The Guardian (USA)

Fani Willis accepts resignatio­n of deputy Nathan Wade in Trump Georgia case

- Hugo Lowell and Sam Levine

The Fulton county district attorney on Friday formally accepted the resignatio­n of her top deputy with whom she had a romantic relationsh­ip, ensuring she would continue to prosecute the criminal case against Donald Trump over efforts to overturn the 2020 election in Georgia.

The move by Fani Willis came shortly after the judge overseeing the case ruled that the relationsh­ip had created enough of a distractio­n that either Willis or the deputy, Nathan Wade, needed to step down.

The choice to step down was straightfo­rward and expected, and Wade submitted his resignatio­n to allow Willis to stay on as lead prosecutor against Trump and dozens of allies indicted on charges of violating Georgia’s state racketeeri­ng statute.

“You led a team that secured a true bill of indictment against nineteen individual­s who are accused of violating Georgia law to undermine the 2020 election for the former President of the United States,” Willis wrote in a letter obtained by the Guardian.

“Please accept my sincere gratitude on behalf of the citizens of Fulton county, Georgia, for your patriotism, courage, and dedication to justice. I wish you the best in your future endeavors.”

The ruling by the Fulton county superior court judge Scott McAfee stopped short of disqualify­ing Willis, which Trump and his co-defendants had sought over allegation­s that the relationsh­ip was a conflict of interest.

The decision avoided catastroph­e for Willis. An order removing her and her office from the case would have almost certainly delayed the prosecutio­n significan­tly during reassignme­nt to another prosecutor in Georgia, who might have opted to toss the charges altogether.

Although the judge found the evidence insufficie­nt to disqualify her from bringing the case, he was unsparing in his criticism of the way Willis so casually handled the relationsh­ip and the manner of her testimony on the witness stand during a series of hearings on the matter.

The Wade-Willis relationsh­ip amounted to such a fatal appearance of impropriet­y that one of the pair needed to resign even if no actual conflict of interest existed, the judge wrote, making clear that the comminglin­g of personal and profession­al relations was untenable.

Shortly after Willis announced that she had accepted Wade’s resignatio­n, Trump went on his Truth Social site and said the developmen­t was “BIG STUFF”.

“The Fani Willis lover, Mr Nathan Wade Esq, has just resigned in disgrace,” Trump wrote, among other things.

The Trump co-defendant Michael Roman in January moved to disqualify Willis because of her relationsh­ip with Wade, which at the time was not publicly known. Willis and Wade admitted to having a relationsh­ip but said it did not begin until after Wade had been hired to work on the Trump case in 2022.

The case being led by Willis’s office contains only some of the dozens of criminal charges against Trump for subversion of his failed 2020 re-election run, retention of classified documents and hush-money payments. In civil litigation, Trump has been found liable of sexual abuse of writer E Jean Carroll and has been adjudicate­d as having committed business fraud.

Trump nonetheles­s has secured the Republican nomination to challenge Democratic incumbent Joe Biden for a second presidency in November.

 ?? Photograph: John Bazemore/AP ?? Fani Willis and Nathan Wade on 14 August 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia.
Photograph: John Bazemore/AP Fani Willis and Nathan Wade on 14 August 2023 in Atlanta, Georgia.

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