Orlando Sentinel

Ex-Christie ally, Bridgegate mastermind avoids prison

- By David Porter

NEWARK, N.J. — A former political blogger and high school classmate of Gov. Chris Christie’s who mastermind­ed the 2013 George Washington Bridge laneclosin­g scheme in a misguided political vendetta was sentenced Wednesday to three years of probation, the likely final act in a scandal that swallowed Christie’s presidenti­al hopes and contribute­d to his political decline.

David Wildstein also was sentenced to 500 hours of community service and a ban on working in government.

Wildstein, of Sarasota, Fla., faced 21 to 27 months in prison under a plea agreement, but federal prosecutor­s asked that he get only probation after his testimony last fall helped convict former Christie staffer Bridget Kelly and Wildstein’s former supervisor, ex-Port Authority of New York and New Jersey executive Bill Baroni.

The three were charged with closing access lanes to the bridge, among the busiest in the world, during a week in September 2013 to cause gridlock in Fort Lee, whose Democratic mayor had declined to endorse the Republican governor’s re-election. Wildstein was the recipient of an infamous email from Kelly that said, “Time for some traffic problems in Fort Lee.”

Wildstein took aim at Christie in a statement to the court Wednesday.

“All three of us put our faith in a man who neither earned it nor deserved it,” Wildstein said. “I willingly drank the Kool-Aid of a man I’d known since I was 15 years old.”

Kelly was sentenced in March to 18 months in prison, and Baroni was sentenced to 24 months. They have appealed.

Prosecutor­s told U.S. District Judge Susan Wigenton there likely would have been no prosecutio­ns in the case if Wildstein hadn’t cooperated.

“He walked into the U.S. attorney’s office and said, ‘I did this, this is why and this is who I did it with,’ ” U.S. Attorney Lee Cortes said.

Christie has denied he knew of the plot and wasn’t charged. His spokesman Brian Murray continued to blame Wildstein after the sentencing.

“Mr. Wildstein devised this outrageous scheme all by himself, coerced others to participat­e in it and then turned himself in to avoid imprisonme­nt for the crimes he has admitted to committing,” Murray said.

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