city judge and lawyer with little prosecutorial experience. After meeting in 2019, Mr. Wade became a confidant and adviser to Ms. Willis, according to the Guardian .
Ms. Willis told the New York Times in 2022 that she only invited Mr. Wade to join the case after being turned down by more experienced lawyers.
Ms. Willis told the New York Times that Mr. Wade was hesitant because she did not have much prosecutorial experience. Ultimately, she convinced him to join the team.
“I needed someone I could trust,” Willis told the New York Times .
Regardless of what happens legally, Mr. Trump will use the alleged affair to attack Ms. Willis’s credibility. Although his attorney has not yet joined Mr. Roman’s petition, Mr. Trump has spoken out.
"When will the great state of Georgia dismiss the phony case against me and others? Election interference! This case is a fraud, just like Attorney General Fani Willis and her 'mistress,'" Trump wrote on the Truth Social platform on January 20.
Mr. Trump at a Republican fundraising event in Columbia, South Carolina in August 2023 (Photo: Reuters).
The defendant's stalling tactic
In fact, Willis had been cleared of prosecution once before after hosting a political fundraiser for an opponent of Burt Jones, who was a fake Trump elector in 2020 and was under investigation at the time. The judge cleared Willis of the Jones indictment.
Like other experts, Stephen Gillers, a legal ethics expert at New York University, said that Roman's request did not list any acts that could cause the court to dismiss the entire indictment to overturn the election against Trump.
"The indictment will not be dismissed for this conduct," Mr. Gillers said.
He also agreed that Willis's conduct would not likely disqualify her, and that Wade's high hourly wage was not a reason to disqualify him.
"Every lawyer who charges an hourly rate charges that. Hourly billing is pretty common across the country," he said.
However, Mr. Gillers said that Mr. Wade should proactively leave the prosecution team to avoid causing a distraction.
Clark Cunningham, a law professor and professional ethics expert, said that regardless of what the judge decides, some parties will likely appeal to "buy time."
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