Bombshell House Report Reveals Trump Prosecutor Nathan Wade Met With White House
Records show that Wade claimed his lover Fani Willis and his boss Fani Willis had planned to prosecute Trump prior to taking office.
New records reveal that Nathan Wade, the Georgia attorney who was chosen by his former lover, Fulton County prosecutor Fani Williams, to prosecute Donald Trump, had extensive communication with the Biden and Harris White House.
According to records obtained by House Judiciary Committee, Wade charged the Fulton County Office for hours spent meeting with officials from the White House, congressional January 6 Committee, and D.C.
Wade said in an interview that Willis had been preparing to bring charges against Trump before she was elected and that Willis put Wade on the “search committee” for a prosecutor. He was ultimately chosen by the committee.
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Wade charged the Fulton Office for eight hours travel time and a “Conf. with White House Counsel” on May 23, 2022. Wade claimed he couldn’t remember who was at the White House or where the meeting occurred. He billed the Fulton office for eight hours on November 18, 2022. However, under oath he claimed that he could not remember whether or not it was an online meeting. Wade charged taxpayers $6,000 between September 7 and 9, 2022 for “Witness interviews; conf call DC, team meeting” but could not recall what the D.C. event entailed.
Q: Has anyone from the White House visited Georgia to meet you?
A: I’m not sure. I’m not sure who’s in the White House. …
Q: Can you recall what or who you meant when you mentioned an interview in Washington D.C./White House.
A: No. …
Q: Do remember if you went to Washington D.C.?
A: I can’t remember.
Q: Do remember if someone traveled to Georgia to interview you?
A: I can’t remember.
Q: Do remember if you contacted the White House to schedule an interview, or if they contacted you?
A: I can’t remember.
He spent eight hours in “Zoom Conf” with investigators from other jurisdictions on April 25, 2023. However, he could not recall anything. Wade claimed he could not remember details 58 different times. Wade’s memory is notoriously bad. In Georgia, witnesses were trying to explain Willis’ hiring of her secret lover without contradicting one another.
The evasiveness continued in the congressional interview. Wade charged 24 hours for “Team Meeting; Conf with Jan 6th, Research Legal Issues to Prepare [Interview]”, and 8 hours for “Jan6 meeting and Atty Conf” on November 16, 2022. Wade denied meeting any members or staff of the January 6 Committee. However, his questioners noted that Politico reported that Willis’ team had met with committee staff at Washington in April 20,22. Wade was one of Willis’s top prosecutors who attended.
Wade, a Trump co defendant in Georgia who argued the prosecution was corrupted, initially provided written answers saying that he had not been involved with Willis while married to another woman. He then admitted on the witness stand he had. Willis and Wade both testified that their relationship began in 2022 after Willis hired Wade, but several witnesses disagreed with that and cell phone data revealed that they had exchanged over 12,000 text messages as early as 2021. Wade left the Trump prosecution after the judge ruled either Willis, or Wade, must be removed to avoid misconduct.
Wade’s testimony in Congress raises questions about Willis giving him the job of special prosecutor knowing that he did not have relevant experience to benefit him, as a lover. Wade admitted to Congress that, despite saying that the prosecution of an ex-president was “unlike any other thing that has happened in American History,” he never worked at a district prosecutor’s office.
He said that he never had worked on a RICO case before he was given the task of bringing the law to bear against an ex-president, and so he attended classes after he got the job. He said, “It is a complicated legal concept. But the man who wrote the book, the godfather of RICO… spent hours upon hours teaching me RICO.”
The U.S. Marshalls who were trying to serve Wade a subpoena couldn’t find him for several days. Wade said he turned off his phone because he wanted to prepare for a court trial and because he took pain medication after injuring his ankle while playing basketball.
Wade was represented at the deposition by two attorneys, including former Georgia Governor Roy Barnes (D). Roy Barnes (D). The lawyers suggested that Wade could refuse to answer any questions, and said there was nothing House members could do because contempt proceedings in D.C. would be held. D.C. residents voted against Trump by 93%.
Barnes: Sure. Barnes: Sure.
Staff: Is this contempt of the House?
Barnes: You cannot enforce anything. Have you got a prison?
Staff: We won’t put anyone behind bars for this. The House has inherent contempt.
Barnes: Your only power is criminal contempt. You are entitled to a trial by jury on criminal contempt.
Wade refused to discuss the details of his trial, in part due to death threats that he claimed he received.
A: I wore a bulletproof vest out in public because I was worried about my safety. I am a licensed firearm owner. I was forced to carry a gun for my protection. My license plate on my car was leaked and people started following me.
Q: Can you quantify the number death threats you have received? Or is it so large that you can’t keep track of it all?
A: Oh my God. I could not even begin to quantify the number. I don’t know how many. There are a lot.
Willis’s dad testified before a court that a racist gang gathered at her home around 5 am and shouted “n-word” and another person painted it on Willis house. The Daily Wire’s public records request found no evidence to support this.
Wade refused to tell Congress about the impact of his relationship with Willis on their work. He said, “Now I’m confused because I — I thought I wasn’t coming here to give answers to questions about my private life.”
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