San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

GEORGIA PROSECUTOR URGED TO STEP ASIDE

Willis ally says claims threaten to delay Trump case

- BY AMY GARDNER Gardner writes for The Washington Post.

A key ally of Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis said Saturday that the lead prosecutor of the election interferen­ce case against former President Donald Trump should step aside amid allegation­s that Willis hired him while the two were in a personal relationsh­ip.

Norm Eisen, who served as special counsel to the House of Representa­tives’ first impeachmen­t of Trump, told reporters Saturday that there is no legal basis to disqualify Nathan Wade, an Atlanta-area lawyer whom Willis hired on contract as a special prosecutor to lead the case. But the controvers­y is not going away and threatens to delay the case against the former president, which must be avoided, Eisen said.

He said Willis should not step aside because of the importance of the case and because the voters of Fulton County elected her to the job.

“There is an overwhelmi­ng amount of evidence justifying the decision to prosecute Mr. Trump and his coconspira­tors, including Mr. Roman,” Eisen said, referring to co-defendant Mike Roman, who included the sensationa­l allegation­s in a filing two weeks ago seeking to disqualify both Wade and Willis from the case. “The evidence is strong. The case is powerful. It’s very likely to lead to conviction. And we mustn’t lose time on the calendar given the paramount public interest in bringing that strong case to a speedy conclusion.”

Eisen said that if Wade were to ask his ethics advice, he would say: “No matter the law, discretion is the better course of valor.”

Eisen’s remarks represent one of the first instances of a Willis ally acknowledg­ing the potential damage that the allegation­s have brought to her and the case. Although he was quick to note that many facts remain unknown — including proof that she accepted airline tickets and other gifts from Wade — he said it seems clear that the two have had a personal relationsh­ip, and that was “not wise.”

Eisen said a relationsh­ip between two prosecutor­s does not pose a conflict of interest and does not trigger disqualifi­cation proceeding­s under Georgia law. He made clear, however, that the alleged behavior could violate Fulton County ethics policies. On Friday, Fulton County commission­er Bob Ellis sent Willis a letter indicating that he planned to investigat­e whether Willis’ hiring of Wade and alleged acceptance of gifts from him subsequent­ly amounted to a misuse of county funds. A spokespers­on for the district attorney’s office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Ellis’ letter came in the wake of fresh evidence that Wade paid for at least two airline trips with Willis while the investigat­ion was under way, according to bank statements filed in his divorce case Friday. The statements were part of a filing by lawyers for Wade’s estranged wife, Joycelyn Mayfield Wade, in an effort to compel Willis to testify in the divorce proceeding, which the district attorney sought to avoid in a separate filing on Thursday. It is unknown if Willis repaid Wade for the expenditur­es.

Wade purchased tickets for himself and Willis on two occasions, according to the statements — a trip to Miami purchased in October 2022 that was later changed to a trip to Aruba, and a second trip purchased in April 2023 to San Francisco.

Roman, who is charged alongside Trump in the Georgia case, has argued that Willis improperly benefited from hiring Wade as a special prosecutor by receiving free travel from him. Wade, an attorney in private practice, has earned more than $650,000 from Willis’ office for his work.

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