The Mercury News Weekend

Christie faces misconduct complaint

Bridge-closure scandal continues to ensnare New Jersey governor

- By Michael Catalini

TRENTON, N.J. — Republican Gov. Chris Christie wasn’t charged by federal prosecutor­s in the George Washington Bridge laneclosin­g case and wasn’t held responsibl­e by other investigat­ions into the political revenge plot, but he’s now been ensnared again in the legal fallout because of a citizen’s misconduct complaint.

On Thursday, a New Jersey judge in Hackensack allowed the complaint against Christie to move forward. Christie’s office said he will appeal and described the citizen as a “serial complainan­t and political activist with a history of abusing the system.”

The complaint, filed by retired Teaneck firefighte­r William Brennan, alleges Christie “knowingly refrained from ordering that his subordinat­es take all necessary action to re-open local access lanes” from Fort Lee that had been “closed with the purpose to injure Fort Lee Mayor Mark Sokolich” for not endorsing Christie’s reelection bid.

The complaint claims residents were “deprived the benefit and enjoyment of their community.”

Brennan, who ran a failed campaign for the Assembly as a Democrat in 2011, disagreed with the characteri­zation of him by the governor’s office. He said in a telephone interview Thursday that he’s pursuing the complaint on behalf of the public.

“I’m more interested in what the judge who heard the evidence had to say, and the judge signed (the summons),” Brennan said.

The judge’s decision comes amid the trial of two former Christie appointees who are accused of orchestrat­ing the lane closures in September 2013 as retributio­n against Sokolich, a Democrat.

The prosecutio­n’s star witness, David Wildstein, testified that several members in the governor’s inner circle knew about the plot beforehand or soon after and that Christie himself was told about the traffic jams on the third day of the four-day lane closures.

Christie has adamantly gated.

Official misconduct is considered a second-degree offense in New Jersey and carries a possible sentence of five to 10 years. An initial court appearance is scheduled for Oct. 24.

Three investigat­ions into the scandal did not find evidence Christie authorized or knew about the lane closures. Federal prosecutor­s did not charge Christie after their investigat­ion, a Democrat-led legislativ­e panel failed to find evidence linking the governor to the plot and a 2014 taxpayer-funded report found the governor wasn’t aware of the September 2013 closures until afterward.

 ??  ?? Christie denied that happened, and spokesman Brian Murray said Thursday: “The simple fact is the governor had no knowledge of the lane realignmen­ts either before they happened or while they were happening.”
The governor’s misconduct case next goes to...
Christie denied that happened, and spokesman Brian Murray said Thursday: “The simple fact is the governor had no knowledge of the lane realignmen­ts either before they happened or while they were happening.” The governor’s misconduct case next goes to...

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