New York Daily News

DA is ‘looking into’ appointmen­ts of dead & unwitting to B’klyn Dem gigs

- BY CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez’s office is scrutinizi­ng revelation­s that dead and unwitting people have been appointed to positions in the borough’s Democratic Party, a spokesman for the DA told the Daily News on Tuesday.

The eyebrow-raising appointmen­ts to the party’s county committee first came to light last week, and the spokesman, Oren Yaniv, said the DA’s office is reviewing whether there’s grounds for an investigat­ion.

“We are looking into this,” Yaniv said. The preliminar­y step from the DA — which Yaniv stressed does not mean that a formal probe is underway — comes two days after The News reported that Coney Island resident Alfreida Davis was appointed to the party’s county committee in December 2020 even though she died a month prior.

Davis’ appointmen­t was made via a form submitted by Dionne Brown-Jordan, the district leader of the 46th Assembly District and an assistant treasurer for the Brooklyn Democratic Party. The same form also appointed three other local residents who said in interviews that they were picked for committee seats without their consent or knowledge.

Those revelation­s, in turn, came on the heels of a report from the news organizati­on The City finding that at least an additional 20 Brooklynit­es, without their permission or knowledge, were nominated for party committee posts last month after their names were included on petitions circulated on behalf of Brown-Jordan and Michael Silverman, her male district leader counterpar­t.

Insurgents in the Brooklyn Democratic Party have alleged that the appointmen­ts could be a concerted effort by party leaders to consolidat­e power by using the unwitting committee members as proxy votes to amend rules and advance candidates of their preference.

A state appeals court recently found that it can be illegal to deliberate­ly include dead or unaware people on political petitions.

Democratic Assemblywo­man Mathylde Frontus (photo), who represents Coney Island and Bay Ridge in the state Legislatur­e and personally knew Davis, told The News that she and two local political candidates, Chris McCreight and Angela Kravtchenk­o, plan to hold a news conference Wednesday with some of the Brooklynit­es who were appointed to the party’s committee without their consent.

The focus of the news conference, Frontus said, will be to make a case for why the committee appointmen­ts must be investigat­ed.

“I feel bad for all the people caught up in this mess,” said McCreight, a City Council staffer who’s challengin­g Silverman for the 46th District leadership in this year’s election. “We’re talking about seniors, some over 90 years old, who are finding out from reporters that their names are being used without their consent. We need to get to the bottom of this to make sure these deceptive practices don’t continue.”

Brown-Jordan, who’s running against Frontus in this summer’s Assembly primary in addition to serving as district leader, could not be reached for comment Tuesday. A spokesman for the Brooklyn Democratic Party did not return a request for comment.

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