Fulton County district attorney is leading a sprawling case against the former president and his allies

The Georgia prosecutor leading a sprawling election interference case against Donald Trump has testified in court about allegations of misconduct levelled against her by the former president and his co-defendants – questions that could potentially disqualify them from the case.

Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis began her testimony in an Atlanta courtroom on Thursday after defence attorneys questioned lead prosecutor Nathan Wade about the timeline of their relationship and the expenses they shared.

The attorneys had already admitted to their relationship but firmly rejected the “meritless” and “salacious” allegations as “bad-faith” attempts to see her kicked off a case that Mr Trump has baselessly labelled a conspiracy against him, according to court filings.

Thursday’s hearing is scrutinising allegations that the former couple financially benefited from Ms Willis hiring Mr Wade to prosecute the former president’s case, which charges Mr Trump and more than a dozen co-defendants as part of a “criminal enterprise” to overturn the state’s election results in 2020.

“I’ve been very anxious to have this conversation with you today,” Ms Willis told defence attorney Ashleigh Merchant. “It’s ridiculous that you lied on Monday and yet here we are. … I’m actually surprised that the hearing continued. But since it did, here I am.”

  • Flying Squid
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    629 months ago

    This case really makes no sense. She had a consensual affair with someone who would be on the same side of the case that she’s on. There is no conflict of interest.

    • @Nightwingdragon
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      259 months ago

      The allegation is that he was hired for the sole purpose of prosecuting Trump, and they both used what they were paid to work on the case in order to fund their ongoing affair. Trumps team is alleging that the entire prosecution of him and the other co-defendants is that this case was brought solely for the purposes of covering up their affair, funding it, and advancing their own name value at the expense of Trump.

      For the record, it’s obvious bullshit. But the appearance of impropriety is a real thing, and there’s plenty of that. Wade spent the entire time on the witness stand trying to split hairs and argue semantics, all while having a smug look on his face as if he thinks he’s getting away with something. Both of them should have recused themselves from the case the minute the affair became public, with the usual talking point of “I intend to fight back against this attempt to drag my personal life into this case, however given the importance of this case I feel it is best for me to step aside and hand the case to another prosecutor to protect the integrity of the case and avoid any appearance of impropriety.”

      She didn’t, and it very well could not only derail the case, but give Trump an enormous campaign victory as it will go a long way in convincing undecided voters that these prosecutions are politically motivated, giving him yet another bump in popularity during a time Biden is stumbling.

      You know how RBG should have stepped down and retired during Obama’s term but didn’t out of her own hubris? Remember how the rest of us ended up paying for that? Same thing applies here. Fani Willis’ own hubris is preventing her from stepping aside and letting another prosecutor at least salvage the case, and that hubris could cost everybody far more if Trump’s team manages to get the whole thing thrown out.  

      • Flying Squid
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        149 months ago

        and they both used what they were paid to work on the case in order to fund their ongoing affair.

        What, were they taking state money over to the adult novelty store or something?

        Like you said, obvious bullshit.

        • @Nightwingdragon
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          149 months ago

          The theory is this:

          Wade was hired for the sole purpose of prosecuting Trump. Both he and Willis were (I could be wrong on the number here, but you get the idea) over $600,000 during their time in the investigation. This $600k was used to fund (among other things) a trip to Belize and other vacations, along with billing the GA DA’s office for expenses that occured during these trips that should have been personal. Had they not “gone after Trump”, they would not have earned the $600k they have been using to fund their affair.

          He’s basically saying that the entire prosecution is just an elaborate scheme to fund and cover up a personal affair. Normally, this would and should be written off as irrelevant nonsense, but their testimony yesterday does show that they had an ongoing affair and played all sorts of shell games with money to cover it up. Trump very easily could walk away from the entire case on a technicality because Willis couldn’t keep her personal and professional life separate, couldn’t avoid the appearance of impropriety, and refuses to step aside because of her own hubris.

          • @perviouslyiner
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            9 months ago

            Wouldn’t it just go to the next prosecutor? It’s not like all of the evidence of crimes has suddenly disappeared (and of course, the people who have pled guilty already)

            • Flying Squid
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              29 months ago

              The problem is that whoever takes over the case might be sympathetic to Trump. This is Georgia after all.

          • Funderpants
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            59 months ago

            Why would this end the case and not result simply in replacing the prosecutors.

            • @[email protected]
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              19 months ago

              She’s the DA. The DA picks the prosecutors that go to trials for the state, and now she is at risk of being disqualified - and as a result the entirety of the DAs office from the case.

              At minimum if that happens it is yet another delay to the case as they scramble for replacements, who will need time to review the case and may not have the same level of understanding as Willis and Wade who’ve spent many months working it so far.

    • AFK BRB Chocolate
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      229 months ago

      Even the word “affair” seems stretching it. Wade and his wife were separated, living separately, Willis was single. It’s not like they were sneaking around. They had a consensual relationship.

      • Flying Squid
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        69 months ago

        Honestly, the only real problem I have with the whole issue, unless it’s true that they were using taxpayer money (which I’m doubtful about), is that Willis made a statement about not having sex with employees if elected because her predecessor was accused of sexual harassment and other sexual issues. I’m sorry, I’m trying to find a link to it but I can’t find one. One of the late night shows last night showed the footage of her saying it.

        But being a hypocrite about something you said before you got elected should have no effect on the Trump case.

        • AFK BRB Chocolate
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          79 months ago

          Oh, v the whole “taxpayer money” thing is nonsense. They aren’t saying they improperly used government funds. They’re saying that their paychecks come from the government, so it’s taxpayer money. It was their salary.

          • @aalvare2
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            19 months ago

            The only question I’d have is whether the salary that was agreed upon for the prosecutor was established before the relationship, if she even had any say in it at all. Otherwise it might be fair to argue she unfairly bumped his pay, meaning some taxpayer money unfairly went to his pocket.

            Not that I really care all that much. Even if the relationship started before she says it did, and even if some of his $650,000 payment was unjustly given (not that I believe all of that)…aren’t we having a trial about obstruction of the democratic process here?

            It’s more that this whole thing is ridiculous, given the stakes of the trial, than it being actually upsetting.

            • AFK BRB Chocolate
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              39 months ago

              I’d be super surprised if she was able to set his salary. Government workers usually have pretty narrow bands.

          • Flying Squid
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            19 months ago

            I didn’t think there was anything to it. Like I said, my only problem here is that she’s a hypocrite. But she wouldn’t be the first lawyer who’s a hypocrite.

    • @[email protected]
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      49 months ago

      Even so, we’ve seen examples where even a married couple has been able to keep their personal relationship out of their professional. No one would call the work effort of either kellyanne Conway or her husband George at all sub-par, despite the fact they were living with a domestic partner diametrically opposed politically.

      It’s possible for people to be professional, and I’m disappointed this is a seemingly new thing for one party in this case. I think even Mr Trump characterized Ms Conway as an excellent and hard working pro, many times, before contradicting himself when it was more suitable later.

    • Goku
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      -89 months ago

      I could see a conflict of interest and I’m disappointed she didn’t recuse herself voluntarily or pick someone else to be involved in the case.

      Appearance is everything in this high profile case and it needs to be by the books or else half the country will scream “unfair, rigged, collusion”

        • @AbidanYre
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          49 months ago

          The only argument I’ve seen is that she could have artificially extended the case to funnel money to her boyfriend.

        • @jpreston2005
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          19 months ago

          The only thing that could let drumpf walk away from this shit, is when our prosecutors make mistakes. Having an ongoing affair between the lead prosecutor and someone she hired, covering it up, and then refusing to step aside after it was found out. These are the mistakes that will let this POS walk free.

        • @[email protected]
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          09 months ago

          Hiring someone you are actively involved with an intimate relationship with? If your sibling works at General Mills you’re immediately disqualified from the cereal box sweepstakes ffs, Willis knows better and should have done better. Especially when it’s a case this big

            • @[email protected]
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              09 months ago

              We’re reading headlines about it, aren’t we? The court is taking time to resolve this allegation (as bullshit as it’s looking) instead of what the case is actually about - prosecuting Trump.

              America is on a deadline before the election, but the slow wheels of justice have to turn over this rock now because there’s enough evidence wrapped up in the claim to warrant a look, if only to disprove the allegations

        • Goku
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          9 months ago

          The district attorney could have feelings left over from the affair and could possibly want to influence the case to see her lover win.

          Edit:

          Okay I’m being down voted.

          Preface: I hate Trump as much as all of you. I think he is a treasonous rapist lying twice impeached failed businessman dumb man child.

          However, consider the [impossible] hypothetical scenario where an anonymous source leaks key information specifically to the DA proving Trump’s innocence. She is obligated to disclose this information to the court.

          However, if she has plans to marry the prosecution attorney and wants him to be famous for winning the case against trump, she might not disclose that information.

          These are the kinds of mental gymnastics the Republican party uses to justify throwing the case out, and this is why she should have recused herself.

          • Flying Squid
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            169 months ago

            Again- they’re on the same side of the case. So yeah, she would want to influence the case they both want Trump to lose.

            • Goku
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              09 months ago

              I edited my comment to elaborate since I received so many downvotes and more than one reply. Feel free to read it or not IDC.

          • @[email protected]
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            49 months ago

            I think you’re confused as to what a district attorney does. Either that or what a lead prosecutor is. The DA inherently wants the lead prosecutor to win and has no methods to influence the outcome (beyond just directly helping them build a strong argument).

            • Goku
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              -39 months ago

              I edited my comment to elaborate since I received so many downvotes and more than one reply. Feel free to read it or not IDC.