Albany Times Union

Alvin Bragg’s main DA opponent concedes

Candidate now poised to win primary contest for Manhattan DA

- By Michael R. Sisak FARHADIAN WEINSTEIN VANCE

Candidate Tali Farhadian Weinstein, ending her primary bid for the Manhattan office, states “it is clear we cannot overcome the vote margin.”

Alvin Bragg, a former top deputy to New York’s attorney general, was poised to become Manhattan’s first Black district attorney and to take over the investigat­ion of former President Donald Trump after his closest opponent conceded in the Democratic primary.

The candidate trailing him by several thousand votes in the race, former federal prosecutor Tali Farhadian Weinstein, said in a statement Friday that after several days of absentee votes being counted, “it is clear we cannot overcome the vote margin.”

New York City’s Board of Election has not publicly released updates on the count of absentee ballots. As a result, The Associated Press has been unable to call a winner.

“This has been a long journey that started in Harlem,” Bragg said in a statement, referring to the Manhattan neighborho­od where he grew up. “And today, that 15-year old boy who was stopped numerous times at gunpoint by the police is the Democratic nominee to be Manhattan District Attorney.”

Bragg led Farhadian Weinstein by about 3 percentage points when voting ended June 22.

With a win, Bragg would be virtually guaranteed to succeed District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr., who has been leading an investigat­ion of Trump and his company and is retiring at the end of the year.

The Republican candidate in the general election will be Thomas Kenniff, a defense attorney, former prosecutor and Army Judge Advocate General. Democrats outnumber Republican­s heavily in Manhattan.

A former federal prosecutor who now teaches at New York Law School, Bragg worked as a civil rights lawyer before entering government service. He currently represents the mother of Eric Garner in a judicial inquiry into his 2014 death after being placed in a police chokehold.

Bragg said he was drawn to a career in law after having a gun pointed at him six times as a youth — three times by police.

In one encounter, amid the crack cocaine epidemic of the 1980s, Bragg said an officer stuck a gun in his face and wrongly accused him of being a drug dealer as he walked to get groceries for his father.

Bragg, 47, defeated a big field of candidates that also included three former assistants in the district attorney’s office, Lucy Lang, Liz Crotty and Diana Florence, and three candidates who have never been prosecutor­s — public defender Eliza Orlins, civil rights lawyer Tahanie Aboushi and state Assembly member Dan Quart.

Farhadian Weinstein said that while she had disagreeme­nts with Bragg, she supported his “commitment to justice.” She also said she heard a “demand for more women in political leadership” while campaignin­g and hoped other would heed that call.

Manhattan has never had a woman district attorney.

The Manhattan district attorney’s office has spent two years looking at Trump’s business dealings.

A special grand jury this week indicted the Trump Organizati­on and its chief financial officer, Allen Weisselber­g. They were charged with helping Weisselber­g and other top executives evade taxes he should have paid on apartments, cars and tuition aid given him by the company.

Trump himself was not charged in the case, but the investigat­ion is not over.

Vance, the Democrat who brought the charges, will lead the Trump probe until he leaves office.

All of the Democrats running for the office had said they weren’t afraid of taking on Trump, but they were also cautious not to appear as if they were prejudging the case or making the matter a campaign issue.

Bragg has investigat­ed Trump before as the state’s chief deputy attorney general in 2018. He helped oversee a lawsuit that led to the closure of Trump’s charitable foundation over allegation­s he used the nonprofit to further his political and business interests.

Prior to that, Bragg led a unit of the state attorney general’s office that investigat­es killings by police.

Campaignin­g for district attorney, Bragg pledged a culture change in the district attorney’s office, prioritizi­ng public safety and police accountabi­lity while declining to pursue many low-level offenses and de-emphasizin­g conviction rates.

Bragg said he’d use data to spot racial disparitie­s in the criminal justice system. In deciding which cases to pursue, Bragg said he’d want prosecutor­s to ask: “Does this case make us safer.”

Manhattan district attorney is one of the most high-profile prosecutio­n jobs in the U.S., dramatized on TV’S “Law and Order” and “Blue Bloods.”

The office has a staff of 500 lawyers and a $125 million annual budget.

A separate forfeiture fund bankrolled by Wall Street settlement­s and worth more than $800 million is used for grants to criminal justice and community organizati­ons and big initiative­s, such as testing backlogged rape kits.

 ?? Craig Ruttle / Associated Press ?? Alvin Bragg, a former top deputy to New York’s attorney general, is joined by his family as he speaks to supporters in New York on June 22. The former top deputy to New York’s attorney general was poised to become Manhattan’s first Black district attorney after his closest opponent conceded.
Craig Ruttle / Associated Press Alvin Bragg, a former top deputy to New York’s attorney general, is joined by his family as he speaks to supporters in New York on June 22. The former top deputy to New York’s attorney general was poised to become Manhattan’s first Black district attorney after his closest opponent conceded.
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