The Guardian (USA)

Trump ally Jim Jordan subpoenas Fani Willis for potential grant money misuse

- George Chidi in Atlanta

The US House judiciary committee has subpoenaed Fani Willis, the Fulton county district attorney, for records related to the use of federal grant money in prosecutio­ns and the potential misuse of those funds.

The subpoena escalates the conflict between Jim Jordan, the Ohio Republican congressma­n, judiciary committee chair and ardent defender of Donald Trump, and Willis, whose office charged the former president and 18 others with 41 counts over interferin­g with a Georgia election and illegally attempting to undo Biden’s victory in Georgia.

Willis responded to the subpoena on Friday. She said: “These false allegation­s are included in baseless litigation filed by a holdover employee from the prior administra­tion who was terminated for cause. The courts that have ruled found no merit in these claims. We expect the same result in any pending litigation.”

She went on to tout the office grant programs and said they are in compliance with Department of Justice requiremen­ts.

The back and forth between Jordan and Willis began last year with correspond­ence Jordan sent on 24 August, the day Trump stood for a mugshot at the Fulton county jail. Jordan’s letter suggested Willis had subjected Trump to “politicall­y motivated state investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns due to the policies they advanced as president”, and that any coordinati­on her office had with federal prosecutor­s may have been an improperly partisan use of federal money.

Willis’s scorching response in subsequent replies said the inquiry offends principles of state sovereignt­y and the separation of powers; that it interferes with a criminal investigat­ion; that Trump is not immune to prosecutio­n simply because he is a candidate for public office; and that Jordan himself was “ignorant of the US constituti­on”.

The Republican-led committee opened a formal investigat­ion into the Willis’s office in December.

Willis has been under fire over the past month after allegation­s of an improper relationsh­ip with special prosecutor Nathan Wade, whom she hired to work on the Trump case in Fulton county.

Jordan sent a letter to Nathan Wade on 12 January, asking for his cooperatio­n in his committee’s inquiry into “politicall­y motivated investigat­ions and prosecutio­ns and the potential misuse of federal funds”. The letter notes Wade’s billings for meetings with the federal January 6 committee, which the letter characteri­zes as partisan. “There are open questions about whether federal funds were used by [Fulton county] to finance your prosecutio­n,” the letter states.

Willis responded on Wade’s behalf 12 days later.

“Your letter is simply a restatemen­t of demands that you have made in past correspond­ence for access to evidence in a pending Georgia criminal prosecutio­n,” she said in the reply.

“As I said previously, your requests implicate significan­t, well-recognized confidenti­ality interests related to an ongoing criminal matter. Your requests violate principles of separation of powers and federalism, as well as respect for the legal protection­s provided to attorney work product in ongoing litigation.”

 ?? ?? Fani Willis in Atlanta in December. Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP
Fani Willis in Atlanta in December. Photograph: Brynn Anderson/AP

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