How a sleuth defense attorney and a disgruntled law partner damaged the Trump Georgia case
THE TRUMP CASES
How a sleuth defense attorney and a disgruntled law partner damaged the Trump Georgia case
By Amy Gardner and Holly Bailey
March 16, 2024 at 5:57 p.m. EDT
In early September, a lawyer for one of former president Donald Trumps co-defendants in the Georgia election interference case scheduled a call with the other defense attorneys to share what he thought could be a game-changing allegation.
Nathan Wade, the lead prosecutor on the case, did not seem qualified for a job that was paying him hundreds of thousands of dollars, Manny Arora told his colleagues. And hed heard that Wade was in a romantic relationship with Fulton County District Attorney Fani T. Willis (D), potential grounds for Williss disqualification from the case.
The reaction was muted. Some of the lawyers didnt even participate in the call. It was just three weeks after their clients had been indicted, and they were busy preparing their cases.
Truthfully, I thought it was too salacious, and I thought it would irritate the judge, said one defense lawyer, who like several other individuals spoke to The Washington Post on the condition of anonymity to speak candidly about the case. Everybody had just been arraigned. We were working on discovery and getting our defense together.
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