As Fani Willis has said many times over the past few years, no one is above the law. She found out recently that her motion to quash a state Senate subpoena was denied by Fulton County Superior Court Judge Shukura Ingram on Tuesday. She has now been ordered to testify under oath about her illegal actions in a case against President Trump and eighteen others charged under the RICO statute.
As previously reported, Fani Willis tried to block subpoenas requiring her to testify before a Georgia State Senate Committee about her relationship with Nathan Wade, where she perjured herself. Willis hired her boyfriend at an inflated fee to perform lawfare against Trump. Willis attended meetings with Biden officials in planning for these illicit prosecutions, as did Alvin Bragg and Jack Smith’s team members, and probably Letitia James. In February 2024, Fani Willis testified under oath that her relationship with her then-top prosecutor, Nathan Wade, had ended months ago.
Committee chairman Senator Bill Cowsert said in September:
“Let’s please note for the record that Ms. Willis has failed to appear in compliance with the subpoena and has failed to produce documents requested.”
Cowsert added that:
“The committee has hired outside legal counsel to assist in the enforcement of the subpoena.”
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELThe Republican-led committee was unable to question Fani Willis about her “misconduct” related to Trump’s RICO case and affair with Nathan Wade because she was a no-show.
Fani Willis was subpoenaed for documents related to hiring and payments made to Nathan Wade as well as communications between the two. The Committee also subpoenaed Fani Willis for documents related to her office’s communications with the Biden White House and Justice Department about President Trump.
Fani Willis’s lawyers asked the judge to declare the committee’s subpoenas void and block them from enforcing the subpoenas.
Lawyers for the Georgia senate committee argued that Fani Willis used the wrong legal arguments to challenge the subpoenas.
In November Fani Willis and her entire office were disqualified from prosecuting Trump in their lawfare RICO case.
The Georgia Appeals Court disqualified Fani Willis because of an appearance of impropriety.
The focus of the committee’s investigation is how Willis spent public funds on her failed racketeering (RICO) and election interference investigation into the 45th and 47th president — and whether any funds earmarked for other purposes were improperly diverted.
A subpoena was issued by the Georgia state Senate in August 2024; but appeared superfluous at first. The prosecutor was slated to appear and speak under oath at a public hearing held by the committee that September — but ultimately she was a no-show.
Around the same time, Cowsert moved to enforce years-old subpoenas against Willis for documents and testimony — as well as the latest subpoena. In turn, Willis and her office filed for a permanent injunction to stop the subpoenas from being enforced.
In early December 2024, attorneys for the parties argued the general issues in the case as well as for and against the possibility of Willis being held in contempt. On Dec. 23, 2024, the Fulton County District Court judge overseeing the matter then ruled in the committee’s favor on the basic question of the subpoena power — denying the district attorney’s petition for declaratory judgment and injunctive relief.
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