It turns out Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis may have paid a huge amount of taxpayers’ money to a chief investigator who is also her boyfriend.
Further, special prosecutor Nathan Wade was reportedly using the taxpayers’ money to buy Willis gifts and vacations.
When the story broke, even The New York Times had to cover it. When sex, power, and money combine into one story, the news media simply can’t resist—even if it ruins one of their favorite hobbies (attacking Donald Trump).
As a nonlawyer, it hit me instantly that Willis had almost certainly broken the law and should be subject to criminal prosecution.
A friend of mine who is a lawyer in Georgia confirmed my instinct. He sent me a whole range of crimes that may be implicated by Willis having misused (read stolen) public money for her private pleasures and purposes.
He suggested a preliminary review led to a series of potential federal and state criminal violations. His list included:
- Honest services fraud, or essentially kickbacks (18 USC 1346).
- Violation of public oath (Ga. Code Ann., § 16-10-1).
- Bribery (Ga. Code Ann., § 16-10-2).
- Improper influence of a government official (Ga. Code Ann., § 16-10-5).
- Criminal conspiracy (Ga. Code Ann., § 16-4-8).
- Conspiracy to defraud government (Ga. Code Ann., § 16-10-21).
- Racketeering (Ga. Code Ann., §§ 16-14-1 through 12).
- False statements and concealment (Ga. Code Ann., § 16-10-20).
- Fulton County’s gift ban (Fulton County Code of Laws § 2-69(a)).
- Similar Georgia laws against public corruption.
Given Willis’ enthusiastic pursuit of the former president and many of his associates using a series of dubious interpretations of various laws—there is a certain irony that she may now be prosecuted under a similarly wide range of criminal charges.
This entire case blew open because several of the defendants Willis went after methodically reviewed her office’s expenditures.
Their investigation led to what may be an even more shocking and powerful set of insights.
By tracking the expense reports of Willis’ boyfriend and reviewing his justification for various trips, they learned that Wade had secretly coordinated with House Democrats’ select committee investigating the Capitol riot of Jan. 6, 2021. Even more astonishingly, the expense reports indicated he had at least twice met with the Biden White House in developing the case against Trump and his associates.
Amazingly, the defendants’ homework may blow apart the Jan. 6 cases—and all the cases in Georgia. They may also have proven that the Biden White House was deeply involved in coordinating these legal cases against President Joe Biden’s political opponent.
All this devastating material has been laid out in the motion the defendants filed to disqualify Willis and her office, which you can read for yourself here.
Clearly, the Georgia case is so contaminated by corruption and political coordination that all the charges should be thrown out. Those who previously pleaded guilty should be absolved of actions taken after being pressured by a clearly corrupt prosecutor.
As for Willis, she will almost certainly be disbarred and may face prosecution and jail time.
Congress now has an obligation to dig into the corruption, law-breaking, and dishonesty of its Jan. 6 committee. Critically, Congress must also uncover how much coordination has been going on between the Biden White House and the various cases against Trump.
It is conceivable that every case is contaminated by White House interference and will have to be thrown out.
Willis may be a small part of a much larger, deeply corrupt legal war against Biden’s political opponent.
This commentary was published originally by RealClearPolicy and made available via RealClearWire
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