FANI AND NATHAN AT DAUGHTER’S ARREST
BY THE LEGAL EAGLE
On August 24, 2024, Kinaya Willis, the 25-year-old unmarried daughter of Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, was arrested in Tyrone, Georgia, for driving with a suspended license. She blamed her mother as her reason for being on the phone as her mother, Fani Willis kept calling her to ask about her pregnancy.
Kinaya was initially pulled over for using her phone while driving. She claimed she was unaware that her license had been suspended.
Fani Willis arrived at the scene with Nathan Wade, despite previous claims and having sworn under oath that their relationship had ended in 2023. There are also witnesses that testified that their relationship began in 2019 which the couple has denied, both swearing under oath that the relationship started years later.
This event has added to the controversy surrounding Fani Willis, who is leading the prosecution in a high-profile case against former President Donald Trump.
The reason that Fani Willis having appeared at Kinaya Willis’s arrest “together,” with Nathan Wade is an important point because both parties swore under oath that they had ended their relationship in 2023. When they arrived at the arrest scene, they appeared to the police as if they were Kinaya’s parents or at the very least, looked very much as if they are a couple.
The Georgia Supreme Court is currently investigating the allocation of various funds by Fani Willis. These funds include civil asset forfeiture proceeds, federal grants awarded by the Department of Justice, and grants intended to expedite the processing of over 30,000 cases involving individuals accused of crimes but who have neither been charged nor released from jail, with some reportedly detained for over five years.
The Georgia Supreme Court is currently investigating the allocation of multiple fund sources received by Fulton County then appropriated by Fani Willis.
The funds include civil asset forfeiture proceeds, and federal grants in the millions, awarded by the Department of Justice intended to expedite the processing of over 30,000 cases involving individuals accused of crimes but who have neither been charged nor released from jail.
Some inmates have been detained for over five years. Ms. Willis has utilized these missing funds at her discretion, asserting that, as a constitutional state officer, “she answers to no one.“