IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.
EXCLUSIVE
Trump investigations

Marjorie Taylor Greene files second ethics complaint against Georgia prosecutor who charged Trump

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene accused Fulton County District Attorney Fani Willis, who is prosecuting Trump in Georgia, of trying to avoid transparency.
Image: Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga.,
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., at a news conference Wednesday on Capitol Hill.Roberto Schmidt / AFP - Getty Images

WASHINGTON — Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, R-Ga., on Thursday called for an investigation into Fulton County, Georgia, District Attorney Fani Willis over claims that Willis, the prosecutor pursuing charges against former President Donald Trump in the Georgia election interference case, has flouted state transparency and ethics rules.

Greene, a conservative firebrand and staunch Trump supporter, said in a complaint filed with the Georgia State Ethics Commission that Willis had failed to file personal financial disclosure statements in the years after she opened the high-profile Trump investigation, violating Georgia campaign finance and ethics rules and leaving Georgians in the dark about possible undue influence.

“The Georgia Campaign Finance Act exists to ensure that public officials are transparent and open about their dealings, influences, and motivations. And that is exactly what Fani Willis has sought to avoid at every turn: transparency,” the complaint says. “Georgians have a right to know who exerts undue and unfair influence over their elected officials.”

Greene slammed the omissions, which occurred in 2021 and 2022, as “intentional, or [demonstrating] at least a wanton disregard for her duties and the law,” and said Willis’ relationship with special prosecutor Nathan Wade had “illegally tainted” the prosecution. Willis also failed to file a financial disclosure statement after she ran for a judgeship in 2018, the complaint says. Her 2020 filing is publicly available.

“For that reason, Fani Willis’ alleged failures to disclose these suspicious relationships and transactions must be fully investigated and, if proven true, punished in order to vindicate these rights and restore Georgians’ confidence in the intentions of their leaders,” the filing says.

The district attorney's office declined to comment on Greene's complaint.

Greene has encountered her own campaign finance problems. In January, reports emerged that the Federal Election Commission fined her $12,000 in December for soliciting donations to a super PAC.

Greene's complaint against Willis refers to earlier claims by Trump co-defendant Michael Roman that Willis may have personally benefited by hiring Wade amid accusations that the two have traveled together to destinations such as the Caribbean and Napa Valley, California. Willis moved in a motion Wednesday to quash a subpoena to testify at an evidentiary hearing next week about the allegations against her and Wade.

“The Georgia Campaign Finance Act mandates transparency from public officials,” Greene said in a statement to NBC News. “Willis’ refusal to disclose her relationships and financial transactions demonstrates a blatant disregard for the law and ethical standards. Georgians deserve leaders who prioritize transparency and accountability.”

She said the accusations against Willis are “a scandal of epic proportions.”

The complaint also alleges that Wade, whom Willis hired, earned a “significantly higher hourly rate” than another prosecutor on the team with considerable experience with the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, the statute under which Trump and his associates were charged. Trump has pleaded not guilty to all charges.

Greene said Wade billed the district attorney’s office “nearly $700,000 in official funds” and filed an invoice that included a billing on Nov. 5, 2021, “for 24 hours on a single day,” as well as another for two trips to Washington, D.C., details that surfaced in expense reports last month. Lawyers for Trump are seeking more information about Wade’s billing records, which list a “Interview with DC/White House” in November 2022.

Fani Willis, DA for Fulton County Georgia, in New York
Fulton County, Ga., District Attorney Fani Willis in New York on Dec. 5.Natalie Keyssar for NBC News

Greene earlier called for a criminal probe of Willis amid allegations that she benefited improperly from a relationship with Wade, the special prosecutor

Willis referred to Greene days later in remarks at a historic Black church in Atlanta.

“Dear God, I do not want to be like those that attacked me,” she said. “I never want to be a Marjorie Taylor Greene, who has never met me but has allowed her spirit to be filled with hate. How does this woman, who has the honor of being a leader in my state, how is it that she has not reached out to me?

“How did such a woman come to think that it was normal and normalized that another woman was worthy of such cruelty? I would never wish for her to have the experiences or the threats that I receive, the derogatory name calling, the being doxxed multiple times,” she added.

In a 176-page filing last week, Willis admitted to a relationship with Wade but pushed back against the accusations of misconduct and sought to dismiss the case. Details have surfaced as part of Roman’s filing and in divorce proceedings for Wade. 

In her statement to NBC News, Greene accused Willis of partisan and unethical conduct and urged a full investigation in light of the accusations. 

“Inappropriate, unethical, and potentially illegal behavior has plagued her investigation from the outset,” Greene said, claiming that “Willis can’t be trusted to fulfill her duties impartially.”

She described Willis' case as “a political prosecution” against Trump and asked, “How can the public trust a prosecutor who abuses her office for personal gain while targeting her political opponents?” 

The allegations against Willis first appeared in a filing by Roman, one of Trump’s 18 co-defendants, who is seeking to dismiss the charges against him in the indictment and disqualify Willis from the case. Trump has joined Roman with a legal motion to dismiss the indictment and remove Willis from the case. 

Greene, a campaign surrogate for Trump, has been floated in the media as a potential running mate for him.