Saturday, September 09, 2023

Fani Willis Tells Jim Jordan To Mind His Damn Business!

Momma don't preach.

Since when did Republicans care about Young Thug?

He is a gender fluid rapper who is also facing criminal charges in Georgia. He is no different than the former president. They both used their power to commit criminal offenses. The state is holding them accountable. He is facing RICO charges and it could put the YSL leader in the iron college for 30 years.

The Georgia prosecutor who indicted Washed Up 45 and 18 other defendants for election interference, House Republicans ordered an investigation into her. The Republicans hell bent on trying to impede all indictments of the former president and several of his allies.

The Republicans are planning an impeachment inquiry into President Joe Biden based off conspiracies they heard from far right extremists like Rudy Giuliani, John Solomon, Sara A. Carter, Greg Jarrett, Peter Schweizer and the agitators at Fox. They have no concrete proof that Biden and his son Hunter ever took bribes from Ukrainian officials.

The allegations whipped up led to Washed 45 being impeached for the first time.

This Georgia matter is a serious issue. The Republicans in state legislature are trying to remove Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis from her position and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-OH) has called for a federal investigations into whether the district attorney violated laws.

Ohio's most useless U.S. Representative is Jim Jordan.

Georgia governor Brian Kemp said he wants no part in his fellow Republicans attempt to remove Willis. He said that she is within her right as a prosecutor to hold the individuals accountable and said that Republicans attempt to remove her violates Georgia's constitution.

Willis has slammed Republicans in a scathing letter. It addresses Jordan by name and she declined to testify at a House hearing.

Willis, who was responding to a letter Jordan sent late last month, said there is "no justification in the Constitution for Congress to interfere with a state criminal matter."

Washed Up 45 was charged in Fulton County last month with felony racketeering and numerous conspiracy counts in a 41-count indictment, which named 19 defendants. Jordan announced that he was launching a congressional probe into Willis' investigation shortly before the former president surrendered at the Fulton County Jail in Atlanta.

"The obvious purpose" of Jordan's requests, Willis said, "is to obstruct a Georgia criminal proceeding and to advance outrageous partisan misrepresentations." She said his public statements and recent letter "make clear that you lack any legitimate legislative purpose for that inquiry."

"Your job description as a legislator does not include criminal law enforcement, nor does it include supervising a specific criminal trial because you believe that doing so will promote your partisan political objectives," she said.

"Your letter makes clear that you lack a basic understanding of the law, its practice, and the ethical obligations of attorneys generally and prosecutors specifically," Willis added.

She then wrote that while "settled constitutional law" permits her "to ignore your unjustified and illegal intrusion into an open state criminal prosecution," she would reply to some parts of his original letter.

Willis also said that if people want to avoid felony charges in Fulton County, such as violations of the state's racketeering, or RICO, laws, then they should not commit those felonies.

She wrote that Jordan's questioning of the length of the investigation and the timing of the indictment is "unfounded," adding that he had no basis to imply that her office has inappropriately spent federal funds. She said her office receives federal grant funds from the Justice Department and warned that if Congress were to block from that money, "you will be deciding to allow serial rapists to go unprosecuted, hate crimes to be unaddressed, and to cancel programs for at-risk children."

Willis also listed a number of "suggestions for productive activity" by the Judiciary Committee, among them that Congress should increase federal grant funds to test untested rape kits and expand a program for children who are in trouble with the criminal justice system.

Finally, she said that because Jordan seems to have a personal interest in her office, "you should consider directing the USDOJ to investigate the racist threats that have come to my staff and me because of this investigation."

Jordan's office did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The suspects are innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.

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