USA TODAY US Edition

Hearings will look into relationsh­ip claims in Ga. case

Trump team hopes to see prosecutio­n come to end

- Josh Meyer

A Georgia judge has ruled that he will hold at least two days of potentiall­y explosive televised hearings on whether to disqualify Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from the election fraud case against former President Donald Trump because of her romantic affair with the special prosecutor she hired to oversee it.

But Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee also cautioned lawyers seeking to have Willis and Nathan Wade dismissed − and the case thrown out − that he will not tolerate attempts to smear their reputation­s through unproven allegation­s.

“If there’s anything that is referring to ... harassment or undue embarrassm­ent, I’m not going to feel inhibited from stepping in, even without an objection from counsel, to move this along and keep it focused on the issues at hand,” McAfee said at a nearly two-hour emergency hearing Monday.

Even though he stressed he has seen no evidence that the allegation­s are true, McAfee’s decision was a sharp setback for Willis and Wade, who, through lawyers, had fought to have the hearing canceled and to avoid having to testify.

Willis and Wade acknowledg­e ‘personal relationsh­ip’

McAfee held the emergency hearing to allow attorneys for Wade, Willis and other potential witnesses to try to quash subpoenas ordering their clients to testify at the evidentiar­y hearing, scheduled for Thursday.

Wade and Willis in particular have made their case that they did nothing wrong and that the high-profile prosecutio­n of Trump and 14 co-defendants should be allowed to proceed.

Both acknowledg­ed in a recent court filing that they have been engaged in a “personal relationsh­ip,” or romantic affair, but they said it began after Willis hired the little-known private attorney to join the DA’s office to helm the highprofil­e case back in November 2021.

The ‘disqualifi­cation’ option

Given that Willis and Wade have acknowledg­ed their relationsh­ip, McAfee said, what “remains to be proven” is whether Willis derived any financial benefit from it, as alleged last month by Michael Roman, a former Trump campaign official also charged in what prosecutor­s say was an effort to illegally overturn Trump’s 2020 loss to Democrat Joe Biden in Georgia.

“So because I think it’s possible that the facts alleged by the defendant could result in disqualifi­cation, I think an evidentiar­y hearing must occur to establish the record on those core allegation­s,” McAfee said.

McAfee suggested that both Willis and Wade are likely to testify at the hearing and that all of the procedural wrangling and attempts to introduce − and refute − allegation­s could prolong the hearing through Friday and possibly longer.

Will court hear from witnesses about when the affair started?

One of the key questions to arise at trial is whether Willis financiall­y benefited from her relationsh­ip with Wade.

A lawyer for Roman, Ashleigh Merchant, has accused Wade of using some of the more than $650,000 he has been paid as special prosecutor to take Willis on vacations to California wine country, Florida and on Caribbean cruises. More recently, Merchant said the affair began before Willis hired Wade − and thus has created a conflict of interest that irrevocabl­y taints the case.

On Monday, Fulton County prosecutor Anna Cross told the judge she believed Merchant is either making it up or mistaken.

‘Shocked’ if the allegation­s are true

“I will be shocked if Miss Merchant is able to support that statement. Shocked,” Cross said. “I don’t believe that’s true.”

Cross told the judge that many of the other allegation­s launched by Roman and lawyers for other defendants, including Trump himself, in a flurry of recent filings are untrue. She described attempts by defense attorneys to subpoena and cross-examine as many as nine prosecutor­s, security officials and others involved in the Trump case, or close to Wade or Willis, as essentiall­y a fishing expedition based on “wild speculatio­n” and thirdhand hearsay.

Cross also reiterated that Wade and Willis split the costs of their trips together and didn’t use any taxpayer money paid to Wade and his law firm as compensati­on for the Trump case for the vacations. And she disclosed that the DA’s office wants to have Willis’ father testify remotely from California Thursday to refute some of the allegation­s, including that Willis and Wade lived together at some key point in their relationsh­ip.

Merchant countered that the witnesses she has subpoenaed do have informatio­n that’s “relevant” to the allegation­s and that Wade had lived with Willis in a county-funded safe house where she was living because of threats against her. She also said a former business associate of Wade’s is prepared testify that their affair predated Willis’ hiring of Wade.

McAfee said he will decide many of those issues, including who might testify, on Thursday, including whether and when the district attorney herself might take the stand.

The Washington Post reported late Monday that Trump himself might attend the hearing, citing two people with knowledge of Trump’s intentions. At Monday’s hearing, Trump lawyer Steve Sadow asked for a private, or “ex-parte,” conversati­on with the judge about an unspecifie­d matter. Afterward, Sadow would not comment on the Post report, telling USA TODAY only that it was “speculatio­n.”

On Tuesday, Sadow revealed that Trump would be in a courtroom, but one 860 miles away in Manhattan, where the former president faces a hearing in his criminal trial over a hush money payment in 2016 to adult film actress Stormy Daniels.

“President Trump will be attending court in New York on Thursday,” the lawyer said.

A prosecutor’s dirty laundry

If the defense gets its way and is allowed to cross-examine witnesses, Thursday’s hearing is likely to turn into a live television spectacle, including a public and potentiall­y detailed airing of the particular­s of Willis’ relationsh­ip with Wade, who is married but getting divorced.

McAfee seemed to suggest he is willing to hear at least some of those allegation­s before deciding whether to disqualify Willis, Wade or the entire DA’s office, as Roman has requested.

“So just to emphasize, I think the issues at point here are whether a relationsh­ip existed, whether that relationsh­ip was romantic or nonromanti­c in nature, when it formed and whether it continues,” McAfee said.

“And that’s only relevant because it’s in combinatio­n with the question of the existence and extent of any personal benefit conveyed as a result of their relationsh­ip.”

 ?? JOHN BAZEMORE/AP ?? Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and Nathan Wade admitted they are having a “personal relationsh­ip.”
JOHN BAZEMORE/AP Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis and Nathan Wade admitted they are having a “personal relationsh­ip.”

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