• Re: Why Nathan Wade, under fire for alleged affair with Fani Willis, is

    From Hose Dispensers@21:1/5 to All on Fri Feb 2 08:34:38 2024
    XPost: alt.politics.republicans, atl.general, sac.politics
    XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 26 Feb 2022, Lefty Lundquist <lefty_lundquist@ggmail.com> posted some news:svdrce$u4f$11@dont-email.me:

    Unethical black Marxist pigs under fire.

    MARIETTA, Ga. — A year before Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis
    hired Nathan Wade to lead the election fraud case against former President Donald Trump, the relatively unknown private attorney was embroiled in
    another high-profile case investigating suspicious deaths in an Atlanta-
    area jail.

    Now, as Willis faces accusations of having an improper personal and professional relationship with Wade, his work on the jail deaths case is
    also being placed under a microscope - including by a defense lawyer
    seeking to have them both kicked off the Trump prosecution.

    Accusations that Wade mishandled the jail-deaths investigation in 2020 are adding to questions about Willis’s judgment in hiring him for the
    sensitive assignment of investigating the former president and alleged co- defendants in their alleged effort to overturn Georgia’s presidential
    election that year.

    “Ms. Willis is relying on him being appointed in Cobb County as part of
    his credentials for why she hired him … and why he was qualified,” said Ashleigh Merchant, a prominent Atlanta defense lawyer.

    “So I think it's important to see what happened in Cobb,” Merchant, who is representing one of Trump’s co-defendants in the election fraud case,
    Michael Roman, told USA TODAY. “I think it's relevant to what's going on
    now because it does reflect on her decision to hire him.”

    Now, as part of her effort to get the Trump case dismissed, Merchant is
    seeking documentation from Cobb County to determine if there was potential corruption and cronyism involving Willis, Wade and a third person, the
    former No. 2 at the Sheriff's Department, Sonya Allen.

    Wade did not respond to a request for comment. Willis and Allen, the
    former Sheriff’s department official — who now works for Willis as a top
    aide — also did not respond to requests for comment sent to the Fulton
    County DA’s office. Last month, however, Willis strongly defended Wade's qualifications and her decision to hire him back in November 2021 for the
    Trump investigation, which was then nine months old.

    Jail crisis scrutiny ‘has to stop’
    Wade was hired by the Cobb County Sheriff’s Department in June 2020, after
    more than a year and a half of brutally critical media coverage about the deaths of predominantly Black inmates, including one who begged repeatedly
    to be sent to the hospital for nearly eight hours while struggling to
    breathe.

    “It has to stop!” then-Deputy Chief Allen said about the “constant attack
    and scrutiny” by the media and civil rights advocates in a June 14, 2020, previously undisclosed email to the department’s rank and file, a copy of
    which was obtained by USA TODAY. Allen wrote that she retained Wade’s law
    firm to review cases "that have involved alleged excessive use of force,
    deadly force, discrimination or neglect ... with a fine-tooth comb.”

    “This is not a witch-hunt,” Allen told her colleagues, who patrol Cobb
    County, conduct investigations and oversee the county jail complex and
    Adult Detention Center, “it's a desire to clear the name of this agency
    and its men and women and of course to give the public the peace of mind
    they deserve.”

    ’My brainchild’
    When Wade finished his investigation later that year, he released no
    formal public report about what led to the deaths at the notoriously
    dangerous lock-up.

    Asked about his findings for a local TV news investigation, Wade conceded
    that he created no “documents, communications, or records memorializing, reflecting evidence, or relating to the work,” according to the news
    station, 11Alive.

    “I have obviously my brainchild, what’s going on in my mind about it.
    That’s what I have,” Wade told a lawyer for 11Alive who was trying to
    obtain Sheriff’s Department internal records about the probe through
    public records act requests. That outcome was condemned by local criminal justice reform activists and defense attorneys, some of whom said Wade’s investigation helped the Sheriff’s Department use the pretense of an
    ongoing investigation to deny public access to potentially embarrassing records.

    'Total disregard of his duty’
    One of those defense lawyers, Cindi Yeager, now questions why Willis would
    hire Wade to oversee one of the most consequential public interest investigations in recent history into whether Trump — and some of his
    White House and campaign aides, including his lawyer Rudy Giuliani and
    former White House chief of staff Mark Meadows tried to illegally overturn
    the results of the 2020 presidential election in Georgia that Trump lost
    to Democrat Joe Biden.

    “Based on the complete lack of following the necessary protocol for
    conducting a proper investigation, I would question anyone who would
    consider utilizing Mr. Wade’s services for this type of investigation, especially one that involves such complicated issues as in the Trump
    election prosecution,” Yeager said Thursday.

    “To say he kept no written notes, no record of interviews conducted, no
    record of reports he reviewed, amounts to a total disregard of his duty,”
    said Yeager, who is now the co-chief assistant District Attorney in Cobb County.

    A bombshell allegation and trips to California wine country
    Roman’s defense attorney Merchant garnered international headlines on Jan.
    8 when she filed a bombshell court motion alleging that Willis was having
    an “an improper, clandestine personal relationship” with Wade that should result in both of them — and the entire DA’s office — being disqualified
    from prosecuting the case and to dismiss the whole case on that basis.

    What’s more, Merchant alleged, Wade was using some of the more than
    $650,000 he made as chief special prosecutor in the Trump case to take
    Willis on romantic vacations to California wine country, Florida and
    Caribbean cruises.

    Since then, Trump himself — and a third co-defendant — have joined in Merchant’s motion.

    Jailhouse deaths and a controversial investigation
    Neither Willis nor Wade has commented specifically about those
    allegations. The presiding judge in the case, Scott McAfee, has given
    Willis until Feb. 2 to respond. He has also set a Feb. 15 court date for a hearing on the motion to disqualify.

    As part of her effort to have the election fraud case tossed, Merchant
    recently filed three requests seeking information about Wade’s handling of
    the jail investigation in Cobb, a suburban enclave just north of Fulton
    County, which includes Atlanta.

    More: Georgia DA Fani Willis rejects idea that Trump prosecution could
    amount to election interference

    Those requests, which Merchant shared with USA TODAY, seek “any and all documentation, emails, meeting notes, letters” and other information
    regarding Wade’s probe into “potential problems and wrongdoing” at the
    jail.

    To that end, Merchant is focusing particularly on how aggressively Wade
    and his law firm investigated four jailhouse deaths in 2019 and 2020,
    including Kevil Wingo, a 37-year-old father of three who unsuccessfully
    begged for medical attention because he couldn’t breathe.

    An 11Alive investigation uncovered and aired videotape of Wingo thrashing
    about in his cell.

    After refusing to check his vitals, the jail nurse in charge put Wingo in
    a padded cell “to mute his screams for help,” 11Alive reported. “He died
    59 minutes later from a perforated ulcer.”

    Wade’s pricey ‘pro bono’ probe
    Merchant’s records request also seeks to determine how much money Wade and others at his law firm were paid for the investigation.

    Invoices show that Wade billed at $550 an hour for his services, despite
    an Oct. 8, 2020 affidavit also obtained by USA TODAY, in which Sonya Allen
    of the Sheriff's department said Wade and his law firm had offered to do
    the investigation “pro bono,” or for free, “as a public service to the community.”

    Merchant has also filed public records act requests with the Fulton County
    DA’s office for information she says she needs to prepare for the Feb. 15 hearing. On Tuesday, she subpoenaed both Willis and Wade to testify at
    that hearing, contending that the DA’s office is intentionally withholding
    the information she seeks.

    A Fulton County DA’s office official, in an interview Wednesday, said the office is complying with Merchant’s request.

    The official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss ongoing investigations, also declined to comment on Willis’ relationship with Wade
    and with Allen, who now works for Willis as head of the Fulton County DA’s Anti-Corruption Division, and whether their performance in the Cobb jail investigation undermines her confidence in them.

    The Fulton County DA’s office says the unit was established “to evaluate
    issues of government corruption and law enforcement misconduct to include elected officials, election tampering, sheriff deputies, and police
    officers.”

    Wade's boss in jail probe joins Fani Willis’ office
    Last month, Willis defended her selection of Wade for the Trump
    investigation, saying he is not only a “great friend” but an experienced
    lawyer with the “impeccable” credentials needed to be a special prosecutor overseeing the sprawling racketeering case and she contrasted attacks on
    Wade with the fact that the white lawyers Willis has hired for this case haven’t been publicly scrutinized.

    "The Black man I chose has been a judge more than 10 years, run a private practice more than 20, represented businesses in civil litigation - I
    ain’t done y’all,” Willis said in a Sunday morning sermon Jan. 14 at the
    Big Bethel A.M.E Church in Atlanta. “Served as a prosecutor, a criminal
    defense lawyer, special assistant attorney general.”

    Willis also referenced Wade’s jail investigation, noting that an elected Republican - Cobb County Sheriff Neil Warren - had hired him for that job.

    "How come ... the same Black man I hired was acceptable when a Republican
    in another county hired him and paid him twice the rate?” Willis asked.
    “Why is the white male Republican's judgement good enough, but the black
    female Democrat's not?"

    While Willis admitted being a “flawed” human being who makes mistakes, she
    did not address specifically whether she and Wade have been involved romantically.

    Willis also has had nothing but praise for former Deputy Sheriff Allen,
    who she hired soon after taking office. At the time, Wade was helping
    Willis staff her team, according to three people familiar with his work
    for her.

    Merchant, the Trump case defense lawyer, is also seeking information about Allen’s role in the Cobb County Jail probe and in hiring and overseeing
    Wade’s work on it.

    “I think it's relevant to what's going on now because it does reflect on (Willis’s) decision to hire him, how she chose him and also the fact that
    Sonya Allen... is integral to him getting this contract in Fulton County,” Merchant said of the Trump investigation. She cited “witness interviews
    that I conducted” in the Trump case for why she believes Allen helped Wade
    get the assignment.

    Clark Cunningham, a professor of law and ethics at Georgia State
    University College of Law, told USA TODAY that "Ashleigh Merchant is
    barking up a lot of trees and using all of her resourcefulness” in her
    defense of her client, but that her efforts are justified because of
    Wade’s key role in the jail probe.

    “The fact that he apparently had no written records of his investigation
    and produced no written report - it seems to me if I were in a position of retaining a lawyer for something of such importance as this current case
    that it would certainly give me pause,” Cunningham said Thursday.

    Investigating Donald Trump
    The Fulton County DA official downplayed Allen’s prior lack of
    prosecutorial experience, saying Willis hired her to help oversee the
    office’s many investigations into corruption in its own Sheriff’s
    Department and jail system.

    But by the end of her first month on the job, Willis also was clearly
    focusing on the “elected officials, election tampering” element of the anti-corruption unit that unit that Allen was now overseeing.

    A few weeks later, Willis sent a letter to top Georgia officials,
    informing them that she had launched a criminal investigation into
    possible interference in the state's 2020 general election – including
    Trumps’ now-infamous call to Secretary of State Brad Raffensperger to
    “find 11,780 votes,” or just enough for him to win the key swing state.

    And on Nov. 1 of that year, Willis hired Wade to be the lawyer who would
    lead that investigation.

    https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/politics/2024/02/01/nathan-wade-fani- willis-affair-new-probe/72436733007/

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