Federal prosecutors have announced charges against former allies of Republican New Jersey Governor Chris Christie related to the 2013 corruption scandal surrounding road closures near the George Washington Bridge.
The United States Department of Justice announced on Friday that
a former advisor to the governor long-accused of having been
responsible for the shutdown pleaded guilty in federal court to
charges related to his role in the scandal. Additionally,
prosecutors have filed indictments against two former colleagues
alleged to have also conspired to exact what US Attorney Paul
Fishman referred to as “political retribution” against the mayor
of Fort Lee, NJ.
David Wildstein, a political blogger-turned-Christie ally,
pleaded guilty to two counts of conspiracy, namely a fraud and a
civil rights charge. Wildstein resigned from office in December
2013 after he was accused of having ordered road closures in Fort
Lee three months earlier because the city’s mayor had failed to
endorse Christie for re-election. The road closures shut down two
of the three lanes that provide local access to bridge’s Fort Lee
entrance, prompting major traffic delays to occur on what the
Port Authority has called the busiest motor vehicle bridge on the
planet. Wildstein admitted to ordering the closures as a means of
political retribution.
Wildstein’s acknowledgement to federal prosecutors implicated two
others tied to the scandal who were subsequently charged in
indictments unsealed later in the day. Former Port Authority
Deputy Executive Director Bill Baroni and Bridget Anne Kelly, the
former deputy chief of staff to Gov. Christie, are named in that
nine-count indictment and expected to be arraigned in Newark on
Monday morning at 11:00am ET.
Ex-ally of @GovChristie David Wildstein arrives Newark fed ct for guilty plea in #bridgegate@njburkett7pic.twitter.com/rZwaVdBsVV
— Aaron Katersky (@AaronKatersky) May 1, 2015
A plea deal dated January 12 and unsealed on Friday revealed that
federal prosecutors had agreed earlier this year to accept a
guilty plea from Wildstein, a former senior official in the Port
Authority of New York and New Jersey
“Did you punish the mayor … by deliberately causing traffic
problems?” US District Judge Susan D. Wigenton asked
Wildstein, according to The Record, a local news outlet.
“Yes,” Wildstein reportedly replied.
According to newly released court documents, Wildstein, Kelly and
Baroni conspired starting in August 2013 to close roads in Ft.
Lee to punish Mayor Mark Sokolich, a Democrat who did not support
Gov. Christie for re-election. The group plotted to shut two of
three critical roads near the GW Bridge under the guise that the
Port Authority was conducting a traffic study, Fishman said,
which they never actually intended on doing.
“They did something else entirely,” Fishman said at
Friday afternoon’s press conference. By using the supposed
traffic study, Fishman said, the three “manufactured and
perpetuated a bogus cover story” in order to “carry out a public
vendetta and exact political retribution” against Sokolich.
Federal prosecutor calls #Bridgegate "a deliberate and illegal scheme" to carry out a "political vendetta" against mayor of Ft. Lee, NJ.
— Andrew Blake (@apblake) May 1, 2015
"Let me be clear Wildstein has admitted and the indictment alleges that the traffic study story was a sham, a total fabrication" Fishman
— Melissa Hayes (@Record_Melissa) May 1, 2015
The result, Fishman said, “Callously victimized the people of
Fort Lee,” a city of barely 35,000 located across the Hudson
River from upper Manhattan. The supposed traffic study, he added,
was in actuality a “total sham.”
“The laws of the United States do not permit this kind of
behavior,” Fishman said.
Fishman said Wildstein orchestrated the “deliberate and
illegal scheme” and that the Justice Dept. has accepted his
guilty plea to counts of conspiracy to misuse and misapply Port
Authority resources and conspiracy to violate the civil rights of
residents by intentionally interfering with their right to
travel.
Wildstein faces a theoretical maximum of 15 years in prison when
he is eventually sentenced, Fishman said, but guidelines
recommend no more than 27 months behind bars. Baroni and Kelly
should expect to face a similar potential sentence if they are
found guilty on all counts, the prosecutor added, and Wildstein
will likely be favored on account of his cooperation with
investigators.
The top charges against Baroni and Kelly carry up to 20 years in prison pic.twitter.com/D8N1MHXsap
— Michael Symons (@MichaelSymons_) May 1, 2015
“He is cooperating with the US. He has been cooperating for
some time, and it is typical when people are cooperating for that
cooperation to be brought to the attention of the sentencing
judge,” Fishman said.
The prosecutor also acknowledged that unnamed co-conspirators are
mentioned in the indictments unsealed this week, but said the
attorney’s office was “not going to charge anyone else in
this scheme” based on evidence that’s currently available.
Wildstein lawyer: "Evidence exists" that #Christie knew about #GWB lane closures http://t.co/u8sWTdIp7N#Bridgegatepic.twitter.com/JjaAQVKpko
— North Jersey News (@NorthJerseybrk) May 1, 2015
However, Alan Zegas, an attorney for Mr. Wildstein, told the
New York Times on Friday that “There is a
lot more that will come out” as proceedings continue. Zegas
told the paper that “evidence exists”.
Gov. Christie knew about the closings as they occurred, but
added, “unfortunately, I am not in a position to talk about
the matter in detail.”