Nathan Wade, the former Fulton County special prosecutor who worked on Donald Trump’s election interference case in Georgia, described how threats from the former president’s most ardent supporters have upended his life in an interview Wednesday on MSNBC.
Wade resigned in March after the judge in that case determined that a prior relationship between Wade and District Attorney Fani Willis created an “appearance of impropriety.”
Having previously spoken to ABC News earlier this month about the circumstances surrounding his departure from the legal team, Wade on Friday added some more details about the downside of helping to bring a case against a former president with notoriously loyal supporters.