New York Post

SOROS’ $40 MILLION ‘SOCIAL-JUSTICE’ BUY

- JASON JOHNSON & SEAN KENNEDY

HOW much exactly does “social justice” cost? Liberal billionair­e George Soros spent at least $40 million over the last decade to answer that question, according to our latest research. Those millions helped elect scores of progressiv­e prosecutor­s bent on remaking the criminal justice system to Soros’ liking.

It’s not to Americans’ liking, as San Francisco District Attorney Chesa Boudin’s recall Tuesday shows. Soros didn’t fund Boudin directly, but he donated to an anti-recall PAC. And Boudin is the first face on the “Meet the Movement” page of the Soros-funded Fair and Just Prosecutio­n, whose conference­s he’s attended.

From 2014 to 2021, Soros’ $40 million in campaign spending helped elect so-called social justice prosecutor­s across the country while dozens more benefited from the billionair­e’s largesse while in office. About 75 Soros-linked district attorneys control the jurisdicti­ons of 72 million Americans — one in five — from Manhattan to Portland, Los Angeles to Philadelph­ia.

And Soros isn’t done yet. Just this year, he’s invested in DA races in Little Rock, Ark. ($321,000), Contra Costa, Calif. County ($652,000) and Portland, Maine ($300,000).

And most of Soros’ bets pay dividends. Soros-connected DAs’ powers extend across much of the country including 25 of the 50 largest cities and counties, the quiet suburbs of Washington, DC, and central Wisconsin’s rural farming communitie­s.

Across those jurisdicti­ons, these prosecutor­s are transformi­ng the justice system. Many have unilateral­ly stopped seeking cash bail, preferring release on recognizan­ce to detention. They refuse to cooperate with immigratio­n authoritie­s, drop felonies down to no-jail misdemeano­rs and seek lenient sentences for serious (and violent) offenders — often with tragic results.

Meanwhile, they’ve antagonize­d law enforcemen­t and alienated their own staffs. Seasoned career prosecutor­s leave en masse — with 75% to 100% turnover across Soros-linked DAs’ offices from Philadelph­ia to St. Louis and San Francisco.

And those experience­d assistant DAs are desperatel­y needed as disorder and violent crime soar. Though representi­ng only 22% of the US population, progressiv­e prosecutor­s’ offices covered 40% of 2021 homicide cases and a third of all violent crime.

These policies have consequenc­es for neighborin­g communitie­s, as crime often bleeds over county and state lines.

Consider the career criminal accused of shooting five homeless men in New York City and Washington, DC, killing two: Gerald Brevard previously faced a sentence of 26-to-life in late 2020 after breaking into two different Virginia hotels and attempting to abduct and sexually assault a maid. But Fairfax, Va., chief prosecutor Steve Descano cut him a sweetheart deal — dropping the felonies to misdemeano­rs with only five months behind bars.

In 2019, Soros’ cash almost single-handedly vaulted Descano — with no prior criminal law experience — into office. Of the $950,000 in donations to his campaign, $659,000 came through two PACs funded either solely or largely by Soros, with another $50,000 from groups or individual­s closely tied to Soros.

Soros’ impact can be even larger: San Antonio DA Joe Gonzales took more than $1.4 million from the exclusivel­y Soros-funded Texas Justice and Public Safety PAC in 2018 — nearly 90% of his campaign haul. Philadelph­ia DA Larry Krasner raked in nearly $3 million from Soros-linked entities for his bids for office in 2017 and 2021.

In Manhattan, Soros put $1.3 million into PACs backing Alvin Bragg for his DA race.

While Soros has some high-profile misses (San Diego 2018, Rochester 2019), his efforts usually succeed. In 10 races from 2018 to 2021, Soros spent $13 million either directly or via third-party groups to elect his choice.

Soros has also built a progressiv­e-prosecutor infrastruc­ture with dozens of satellite groups supporting radical DAs in their efforts to upend the criminal-justice system. With hundreds of millions in Soros dollars and even more from ultra-wealthy donorallie­s, ideologica­l profession­al associatio­ns and advocacy groups train, organize and fête social justice reformers in white papers, at conference­s and on faraway junkets to Kenya and Portugal.

Those investment­s have paid off beyond the ballot box. Soros has seen his preferred prosecutor­s decriminal­ize drugs, end death-penalty and hate-crimes enhancemen­ts and release jail and prison inmates to a degree previously unfathomab­le. Soros gets what he pays for.

Jason Johnson, the former deputy commission­er of the Baltimore Police Department, is president of the Law Enforcemen­t Legal Defense Fund. Sean Kennedy is LELDF’s policy director and a visiting fellow at the Maryland Public Policy Institute.

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