Nathan Wade, the Georgia prosecutor who was appointed by Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis — who he was having an affair with— to prosecute former President Donald Trump over numerous charges of alleged election interference, held numerous meetings with the White House. And, of course, Wade charged the Fulton County office for the hours of meetings he held with the Biden-Harris administration, the congressional Jan. 6 committee, and many other D.C. officials, records obtained by the House Judiciary Committee that were released on Monday. In other words, the American taxpayers in the Peach State were forced to pay the bill for a guy who was engaging in some sort of political intriguing against Trump. That is an egregious offense.
The House committee then released a transcript of an interview with Willis’ boy toy. Wade was compelled to do the interview because of a subpoena, where he stated that Willis was preparing to prosecute Trump before she even got into office. Her boyfriend then stated that she put him on a “search committee” to find a prosecutor, but ultimately chose him for the job.
via The Daily Wire:
On November 18, 2022, he billed eight hours for “Interview with DC/White House,” but under oath claimed he didn’t remember the meeting and couldn’t even say whether it was online or in-person. Between September 7 and September 9, 2022, Wade billed $6,000 to taxpayers for “Witness Interviews; conf call DC; team meeting,” but couldn’t remember what the D.C. meeting entailed. On April 25, 2023, he spent eight hours on “Zoom conf with investigators in other jurisdictions,” but could not remember anything about it. In the congressional interview, the evasion and bizarre answers continued. Wade acknowledged meeting with “individuals associated with the January 6th Committee” — a Democrat-run House committee digging up dirt on Trump — several times, but also claimed he did not talk to either members or staff of the committee, instead corresponding with lawyers whose names he could not remember, and that he did not know who the lawyers’ client was.
Wade billed 24 hours in April 2022 for “Team meeting; conf with Jan 6th; research legal issues to prep [interview]” and eight hours on November 16, 2022 for “Jan 6 meeting and Atty conf.”
In the proceedings that took place in Georgia, one of Trump’s co-defendants attempted to make the case that the prosecution was riddled with corruption. At hat time, Wade provided written answers to questions under oath, stating he did not have a romantic relationship with Willis while he married to another woman. Later, on the stand, he confessed he did cheat with Willis while he was married. The judge presiding over the case decided that either Willis or Wade would need to be removed from the prosecution. Wade chose to remove himself.
Falling on the sword for the mistress he was seeing behind his wife’s back? Gee, what a wonderful man. Too bad he didn’t think that highly of his wife, right?
The testimony Wade provided before Congress has raised many questions about whether his forbidden lover appointed him as a prosecutor despite his lack of experience, in order to pamper him as her paramour. Wade then told lawmakers in Congress he didn’t have the relevant experience to be qualified for the position, noting that as soon as he was appointed as a special prosecutor, he started to take classes to learn the job.
“U.S. Marshalls attempting to serve Wade with a subpoena could not locate him for days. Wade claimed he had turned his phone off because he was preparing for a trial, and also because he was on pain medication from hurting his ankle playing basketball,” the report finished.