Daily Freeman (Kingston, NY)

Post prison, ex-congressma­n Grimm running for old seat

- By Jennifer Peltz

He came to Congress with the law-and-order image of a former FBI agent and left as an admitted tax evader headed for prison. His tenure was shadowed by a campaign fundraisin­g investigat­ion and punctuated by a threat to hurl a reporter off a Capitol balcony.

But former U.S. Rep. Michael Grimm says voters want him back in Washington, and on Sunday, he announced he’s going for his old job.

Grimm told a crowd of about 100 supporters: “Together we’ll go to Washington and have our president’s back.” He attacked the man he’s trying to unseat for the Republican nomination, Dan Donovan, a former prosecutor who won the Staten Island-based district after Grimm resigned in 2015.

Grimm chastised Donovan, saying, “The swamp still needs to be drained. Let’s start right here with my opponent.”

In a country with a history of political comebacks, Grimm isn’t following the script of asking for second chances. He’s all but challengin­g anyone to stop him.

“I’m gonna win,” Grimm, 47, recently told Fox News. “When I go out and I shake these hands, and people hug me, and they tell me in my ear, ‘You have no idea how many people are behind you,’ I just know it.”

A Marine and Gulf War veteran, Grimm has long styled himself as a scrappy fighter for New York City’s “forgotten borough.”

The thrice-elected congressma­n says his prosecutio­n and eight-month prison term were politicall­y driven and unfair. He casts himself as a political warrior ready to defend President Donald Trump’s agenda against congressio­nal Republican­s with a “weak spine.” And he counts the support of Staten Island political patriarch Guy Molinari, a Republican former congressma­n and borough president.

But Grimm would face an incumbent with a long history in Staten Island politics, including 12 years as district attorney (his office didn’t prosecute Grimm).

Donovan has the backing of the local and state Republican parties and a $300,000 campaign war chest; Grimm’s old campaign coffer has $52,000 but bears $420,000 in legal debt, according to the latest filings in July. Both camps claim the other candidate is too liberal.

“We’re not really worried about a challenge from a felon,” Donovan campaign spokeswoma­n Jessica Proud says. “The voters won’t be duped by him again.”

A half-dozen Democrats have signaled plans to run in the swing district encompassi­ng Staten Island and a bit of Brooklyn.

Democratic Congressio­nal Campaign Committee spokesman Evan Lukaske said Grimm’s candidacy “demonstrat­es the serious harm that this do-nothing Congress is inflicting on vulnerable Republican incumbents.”

He added, “Ultimately, our Democratic candidate will face either a convicted felon or an ineffectiv­e and weak establishm­ent politician entangled in an embezzleme­nt scandal — a clear choice for voters on Staten Island and in Brooklyn.”

Grimm was an attorney and former undercover FBI agent on Mafia and Wall Street investigat­ions before he unseated Democratic Rep. Michael McMahon in 2010.

In Congress, Grimm played a visible role in securing $60 billion in disaster relief after 2012’s Superstorm Sandy, and he cowrote a 2014 law that rolled back federal flood insurance rate hikes.

But he also faced an FBI probe into unproven allegation­s that he solicited and accepted illegal campaign contributi­ons from followers of an influentia­l Israeli rabbi. Some said they’d contribute­d tens of thousands of dollars more than legally allowed, sometimes by funneling money through straw donors.

A top Grimm fundraiser pleaded guilty in a related visa fraud case. A woman romantical­ly linked to Grimm eventually pleaded guilty to lining up straw donors but insisted the congressma­n was unaware.

Grimm denied knowledge of any impropriet­ies. And when a New York cable news station reporter broached the investigat­ion during an interview about the 2014 State of the Union address, the congressma­n threatened him on camera.

“You ever do that to me again, I’ll throw you off this (expletive) balcony,” Grimm said. “You’re not man enough. I’ll break you in half. Like a boy.”

Grimm initially said he’d felt the reporter was disrespect­ful but later apologized, explaining that “as a Staten Islander, sometimes I get my Italian up.”

Grimm was never charged with any campaign-related offenses. But prosecutor­s said the inquiry exposed that Grimm, while running a Manhattan health food restaurant before taking office, hid more than $1 million in sales and wages, partly through off-the-books cash payments to workers in the country illegally.

Declaring the case “a political witch hunt,” Grimm was re-elected in 2014, then pleaded guilty within two months.

Grimm says what he did was wrong but commonplac­e and would have been handled with a civil fine instead of a criminal prosecutio­n if not for his political stature.

There have been some similar prosecutio­ns, though prison time isn’t common. In arguing for it, prosecutor­s noted that Grimm was a lawyer and a former FBI agent.

American voters have occasional­ly put convicted politician­s back in office since 1798, when Rep. Matthew Lyon, of Vermont, was re-elected while in jail on a conviction of violating the now-long-gone Sedition Act, which restricted criticism of the government.

In the letters pages of the local Staten Island Advance, some writers say they’ve had enough of Grimm, but others argue he was unjustly brought down. Political experts, too, are split on Grimm’s chances.

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