Fulton County, Georgia, prosecutor Fani Willis, who is suspected of coordinating with Democrats and officials in Joe Biden’s leftist administration to assemble what essentially was an organized crime claim against President Trump, now has been ordered to hunt harder for records of her work.
That case turned into a massive embarrassment for her, and the entire Fulton County prosecutor’s office, as she was revealed to have had an ongoing affair with a man she hired to assemble the anti-Trump case for her.
Further, appeals court judges threw her, and her office, off the case, and it’s been dying in the clerks’ offices since.
Now a report at Fox News explains that Willis has been ordered by a court in her state to do a “new search for records related to her criminal case” against Trump.
The court had found that her search methods were inadequate.
It is government watchdog Judicial Watch that has been insisting she come clean on her work, specifically whether and how much she coordinated her case with the January 6 select committee, a partisan panel assembled by ex-House Speaker Nancy Pelosi to publicize accusations against Trump over the January 6, 2021, protest turned riot at the Capitol.
Willis also is suspected of coordinating her lawfare against Trump with Jack Smith, a special counsel who was entrusted by Democrats with two lawfare cases against Trump. Both of his failed.
The order is just another in a string of setbacks for Willis, who was ordered a few months ago to pay some $22,000 in legal fees to Judicial Watch after she declined to fully respond to the organization’s opening records requests.
Judicial Watch spokesman Tom Fitton, according to the report, said his group has been digging into Willis’ communications “because he believes the district attorney improperly coordinated with the federal government to charge Trump over the 2020 election.”
“The lawsuit is about any collusion and collaboration with Congress and the Justice Department, Jack Smith, and we haven’t seen the documents, but they show that there has been because their very existence shows that they were talking to them,” Fitton said.
Fitton said the coordination among the various Democrat operatives would show Willis’ indictment was a “political operation,” not any “honest” process.
The judge’s new order noted Willis failed “to address searches of devices belonging to former Fulton County special prosecutor Nathan Wade and chief investigator Michael Hill, both of whom were integral to the investigation into Trump’s alleged subversion of the 2020 election in Georgia.”
The judge noted he found “omissions” in Willis’ statements.
Willis charged Trump and 18 co-defendants in August 2023 with racketeering and other violations over the 2020 election, but the case fell apart because of plea deals and dismissed charges. Ultimately, the Georgia Court of Appeals disqualified Willis from the case, finding her private romantic relationship with Wade presented a conflict of interest. The case has been shelved indefinitely since the ruling, the report said.
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Author: Bob Unruh
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