Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ Controversial Relationship with Special Prosecutor Nathan Wade and Its Impact on the Trump Case
3 min readFulton County District Attorney Fani Willis has been making headlines for her controversial relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, who was hired to prosecute the sprawling racketeering case against former President Donald Trump. The relationship has raised concerns about potential conflicts of interest and has led to calls for Willis’ removal from the case.
Co-defendant David Shafer, who served as the Georgia GOP Chairman and a GOP presidential elector for Georgia during the 2020 election, filed a motion in court on February 5, 2024, seeking to disqualify Willis from the case. Shafer accused Willis of engaging in a pattern of prosecutorial and forensic misconduct, which he argued warranted her removal.
Shafer’s motion followed co-defendant Michael Roman’s claims that Willis had an improper relationship with Wade and asked the court to disqualify her from the case. Willis responded to the allegations in a court filing on February 5, 2024, admitting to having a personal relationship with Wade but denying any conflict of interest.
However, Shafer argued that Willis’ public statements about the case through various media interviews and public speeches, in which she rejected and infected the jury pool with unfounded allegations of racism, constituted prosecutorial and forensic misconduct and warranted her removal.
The court filing referenced Willis’ remarks at Bethel AME Church in Atlanta on January 14, 2024, where she questioned those who dared to question her or Wade’s conduct as playing the race card. Shafer argued that these comments directly affected the pending litigation and were indefensible and reprehensible.
In legal filings last month, Roman alleged that Wade billed Fulton County for 24 hours of work on a single day in November 2021 and that Willis financially benefited from Wade’s padded taxpayer-funded salary by taking lavish vacations together on his dime. According to court documents, Wade, who has no RICO and felony prosecution experience, billed taxpayers $654,000 since January 2022.
Shafer also argued that Willis’ employment of Wade to investigate and prosecute the defendants and payments to Wade of over a half a million dollars from the Fulton County treasury while allowing Wade to pay for vacations for the District Attorney and other personal expenses constituted a disqualifying conflict of interest as well as a violation of ethical rules applicable to attorneys and Fulton County employees and potentially criminal law.
The motion also claimed that Willis’ improper and inaccurate characterization of Shafer and the other 2020 nominee Republican Presidential Electors as “Fake Electors” to the national media had been exceedingly prejudicial to Shafer, noting that at all times material to her indictment, Shafer was qualified as a “lawful” Presidential Elector pursuant to Georgia law through his nomination as a Presidential Elector by the Georgia Republican Party.
Shafer asked the court to keep in place a February 15 evidentiary hearing set by Judge Scott McAfee, in which the parties will present evidence to try and compel the court to remove Willis and her office from the case.
The controversy surrounding Willis and Wade’s relationship is not the first time that Willis has faced criticism for her handling of the Trump case. In January 2023, the Georgia House voted to revive the prosecutor oversight panel that could potentially oust Willis from the case.
Despite the controversy, Willis has remained steadfast in her pursuit of the case against Trump, who she has accused of election interference. However, the allegations of conflicts of interest and forensic misconduct have raised questions about the fairness and impartiality of the case and have cast doubt on the outcome of the trial.
In conclusion, the controversy surrounding Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis’ relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade and the potential conflicts of interest it raises has cast doubt on the fairness and impartiality of the Trump case. The allegations of prosecutorial and forensic misconduct, as well as the financial benefits Willis and Wade have derived from the case, have led to calls for Willis’ removal from the case and have raised serious concerns about the integrity of the legal system. The outcome of the evidentiary hearing on February 15, 2024, will be closely watched as it could potentially determine the fate of the case against Trump.