Where is District Attorney Fani Willis’ campaign office located?
It appears to be the same office as a top Democratic National Committee member, according to a recent investigative report from RedState.
The conservative news outlet found that Willis’ campaign address is the same office as two law firms: Evans Law and Cook & Connelly.
Evans Law is run by Andrew Evans, a lawyer who represents Nathan Wade.
Wade is Willis’ reported lover, who she hired with taxpayer dollars to prosecute former President Donald Trump.
The office also appears to be home to one of Georgia’s top Democratic Party officials’ offices, Cook & Connelly.
According to RedState:
Charlie Bailey, the Georgia Democrats’ 2022 Lieutenant Governor nominee, is an attorney with the firm of Cook & Connelly, which is also housed at the address. Bailey’s wife, Pallavi, is one of 7 DNC members from Georgia and also works as a spokesperson for Willis.
Willis’ intimate connections with the Democratic Party — and her undisclosed intimate love life with Nathan Wade — have caused a huge scandal in Georgia.
On Friday, a top lawyer for Trump argued that keeping Willis on the Georgia election interference case against Trump would undermine public confidence in the legal system.
In the first arguments over whether Willis should be allowed to remain, Superior Court Judge Scott McAfee was told by attorney John Merchant, who represents a Trump co-defendant, that “if the court allows this kind of behavior to go on … the entire public confidence in the system will be shot.”
Merchant argued that, if the McAfee were to fail to disqualify Willis, “there’s a good chance” an appeals court would overturn the ruling and order a new trial.
Trump’s own attorney, Steve Sadow, accused both Willis and Wade of being dishonest on the witness stand when they testified under oath that their secret relationship didn’t begin until after Willis had hired Wade for the case.
Text messages and witnesses seem to corroborate accusations that the two had begun their tryst long before Trump.
Sadow told Judge McAfee that the mere “appearance of impropriety” is enough disqualify the two.
The Horn editorial team