Albuquerque Journal

Witness refuses to answer questions

Fani Willis hearing ensnared in legal arguments during testimony about romantic relationsh­ip timeline

- BY KATE BRUMBACK, ALANNA DURKIN RICHER AND ERIC TUCKER

ATLANTA — A man expected to be a key witness for lawyers trying to get Fani Willis disqualifi­ed from the Georgia election interferen­ce case against Donald Trump instead refused to answer most of their questions on Friday, citing attorney-client privilege during the second day of a hearing that sometimes bordered on theater.

During repeated interrogat­ions by a series of attorneys for Trump and other defendants in the election case, Terrence Bradley declined to discuss a romantic relationsh­ip between Willis and Nathan Wade, a special prosecutor she hired for the case.

The lawyers contend the relationsh­ip started before Willis, the district attorney for Georgia’s Fulton County, hired Wade and that she improperly benefited from his earnings, creating a conflict of interest that should disqualify Willis’ office from the case. Robin Yeartie, Willis’ former friend and co-worker, testified Thursday that she saw the two hugging and kissing before Wade was hired in November 2021.

Meanwhile, attorneys for the state who are trying to discredit the misconduct allegation­s against Willis called two key witnesses of their own Friday: Willis’ father, who said he didn’t know about his daughter’s relationsh­ip until recently; and former Gov. Roy Barnes, who testified that Willis asked him to serve as special prosecutor, testimony the attorneys used to back her claim that Wade was not her first choice for the job.

Other testimony in the hearing — about cash stashes in homes and romantic dalliances to exotic locales — has lent a soap opera feel to the election case against Trump, one of the most politicall­y consequent­ial prosecutio­ns ever initiated by a district attorney. Thousands watched a livestream of the proceeding­s, even during tedious lawyerly exchanges about legal theory, while some prominent local figures — including Atlanta’s mayor — dropped in to witness the hearing in person.

It was far from clear by the end of the day Friday that defense lawyers had succeeded in presenting indisputab­ly persuasive evidence to push Willis or Wade off the case against Trump. But even if the allegation­s don’t derail the case, they threaten to taint the public’s perception of one of four criminal proceeding­s facing the former president and have provided an opening for Trump and his Republican allies to try to cast doubt on the case’s legitimacy as he vies to reclaim the White House in November.

Trump immediatel­y jumped on the allegation­s in hopes of discrediti­ng the entire case, part of a yearslong pattern of deflecting attention away from his own conduct by highlighti­ng the personal lives and lapses in judgment — both perceived and real — of the officials investigat­ing him.

On the witness stand Thursday, Willis forcefully pushed back against any suggestion that her relationsh­ip with Wade created a conflict of interest and accused a defense attorney of trying to smear her with salacious lies in an effort to discredit the case against Trump. Her team opted not to bring her back on Friday.

The relationsh­ip between Willis and Wade was first revealed by Ashleigh Merchant, an attorney for Trump co-defendant Michael Roman, a former campaign staffer and onetime White House aide. Merchant has alleged that Willis personally profited from the case, paying Wade large sums for his work and then benefiting when Wade used his earnings to pay for vacations the pair took.

Bradley, Wade’s former business partner who also served as his divorce attorney for a while, repeatedly refused on Friday to answer questions about Wade and Willis, citing attorney-client privilege. But he did acknowledg­e communicat­ing with Merchant between September and January as she was investigat­ing the possibilit­y of the relationsh­ip.

Wade testified Thursday that he and Willis took trips together, but said Willis paid him back in cash for some expenses that he had charged to his credit card. Attorneys for Trump and some of his co-defendants have sought to cast doubt on the claim that Willis paid Wade in cash, pressing both of them on why Willis would use cash and if they had any evidence that she reimbursed him.

Floyd, Willis’ father, seemed to support his daughter’s assertion that she keeps large amounts of cash at home with his testimony that he always told his daughter to have six months of cash on hand. “It’s a Black thing,” Floyd said. “Most Black folks, they hide cash, they keep cash.”

Fulton County Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee said he won’t rule on whether Willis and her office should be disqualifi­ed from the case until after attorneys for both sides have a chance to present arguments, which he said would likely happen next Friday or the following week.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Terrence Bradley, Nathan Wade’s former business partner, testifies during a hearing on the Georgia election interferen­ce case on Friday in Atlanta.
ALYSSA POINTER/ASSOCIATED PRESS Terrence Bradley, Nathan Wade’s former business partner, testifies during a hearing on the Georgia election interferen­ce case on Friday in Atlanta.
 ?? ?? Fani Willis
Fani Willis

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