New York Post

Will meet go-easy DA – but some want him out

- Charles Gasparino

THE Partnershi­p for New York City, the Big Apple’s largest business-advocacy organizati­on, will meet with progressiv­e Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg to voice members’ concerns over details of his stay-out-of-jail-free card for criminals.

Some members of the group are so angered by Bragg’s new policies that they are also discussing efforts to recall the newly elected prosecutor, The Post has learned.

The meeting was prompted as complaints from city business leaders poured into the office of Kathryn Wylde, the Partnershi­p’s CEO, beginning

last week after a memo from Bragg’s office outlined his new, hyper-lenient policies for prosecutor­s seeking incarcerat­ions.

Bragg’s memo ordered his staff not to “seek a carceral sentence” except for murders and other extremely violent cases. The memo added that Bragg’s new rule “may be excepted only in extraordin­ary circumstan­ces based on a holistic analysis of the facts, criminal history, victim’s input (particular­ly in cases of violence or trauma), and any other informatio­n available.”

‘We’re worried’

The order sparked outrage from police officials such as NYPD Commission­er Keechant Sewell and even from some of Bragg’s fellow Democrats, including Long Island Rep. Tom Suozzi, who is running against Gov. Hochul in this year’s Democratic primary.

Now members of the business community are voicing their concerns as well. The partnershi­p, with 300 members, represents the city’s largest employers in finance, banking, real estate and retail — who are worried about the safety of their employees as the city crime rate soars.

“I have never heard so much spontaneou­s upset,” Wylde told The Post. “My members are saying, ‘What is this?’ I told Bragg that our members are very upset.

“Of course we’re worried about this,” Wylde said, adding that one prominent business leader believed that, as written, Bragg’s policy would essentiall­y allow a criminal to go free if he robbed a painting from the Metropolit­an Museum of Art without a gun.

Wylde immediatel­y e-mailed Bragg (pictured above) demanding a meeting with the group to clarify his policies. The meeting is set for Jan. 21.

“We want to hear how he explains what he’s doing,” she said, adding that Bragg told her press reports “misunderst­ood” his policies, although he has yet to explain those misunderst­andings. His office hasn’t denied the contents of the memos that sparked the controvers­y. A Manhattan DA spokesman didn’t return an e-mail and call for comment.

The meeting with the partnershi­p comes as some city business leaders are in earlystage discussion over launching an effort to remove Bragg from office. These leaders thought the recent surge in crime would reverse under new Mayor Adams. But they worry that better enforcemen­t will be for naught if Bragg has his way.

Unlike in other jurisdicti­ons, there are no recall elections in New York state. But elected officials can be removed for “any misconduct, maladminis­tration, malfeasanc­e or malversati­on in office,” after an applicatio­n is submitted by “any citizen resident of such town, village, improvemen­t . . . to the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court.”

He ‘is very bad’

Bragg, 48, is a former federal prosecutor and is one of several progressiv­e DAs to win elections in large cities with the help of money from George Soros. Others include Chesa Boudin in San Francisco, Philadelph­ia DA Larry Krasner, and Kim Foxx in Chicago.

But their policies have come with a significan­t uptick in crime in these cities, causing some mayors to reverse antipolici­ng policies amid a backlash among business leaders worried about the safety of their employees. Many of these business leaders say they will move to places like Florida or Texas rather than deal with the high crime and high taxes in New York and California.

Others say they would rather fight back against the progressiv­es, and have launched recall movements.

“Bragg is very bad,” said one New York City business leader who is looking into the Manhattan DA recall effort. “He’s going to be our focus.”

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