Jim Hooft reported earlier Friday that authorities tracked Nathan Wade's location geographically and found that Nathan Wade made at least 35 visits to corrupt Fulton County DA Fanny Willis before he was named lead prosecutor in the law war RICO case against President Trump and 18 Trump's aides. . This puts both Willis and Wade at risk of being disqualified.
Now, Fanny Willis may be in even hotter mode after Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) revealed another bombshell at CPAC.
Jordan told CPAC host Matt Schlapp that Willis and Wade have not responded to the Judiciary Committee's subpoenas, but they have interviewed a whistleblower from Willis' office who may have some details to release about the corrupt prosecutor.
Jordan: We have not heard a response from her yet. We'll see what we get from it. But there is a whistleblower in her office that we spoke to, the committee staff.
The informant, I think she's 4'11, but Fanny Willis had seven police officers escorting her out when she fired this lady. She expressed concern that Ms. Willis was not following the grant dollar rules in an appropriate manner.
She's talking to our office now, and we'll see how it goes. But that's why we've subpoenaed documents related to this matter.
He watches:
GOP chief investigator Jim Jordan sends “Big Fani” Willis into a panic:
“There is a whistleblower in her office and we spoke to him.”
– Benny Johnson (@bennyjohnson) February 24, 2024
Jordan did not reveal the identity of the whistleblower, but he is likely referring to former Fulton County employee Amanda Timpson. As TGP's Christina Leila previously revealed, Timpson warned Fanny Willis, one of his aides in the office, that he would use “a $488,000 federal grant — intended to create a youth empowerment and gang prevention center — to pay for 'swag,' computers, and travel.”
Willis said she “respects” Timpson's assessment of the situation. But after 56 days, Timpson was canned by Willis.
Willis' office issued a statement calling Timpson a “relic of the previous administration” and she was fired for “failing to meet the standards of the new administration.”
The whistleblower said this behavior by Willis was part of a larger pattern of her abuse and corruption.