House Judiciary Committee Chairman Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) released the transcript from the committee’s deposition of former Fulton County special prosecutor Nathan Wade.

According to Fox News, the transcript suggests Wade met with Biden administration staff on at least two occasions during District Attorney Fani Willis’ probe into President Trump.

“We’ve found the collusion!” Mike Cernovich commented.

Per Fox News:

Wade was interviewed by House Judiciary Committee staff last week as part of Chairman Jim Jordan’s probe into the prosecutions of the former president.

A grand jury indicted Trump and allies last year on charges related to alleged efforts to overturn the 2020 presidential election results in Georgia.

Wade did not disclose the details of his supposed meetings with White House representatives, including if they were in-person or remote, but he acknowledged the existence of invoices and other records that indicated discussions occurred.

At one point, the transcript shows Wade was asked about an invoice line indicating “travel to Athens; conf with White House counsel, May 23rd, 2022.”

“So if it says conf with White House counsel, that would mean there was a conf with White House counsel?” investigators asked, according to the transcript.

Wade responded that the semicolon written after “travel to Athens” represented a separate thought.

The investigator asked, “So if you billed for a conf with White House counsel, would that have occurred?”

“Prosecutor Nathan Wade admitted to multiple meetings with the Biden-Harris White House during Fani Willis’s prosecution of Donald Trump in Georgia but repeatedly claimed, ‘I don’t recall’ or ‘I don’t remember’ the details of those meetings,” Kanekoa The Great wrote.

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* Images from Kanekoa The Great X Post *

From the New York Post:

Wade — who was forced off the case in March because of an affair with his boss, Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis — said under questioning from the House Judiciary Committee on Oct. 15 that he’d never worked in a DA’s office before and had never worked on a racketeering case, according to a transcript made public Monday.

“I went to … what I would call ‘RICO school’ to learn about what it is, what it means, and how it works,” Wade said during the deposition. “It’s a very complicated legal concept, but the dubbed ‘Godfather of RICO,’ the gentleman who wrote the book … spent hours and hours teaching me RICO, if you will.”

“He was teaching a RICO course and I went to the course,” Wade explained further.

The federal RICO — or Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations — Act was put in place in 1970 and later adopted by certain states, like Georgia, for the purpose of prosecuting organized crime.

Read the full transcript HERE.

 

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