You just had the feeling it was a matter of time before something would break in that ridiculous case in Georgia. And, on Monday, it did.
Mike Roman, a Republican political operative in Georgia who was indicted with 17 others, including President Donald Trump, in one of the more bizarre criminal cases in American history, dropped a nuclear bomb on the prosecutor in that case — a noxious urban Democrat cretin named Fani Willis. Roman’s allegation, contained in a motion to dismiss, would seem to indicate that, in this case, the prosecutor is in a whole lot more trouble than any of the defendants:
District Attorney Fani Willis improperly hired an alleged romantic partner to prosecute Donald Trump and financially benefited from their relationship, according to a court motion filed Monday which argued the criminal charges in the case were unconstitutional.
The bombshell public filing alleged that special prosecutor Nathan Wade, a private attorney, paid for lavish vacations he took with Willis using the Fulton County funds his law firm received. County records show that Wade, who has played a prominent role in the election interference case, has been paid nearly $654,000 in legal fees since January 2022. The DA authorizes his compensation.
Something intriguing from the motion:
While the filings in the divorce case are sealed by Court order, undersigned counsel has learned that Willis and Wade have traveled personally together to such places as Napa Valley, California, Florida and the Caribbean and Wade has purchased tickets for both of them to travel on both the Norweigan [sic] and Royal Carribean cruise lines. Wade has also purchased hotel rooms for personal trips with funds from the same account used to receive payments under his contract with Willis.
So we don’t have the smoking gun of proof of the allegations yet, and that’s something to watch. How many of our betters at places like MSNBC and the Washington Post will come screaming that these charges are unfounded?
You might see some of that. The bet here is that the defense of Fani Willis in the court of public opinion will be very muted.
Because the American people, and particularly those of us who live in or near the big blue cities, know what kind of people hold sway in offices like that of district attorney. They know who gets promoted and why.
Fani Willis is Claudine Gay. Claudine Gay is Fani Willis. And this applies to Alvin Bragg and Letitia James, too. And Larry Krasner. And on and on.
We’re not talking about race here. We’re talking about a culture of corruption in the big blue cities that transcends race.
Before last year, when James, Bragg, and Willis abused their local prosecutorial authority to join hands with the execrable Jack Smith in attempting to weaponize the judicial system as a means of denying the public the right to vote for the Republican frontrunner, the endemic corruption of local judicial officers was a low-level irritant on a long list of problems facing an increasingly dysfunctional republic.
But that’s over now.
Before, you could choose to live outside of Fulton County — or outside of Georgia — and not give a damn who Fani Willis is or what she does. Willis’ brand of “justice” would have nothing to do with you if you weren’t her constituent. She and the crooked district attorney’s office in Atlanta would be an extreme problem for Atlantans, to be sure, but anyone still choosing to live in that city after what it’s become in the last 10 years has brought that problem on himself.
Almost like choosing to be a Falcons fan. If that’s you, then I can’t help you, and I won’t try.
But Fani Willis reached out and touched the entire country with an indictment not just of Trump but of a dozen and a half people involved in his reelection effort for conduct that is protected by the First Amendment and could even be said to be just Trump doing his job.
If Trump thought he was having an election stolen from him in Georgia, then using legal means to contest that election isn’t just within his rights but would constitute the correct action for a president charged with seeing that the laws are faithfully executed.
Willis’ RICO case against Trump and a collection of political operatives, campaign staffers, and lawyers who were involved in attempting to diagnose and remedy the irregularities of the 2020 election in Georgia plays almost exactly like Trump’s first impeachment — in other words, Democrats will engage in open, blatant corruption, and if you attempt to call it out, they will then attempt to make you the criminal.
It’s Orwellian stuff. Evil stuff.
Now we know that Willis is utterly corrupt. Evil. Satanic, even, if you consider that she fostered a direct attack on the American system of democracy largely as a grift to fleece her constituents out of $650,000 paid to a guy she was screwing and taking kickbacks from in the form of luxury trips and other benefits.
That’s a satanic level of contempt for the people of Atlanta — who have been dragged through the mud for months due to this case — of Georgia, and of the entire country.
It doesn’t just cast Willis in that light. It does so for urban Democrats as a whole — the statue-toppling, criminal-coddling, graft-multiplying, kid-indoctrinating, sexual miscreant wreckers who have put every American city into an advanced state of dilapidation.
It isn’t a sure thing that Willis’ case against Trump and his alleged confederates, whose crime was a conspiracy to get to the bottom of Georgia’s botched 2020 election, will now collapse. But it’s hard to see how it won’t, assuming Roman’s allegations bear out (and, of course, they will).
The devil has gone down in Georgia. Let that be the first of many such events.
via spectator