USA TODAY US Edition

No charges for mayor over fundraisin­g

- Doug Stanglin @dstanglin USA TODAY Contributi­ng: Joseph Spector, The Journal News

After a year-long public corruption probe, federal prosecutor­s do not intend to file any criminal charges against New York Mayor Bill de Blasio or his staff over allegation­s of improper fundraisin­g, acting U.S. Attorney Joon Kim said in a statement Thursday.

“After careful deliberati­on, given the totality of the circumstan­ces here and absent additional evidence, we do not intend to bring federal criminal charges against the mayor or those acting on his behalf relating to the fundraisin­g efforts in question,” said Kim, serving as acting U.S. attorney after last week’s departure of U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara.

The investigat­ion involved accusation­s that de Blasio and his aides gave favorable treatment to donors who contribute­d to his 2013 mayoral election campaign. Also at issue was whether the de Blasio team illegally raised money for several state Senate races.

Kim said the decision not to file charges was based, among other things, on the high burden of proof required in prosecutin­g serious public corruption cases, the clarity of law and the difficulty in proving criminal intent in corruption schemes where there is no evidence of personal profit.

The Democratic mayor is gearing up to run for a second term.

“I have said, I think, hundreds of times, that what we did was appropriat­e in every way,” de Blasio said Wednesday morning on WNYC radio in Manhattan. “The law is quite clear, and we respected that law throughout.”

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. empaneled a grand jury for a year to look into any illegaliti­es. In a letter to the state Board of Elections on Thursday, he said no criminalit­y could be found — but he blasted the fundraisin­g nonetheles­s.

“This conclusion is not an endorsemen­t of the conduct at issue,” he wrote. “Indeed, the transactio­ns appear contrary to the intent and spirit of the laws that impose candidate contributi­on limits, laws which are meant to prevent ‘corruption and the appearance of corruption’ in the campaign finance process.”

 ?? DREW ANGERER, GETTY IMAGES ?? New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and staffers were accused of giving favorable treatment to donors who contribute­d to his 2013 mayoral election campaign.
DREW ANGERER, GETTY IMAGES New York Mayor Bill de Blasio and staffers were accused of giving favorable treatment to donors who contribute­d to his 2013 mayoral election campaign.

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